Cathedrals of Consumption

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architectural innovation retail
Category=NH
Christmas Shopping
consumer culture studies
Department Store Advertising
Department Store Business
Department Store Sector
Diminished Responsibility
Earlier Department Stores
Eighteenth Century Shops
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European Department Store
European retail transformation analysis
French Department Store
gender and shopping
German Department Stores
Grand Bazaar
Grand Bazar
Grand Magasin
High Class Shops
Jeunesses Patriotes
La Flandre
Large Scale Retail Trade
Main Department Stores
Nineteenth Century Department Store
Paris Chamber
Parisian Department Store
Petit Bourgeois Movement
retail history
Shop Girl
urban modernity
Wertheim Department Store
workforce training retail
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367134037
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1999, Cathedrals of Consumption examines the history of the department store. After many decades in which it was almost exclusively historians of retailing and company biographers who were interested in the phenomenon, the department store has now come to attract the attention of historians of culture, consumption, gender, urban life and much more. Indeed, the department store in its classic era of expansive growth has often seemed better than anything else to embody the cultural and social modernity of its time.

The articles in this book range widely in presenting the breadth of these new approaches to department store history. An introductory essay explores the questions that surround the department store from its appearance in the mid-nineteenth century, through its golden age in the decades before the First World War, to the challenges posed in the more competitive world of inter-war Europe. A dozen contributors - writing about Britain, France, Germany, Belgium and Hungary - then examine themes as varied as the new public space which department stores provided for women, the politics of consumption, the architecture of the new stores, the training of the workforce, the cult of shopping, advertising strategies, shoplifting, employer organisations, and the geographical spread of the new stores, while a comparison with eighteenth-century London raises the question of just how new the department store was.

Serge Jaumain, Geoffrey Crossick