The Dictionary of Human Geography

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conventionally adopted a specific spatial focus,
with enquiry usually directed at the intra-urban
and, occasionally, at the regionalscale.The
geographies of consumer behaviour and retail
organization are also frequently theorized as
some function of distance (distance decay),
actual or perceived.
This perspective has come under challenge,
as political economic and cultural perspectives
have been brought to bear on retail geography.
Initial insights were drawn from the allied field
of industrial geography, which saw the
import of Marxist perspectives into spatial–
economic analysis in the 1980s. One analysis,
by Ducatel and Blomley (1990), drawing from
Marxist insights into economic structure,
sought to re-theorize retailcapitalboth as a
vital component of a larger capitalist system,
and as characterized by its own internal logic
(seemarxist geography).
Although this re-theorization has been criti-
cized (Fine and Leopold, 1993), the call for a
political economic perspective on retail capital
generated a response, particularly in the UK.
The ‘new economic geographies of retailing’,
as Wrigley and Lowe (1996) styled them,
paid particular attention to the phenomenon
of retail restructuring. More recently, geog-
raphers have explored commodity chains
and power relations between retailers and
suppliers (Hughes, 2005).
Over the past decade or so, the ‘new retail
geography’ has become more attentive to the
cultural geographies of retailing. In line with a
more generalized recognition that economic
processes are culturally coded (seecultural
economy), retail geographers have again
become interested in questions ofconsump-
tion. However, consumption is not seen
simply as the unproblematic expression of con-
sumer demands, but is understood as a critical
site for the expression, reproduction and con-
testation of various identities (seeidentity).
One question, in this regard, is the way in
whichgenderroles are formed in retail spaces.
Certain retail sites – notably the department
store and the mall – have received particular
attention (Blomley, 1996). However, it is inter-
esting to see other retail spaces coming under
scrutiny, including the car-boot sale (Crewe
and Gregson, 1998). Excellent reviews of and
commentaries on this literature are provided by
Crewe (2000, 2001, 2003). nkb

retroduction A mode of inference (particu-
larly associated withrealism) in which events
are explained by postulating (and then iden-
tifying) the mechanisms by which they are

produced. Those mechanisms realize causal
powers, the potential causes of events that
have to be activated (as with the striking of a
match and the creation of fire): those powers
may not be observable (as with gravity) and
their existence has to be retroduced from
appreciation of observed events. rj

Suggested reading
Sayer (1992 [1984]).

retrogressive approach A method of work-
ing towards an understanding of the past by
an examination of the present (cf. retro-
spective approach). The term achieved wide
circulation through the work of Mac Bloch
(seeannales school), who insisted that the
analysis of past landscapes required the prior
analysis of the present landscape, ‘for it
alone furnished those comprehensive vistas
without which it was impossible to begin’.
Likening history to a film, Bloch argued that
‘only the last picture remains quite clear’, so
that ‘in order to reconstruct the faded features
of others’ it is first necessary ‘to unwind the
spool in the opposite direction from that in
which the pictures were taken’ (see
Friedman, 1996). dg

retrospective approach A method, prin-
cipally employed inhistorical geography,
the focus of which is understanding the present,
and which considers the past only insofar as it
furthers an understanding of the present (cf.
retrogressive approach). The retrospective
approach, much advocated by Roger Dion
(1949) in his study of French agrarian land-
scapes and similar to the historic-evolutionary
approach in classical Germancultural geog-
raphy, considers that an understanding of the
presentlandscapeposes problems of explan-
ation that can only be solved by a retrospective
search for their origins. cw
The study of the past for the light it throws
on the present (cf.retrogressive approach).
The approach would makehistorical geog-
raphya prerequisite for contemporary analy-
sis. Its most explicit advocate was Roger Dion
(seeannales school), who believed that a
consideration of the presentlandscapeposes
problems that can only be solved by a search for
their origins; but the approach can evidently be
extended beyond the analysis of the landscape
and has much in common with ‘genetic’ or
‘historical’explanationsmore generally. dg

Suggested reading
Baker (1968).

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_R-new Final Proof page 654 2.4.2009 9:12pm

RETRODUCTION
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