An exploration of orientations, practices and attitudes toward shopping in Australia (original) (raw)
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Annals of the University of Craiova, 2014
As places of leisure, consumption and entertainment, the shopping mall has become a familiar sight in many capitalist countries, but also a contested and instable space, having been accused of a tendency towards spatial uniformity and of fostering a sense of placelessness. Focussing on a number of examples, the article argues that the built environment of the mall has become a site where ideas of what is perceived as real and authentic are frequently challenged and blurred. As postmodern places of hyperreality and visual markers of ideologies, they both contribute to a destabilisation of spatial and temporal relations and confront the visitor with a prefabricated form of authenticity that naturalises consumerist behaviour.
The Holy Trinity of Modernity: Leisure, Suburbia and the Shopping Centre
2014
Writing about leisure in suburbia would be neigh impossible without including shopping centres. Leisure, suburbia and shopping centres might well embody the holy trinity of capitalist modernity. It was the consolidation of capitalism that established our modern sense of work, free time and leisure, and the shopping centre became its temple; a destination for the mid-twentieth century suburban masses to ‘consume’ their ‘leisure time’.
Towards a theory of shopping: a holistic framework
Journal of Consumer Behaviour, 2002
One criticism (Arnould, 2000) of Miller's 1998 book, A Theory of Shopping and the jointly authored Shopping, Place and Identity (Miller et al., 1998) is that the authors fail to incorporate or even acknowledge the body of literature which exists within marketing and consumer research. Thus, as Arnould states, `the authors rediscover some of the findings of theoretical marketing literature about shopping venues, shopping and customer-store and service relationships' (Arnould, 2000, p. 106). This paper attempts to redress the balance by proposing a conceptual framework for shopping which incorporates relevant marketing and consumer research literature and which also draws on the wider literature in the social sciences to set the context for progress towards a theory of shopping.
Gender, Place and Culture. A Journal of Feminist Geography., 2014
"‘Leisure shopping’ is a particular kind of shopping activity that is devoted mainly to fashion clothes and accessories. Women are commonly represented as the main leisure shoppers, and consequently, they tend to be at the centre of shopping centres' mainstream discourses. This article argues that interpretations of representations of ‘leisure shopping’ and the corresponding practice have too often ignored the daily and seemingly ‘banal’ experiences of the social actors involved. The primary purpose of this article is to show how gender roles are performed and reified in high-end factory outlet villages in Italy. It adopts a cross-sectional approach to ‘leisure shopping’ that includes an analysis of the ‘languages’ of two Italian high-end factory outlet villages, the ‘social space’ represented by the same sites and the ‘stories’ about a few ideal-typical female shopping experiences. These aspects are situated in the Italian cultural and political context at the time the research was conducted. Very different demands – such as sensuality, efficiency and motherly care – are put on women in Italy, as well as in the majority of Western societies. The analysis reveals that through their practice of browsing in a high-end factory outlet village, women often reproduce stereotypes while simultaneously trying – though ambiguously – to challenge them. La ‘compras por placer’ es un tipo particular de ir de compras que se dedica principalmente a la ropa y accesorios de moda. Las mujeres son comúnmente representadas como las principales compradoras por placer, y en consecuencia, suelen estar en el centro de los discursos dominantes de los centros comerciales. Este artículo propone que las interpretaciones de las representaciones del ‘comprar por placer’ y la correspondiente práctica han ignorado con demasiada frecuencia las experiencias cotidianas y aparentemente ‘banales’ de los actores sociales involucrados. El objetivo principal de este artículo es mostrar cómo los roles de género son performados y materializados en villages de compras outlet de las marcas de moda en Italia. Adopta un enfoque transversal al ‘comprar por placer’, que incluye un análisis de los ‘idiomas’ de dos villages de compras outlet italianos, el ‘espacio social’ representado por los mismos lugares y las ‘historias’ sobre algunas experiencias típicas de compras de las mujeres. Estos aspectos están situados en el contexto cultural y político italiano en el momento en el que la investigación se llevó a cabo. Se ponen muchas demandas diferentes – sensualidad, eficiencia y cuidado materno – sobre las mujeres italianas, así como en la mayoría de las sociedades occidentales. El análisis revela que a través de su práctica de recorrer en un village de compras outlet, las mujeres a menudo reproducen los estereotipos al tiempo que simultáneamente tratan – aunque en forma ambigua – de desafiarlos.
The trouble with shopping: Discourses, practices and pedagogies of the consumer-citizen
Proceedings of the 47th Annual Adult Education …, 2006
In this paper, I begin with an outline of modern citizenship and a review of feminist and other critical analyses of this concept. I then discuss the role of consumption as a marker of citizenship. The paper closes with the prospect of understanding shopping as a potential process of learning about the links between consumption, citizenship and globalization.
Community-oriented consumption and opportunities for change in shopping centre/mall design
ShoppingScapes '13 Conference, 2013
Shopping centres are the bastions of the consumer age, promoting in their design the desire to continue to consume at an unsustainable rate. However there is growing evidence that new paradigms of consumption are emerging in developed countries, led by evolving technologies and online shopping, that are shifting consumer values and behaviours - and the environments in which we shop will need to adapt. Community-oriented consumption paradigms relate to behavioural changes that link people more closely, socially and/or culturally, with each other, providing a sense of community. These can be virtual or face-to-face. Collaborative consumption, the ‘Me vs We’ economies, service economies, the slow movement and prosumption are examples. This paper will discuss the variety of community-oriented consumption paradigms, addressing food as a linking concept, and their influence on shopping centre/mall design.
Consuming postcolonial shopping malls
Journal of Marketing Management, 2012
Through a naturalistic inquiry, we interpret shopping malls in India as post-colonial sites in which young consumers deploy the West in an attempt to transform their Third World identities. Shopping malls in former colonies represent a post-colonial hybridity that offers consumers the illusion of being Western, modern, and developed. Moreover, consumption of post-colonial retail arenas is characterised as a masquerade through which young consumers attempt to disguise or temporarily transcend their Third World realities. This interpretation helps us to offer insights into transitioning retail servicescapes of the Third World, which in turn helps to improve extant understanding of consumer identity and global consumer culture.