Nightclub Bouncers, Risk, and the Spectacle of Consumption – PDF/EPUB Version Downloadable

$49.99

Author(s): George S. Rigakos
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
ISBN: 9780773533622
Edition:

Important: No Access Code

Delivery: This can be downloaded Immediately after purchasing.

Version: Only PDF Version.

Compatible Devices: Can be read on any device (Kindle, NOOK, Android/IOS devices, Windows, MAC)

Quality: High Quality. No missing contents. Printable

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Description

People go to nightclubs to see and be seen – to view others as aesthetic objects and to present themselves as objects of desire. Rigakos argues that this activity fuses surveillance and aesthetic consumption – it fetishizes bodies and amplifies social capital, producing violence and crises fuelled by alcohol. At closing time, patrons flow out of the insular haze of the nightclub and onto city streets, moving from private spectacle to public nuisance. Bouncers are thus both policing agents in the nighttime economy and the gatekeepers of an urban risk market – a site of circumscribed transgression and consumption that begins at the nightclub door.

Nightclub Bouncers, Risk, and the Spectacle of Consumption – PDF/EPUB Version Downloadable

$49.99

Author(s): George S. Rigakos
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
ISBN: 9780773533622
Edition:

Important: No Access Code

Delivery: This can be downloaded Immediately after purchasing.

Version: Only PDF Version.

Compatible Devices: Can be read on any device (Kindle, NOOK, Android/IOS devices, Windows, MAC)

Quality: High Quality. No missing contents. Printable

Recommended Software: Check here

Description

People go to nightclubs to see and be seen – to view others as aesthetic objects and to present themselves as objects of desire. Rigakos argues that this activity fuses surveillance and aesthetic consumption – it fetishizes bodies and amplifies social capital, producing violence and crises fuelled by alcohol. At closing time, patrons flow out of the insular haze of the nightclub and onto city streets, moving from private spectacle to public nuisance. Bouncers are thus both policing agents in the nighttime economy and the gatekeepers of an urban risk market – a site of circumscribed transgression and consumption that begins at the nightclub door.