Attempts to Build Community: How Independent Bookstores Contribute to Culture

Authors

  • Ashley Platz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31542/ngc80c28

Abstract

This study focuses on comparing the book culture of Glass Bookshop in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, with Lighthouse Bookshop in Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom. Each independent bookstore has a social narrative, portrayed as a space where communities gather and is important to the local community fabric. Glass Bookshop and Lighthouse Bookshop have left-leaning, socio-political social narratives. Different aspects of each bookstore’s websites, store events, and customer habits were compared and contrasted using qualitative data analysis. It was found that Lighthouse Bookshop appears more established in its book culture and community interactions than Glass Bookshop, which appeared to be more disconnected in its portrayal and interactions. Glass Bookshop closed in February 2024, so the study cannot be replicated.

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Published

2025-08-26

Issue

Section

Fine Arts and Communications

How to Cite

Platz, A. (2025). Attempts to Build Community: How Independent Bookstores Contribute to Culture. MacEwan University Student EJournal, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.31542/ngc80c28