1 / 72

Charles Rawding: Edge Hill University

Towards teaching the geographies of consumer society. Charles Rawding: Edge Hill University. Geographies of consumption : retailing. Traditional approaches to shopping. Source: D.Waugh & T.Bushell: Foundations (new edition).Stanley Thornes. (1996)p58.

achilles
Download Presentation

Charles Rawding: Edge Hill University

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Towards teaching the geographies of consumer society Charles Rawding: Edge Hill University

  2. Geographies of consumption : retailing

  3. Traditional approaches to shopping Source: D.Waugh & T.Bushell: Foundations (new edition).Stanley Thornes. (1996)p58

  4. Changing components of the retail price index Source: Adapted from O’Donoghue et al: 2006.

  5. Geographies of consumption • Shopping: some alternative approaches • As consumer practice embedded in modernity • Shopping in ‘new’ locations • The changing nature of retail locations • The changing nature of retail operations

  6. Shopping in ‘new’ locations Out of town shopping centres

  7. Shopping in ‘new’ locations Retail parks

  8. Shopping in ‘new’ locations One-stop shopping

  9. Shopping in ‘new’ locations Niche locations

  10. Shopping in ‘new’ locations Shopping and travel

  11. Shopping in ‘new’ locations Shopping online

  12. The changing nature of retail locations Source: C.Rawding: Reading our landscapes. Chris Kington, Cambridge, 2007. p69

  13. The changing nature of retail locations

  14. Landscapes of globalisation and standardisation

  15. The global geographies of leading trans-national food retailers. Source: P.Dicken: Global shift. 5th Ed 2006. p373

  16. Tesco, Clitheroe, Lancashire

  17. Tesco Extra , Leyland Lancashire

  18. Tesco, Krakow, Poland

  19. ‘Food giants cash in on a taste of Poland’ Borsch packet soup and goulash ready-meals are the new battleground for British retailers and manufacturers as they meet the demand for home-grown comfort food from the country's burgeoning Polish community. An estimated 750,000 Poles - 2 per cent of the total Polish population - now live in Britain and the market opportunity afforded by the Polish pound (actually the zloty) is not going unnoticed. Nestle is going head to head with its arch-rival Heinz by bringing Winiary, its Knorr-style Polish food brand, to the UK. The brand is a household name in Poland, generating sales of around £100m and Nestle is to launch the bestselling product lines, including the white and red borsch-flavoured packet soup, stock cubes and favourite pudding, kisiel o smaku truskawkowym, a soft strawberry jelly. The move is backed by a campaign in Dziennik Polski, the daily Polish language paper which has a UK circulation of around 30,000. (Observer 24th June 2007)

  20. Retail geographies:where next ?

  21. The changing nature of retail locations ‘retail’

  22. ‘leisure’

  23. Leisure and tourism as geographies of consumption

  24. Recent definitions of tourism. Tourism is now far too blended into everyday life and the global flows of people and things to be treated as a detachable phenomenon. The everyday world is increasingly indistinguishable from the touristic world. Almost everywhere has become mantled with touristic properties Source:A Franklin. Tourism : an introduction. 2003. Sage London. p26

  25. Recreation zone Suburbs In the home Shopping, eating, drinking, cinema, theatre CBD Central Business District Golf course, country park, water sports, equestrian Leisure and tourism embedded in modernity

  26. Heritage tourism

  27. Themed tourism: The Beatles.

  28. Tourism and ‘events’

  29. Literary tourism: Haworth and the Brontes

More Related