Table of contents - Special Issue: Kids and retailing: future trends part 1 - children, shopping and their representation
Guest Editors: Brigitte de Faultrier
The representation of shopping in children’s books
Olivier Badot, Joel Bree, Coralie Damay, Nathalie Guichard, Jean Francois Lemoine, Max PoulainThe purpose of this paper is to identify the representations, figures and processes of shopping/commerce in books published in France that are aimed at three to seven-year-olds.
Perception of young children of the ideal shopping experience
Zsuzsa Deli-Gray, Marie-Pierre Pinto, Cécile McLaughlin, Roland SzilasThe purpose of the paper is to discover how very young (three- to six-year-old) children describe their “actual” shopping process and how they characterise an “ideal” shopping…
Convenience stores and discretionary food consumption among young Tokyo consumers
David MarshallThe purpose of this paper is to consider the question of young consumer’s discretionary consumption in Japan where the ready access to convenience stores, or “konbini”, presents a…
Exploring children’s responses to store atmosphere
Kafia Ayadi, Lanlan CaoThe purpose of this paper is to explore children’s responses to store atmosphere, and the role of parent-child interaction in these responses.
“Boys and dolls; girls and cars”: Children’s reactions to incongruent images in a retailer’s catalogue
Isabelle Ulrich, Pascale EzanFrench retailer, Système U, has triggered controversial debates among professionals and parents recently, by inserting images revolutionising gender norms in its Christmas toy…
The child “in absentia” in furniture retail catalogues
Valérie-Inés de La Ville, Anne KrupickaFrom an interpretive semiology perspective this paper examines the meaning suggested by the absence of children in newspaper advertisements, commercial websites and catalogue…
ISSN:
0959-0552e-ISSN:
1758-6690ISSN-L:
0959-0552Renamed from:
Retail and Distribution ManagementOnline date, start – end:
1990Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditor:
- Prof Neil Towers