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Devrim Umut Aslan.

Devrim Umut Aslan

Teaching staff

Devrim Umut Aslan.

Why Local Shopping Streets Matter : A visual ethnographic study of shopping activities

Author

  • Devrim Umut Aslan

Summary, in English

Retail and cities have had a long and intertwined history together. Since the beginning of first cities established, being a hub for commercial exchange has been one of the main elements what makes a city (Söderlind, 2011). Nevertheless, since 1980s, there have been some substantial shifts at the global scale regarding the organization of retail, and in turn, its spatial manifestations in the cities (Wrigley & Lowe, 1996, 2002; Mansvelt, 2005; Kärrholm & Nylund, 2011; Aslan & Fredriksson, 2017). The social, cultural, and economic backgrounds of this axis alteration, and its implication to the city life in general, have been discussed thoroughly. However, the main empirical focus has been mostly on the "spectacular" new shopping environments, such as upmarket high streets, newer shopping malls, and flagship stores (Crewe, 2000; Mansvelt, 2005), and there is little literature on current situations in “other” retail geographies, particularly on local shopping streets. A little known about these retail geographies’ qualities and significance for making our cities socially sustainable and resilient (Hall, 2012; Findlay & Sparks, 2012; Zukin, 2012).Taking Södergatan, the main shopping street in the stigmatized southern part of Helsingborg, as a case, this study examines the shopping activities on local high streets in order to understand the ways retail geographies at urban margins become meaningful parts of the cities. Thereby it studies these retail geographies from social sustainability perspective. It contributes specifically to the theoretical discussion in cultural turn within retail geography on the interplay between consumers and retail places (Wrigley & Lowe, 1996; Gregson & Crewe, 1998; Crewe, 2001; Gregson et al., 2002). While doing this, the study engages with “practice theory”, which supplies a profound conceptual framework for analyzing people’s everyday routines (Schatzki 2001, Warde 2005, Shove et al. 2012, Fuentes, 2014). The major method employed in the study is video-ethnography, due to its capability to synchronically appreciate shopping activities, consumers’ reflections, the sensory and material environment of the street, and the movement within (Belk & Kozinet, 2005; Pink, 2007, Jewitt, 2012).

Department/s

  • Department of Service Studies

Publishing year

2018

Language

English

Document type

Conference paper: abstract

Topic

  • Social Sciences Interdisciplinary

Keywords

  • Local High Street
  • social sustainability
  • shopping
  • retail

Conference name

34th Nordic Ethnology and Folklore Conference

Conference date

2018-06-12 - 2018-06-15

Conference place

Uppsala, Sweden

Status

Published

Project

  • Praxitopia: How shopping makes a street vibrant