�High status� of women has been one of the social characteristics used by scholars to define Southeast Asia as a field of study. Since the 1970s, feminist critiques of mainstream scholarship have challenged the idea that we can analyze the situation of women outside a broader framework and attend to the structuring of sex differences and gender inequality that encompasses masculinity as well as femininity. This chapter reviews the development of approaches to studying gender that have grown out of the renewal of feminism in the late 1960s, referencing some of the important ways Southeast Asian scholarship linked to this scholarship. In particular it tracks the move from studying the �position of women� to �gender relations,� which includes ...