Jan Whitaker
Goodreads Author
Website
Genre
Influences
I am a voracious reader of social history and love to learn how the wo
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Member Since
October 2012
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Service and Style: How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class
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published
2006
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4 editions
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Tea at the Blue Lantern Inn: A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America
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published
2002
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6 editions
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World of Department Stores
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published
2011
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3 editions
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The Department Store /anglais
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published
2011
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2 editions
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“Flattery was a prime department store strategy for cultivating customers, and men got a heavy dose. Males could expect to be treated like busy executives and discriminating men of the world. Men’s sections, floors, and entire stores were designed to resemble opulent clubs, often outfitted with wood-paneled grills that women customers were not permitted to enter. Vandervoort’s and Filene’s went to somewhat unusual lengths in furnishing a men’s lounge and smoking room, oddly working against the prevailing assumption that men had no time to spare. In Halle’s new men’s store of the late 1920s, dark mahogany paneling and carved marble detailing created the ambience of a priestly inner sanctum. Filene’s furnished an indoor putting green in its men’s store of 1928. Wanamaker’s outdid itself in 1932, the unlucky Depression year it opened its luxurious six-story men’s store in the Lincoln-Liberty building, with stocks of British imports and an equestrian shop too. Both Wanamaker’s and Marshall Field sold airplanes. Lord & Taylor reserved its tenth floor in New York City for men, with heman departments for cutlery, the home bar, and barbecue equipment. Gimbels, Macy’s, and Hearn’s stuck to more basic appeals, using their large liquor departments to attract men.”
― Service and Style: How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class
― Service and Style: How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class























