Laurence Moss wrote: "What makes a critique of a body of economic analysis "feminist"? I really would like to know." Let me provide one answer among the many that might be developed: A critique of a body [sic -- whose?] of economic analysis may be called "feminist" if that critique is developed from an analysis of the gendered assumptions that underlie the distinctions and presuppostions of those texts. The surfacing of such gendered material may (or as well may not) subvert the stated assumptions of those texts. In either case one has provided a feminist critique of that economic analysis. E. Roy Weintraub