Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store

Department stores, in the second half of the nineteenth century, can be characterised as spaces with multiple functional identities. Retailers aimed to maximise potential sales through a combination of innovative display, modernised architecture, and the curation of customers’ movement, which promot...

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Main Author: Kate Morris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2023-03-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12906
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author Kate Morris
author_facet Kate Morris
author_sort Kate Morris
collection DOAJ
description Department stores, in the second half of the nineteenth century, can be characterised as spaces with multiple functional identities. Retailers aimed to maximise potential sales through a combination of innovative display, modernised architecture, and the curation of customers’ movement, which promoted increased sales opportunities by assistants. In large stores, where sales figures were the only indicator of success, assistants were under pressure to ‘never allow a lady to leave without a sale’. Women, however, were inclined to view department stores as leisure spaces, respectable enough to be visited without an escort. This duality of function, with department store interiors existing simultaneously as sales floor and leisure space, appears to have resulted in tension between sales staff and customers. Drawing on the extensive literature focused on spatial archaeologies of eighteenth-century retail interiors, this article considers the department store as an extension of earlier shopping practice, drawing links between the private pseudo-domestic parlours of the Georgian shop and the refreshment rooms of the department store. It is shown that the creation of subdivided interiors allowed for the separation of retail and leisure space, allowing for the easing of tension between staff and customer, and demonstrating a continuation of the retail owner as peer and host for the customer.
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spelling doaj-art-1cede26ef13e42c2b23c38b681bb8d0d2025-01-30T10:22:41ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492023-03-019710.4000/cve.12906Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department StoreKate MorrisDepartment stores, in the second half of the nineteenth century, can be characterised as spaces with multiple functional identities. Retailers aimed to maximise potential sales through a combination of innovative display, modernised architecture, and the curation of customers’ movement, which promoted increased sales opportunities by assistants. In large stores, where sales figures were the only indicator of success, assistants were under pressure to ‘never allow a lady to leave without a sale’. Women, however, were inclined to view department stores as leisure spaces, respectable enough to be visited without an escort. This duality of function, with department store interiors existing simultaneously as sales floor and leisure space, appears to have resulted in tension between sales staff and customers. Drawing on the extensive literature focused on spatial archaeologies of eighteenth-century retail interiors, this article considers the department store as an extension of earlier shopping practice, drawing links between the private pseudo-domestic parlours of the Georgian shop and the refreshment rooms of the department store. It is shown that the creation of subdivided interiors allowed for the separation of retail and leisure space, allowing for the easing of tension between staff and customer, and demonstrating a continuation of the retail owner as peer and host for the customer.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12906movementconsumerismwomen’s leisureretail spaceshistorical archaeology
spellingShingle Kate Morris
Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
movement
consumerism
women’s leisure
retail spaces
historical archaeology
title Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store
title_full Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store
title_fullStr Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store
title_full_unstemmed Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store
title_short Dualities of Function: Archaeological Approaches to the Study of Movement and Space within the late‒Victorian Department Store
title_sort dualities of function archaeological approaches to the study of movement and space within the late victorian department store
topic movement
consumerism
women’s leisure
retail spaces
historical archaeology
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12906
work_keys_str_mv AT katemorris dualitiesoffunctionarchaeologicalapproachestothestudyofmovementandspacewithinthelatevictoriandepartmentstore