Retail and Community
Business, Charity and the End of Empire
Contributor(s)
Campbell Gosling, George (editor)
Green, Alix R. (editor)
Millar, Grace (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Available Open Access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. Retail has never existed in a vacuum. This interdisciplinary volume explores how English commercial, co-operative and charity retailing were shaped by and in turn influenced their social and political environments, from the local to the global, between the late nineteenth and early twenty-first centuries. Historians, sociologists, archivists and heritage professionals engage with current debates on the rise of modern business and the decline of the high street, class and credit, professionalisation in the voluntary sector, migration and the end of empire. This book will be a key resource to better understand retail and community in an era defined by social change, shedding new light on the enduring centrality of community relationships to modern retailers.
Keywords
Charity shops; Co-operatives; Community relationships; Non-profit organisations; business history; consumption; retailingDOI
10.47674/9781529235265ISBN
9781529235241, 9781529235265, 9781529235258Publisher
Bristol University PressPublisher website
https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
Bristol, 2024Classification
Social and cultural history
Charities, voluntary services and philanthropy
Social groups, communities and identities