"Nightclubs are a crucial part of urban planning" 26-08-2008 "Nightclubs are central to the nighttime economy and signifiers of the urban
cool. They are also a crucial part of urban planning and manufacture a city's
appeal." George S. Rigakos, associate professor of law, criminology and
political economy at Carleton University, Canada, spent several years
researching nightclubs from within. He especially focused on mechanisms of
(in)security visible in the nighttime economy. "Generalised insecurity is
endemic to late capitalist consumption", he states. Especially when it comes to
nightlife, security is an important element. Rigakos therefore dove into
Canadian nightlife to explore the multiple dimensions of the security issues at
stake. His book 'Nightclub', also discussed in this EUKN Review, is the result
of this extensive research, and provides an interesting analysis of bouncers,
nightclubbers, public police and the spectacle of nighttime consumption.
Why a book about nightclubs and bouncers?
I suppose the short answer is that it was about time. To study the
re-emergence of private policing and the consumption of security, as I have done
for the last seven years, and to exclude nightclubs and bouncers does not make
much sense. Both are far too important to the nighttime economy and for securing
contemporary urban centres. It was inevitable for me that nightclubs and
bouncers be considered as an object of research.
You did your research on the basis of direct observations in nightclubs.
How did you experience this as a relative outsider?
The point is to be accepted as an insider as quickly as possible. If not an
insider then at least an unobtrusive 'hanger-on'. This is when the data become
intriguing, when you get access to the type of candour that increases your
understanding of motivation and legitimation among bouncers. Much of this comes
with time and by taking on a non-judgemental posture. Of course, simply by
virtue of being in the nightclub, being swallowed up by the music, the
aesthetics, the entire vibe, to a certain degree you inescapably become an
insider.
What is the place of the nightclub, the bouncer and the clubber in
today’s society?
They are central to the nighttime economy and signifiers of urban cool. They
are a crucial part of urban planning and manufacture a city’s appeal.
Ostensibly, an urban centre with no nightlife is a moribund city because it
cannot attract the type of hip cultural consumers who are said to be the
creative drivers of wealth in post-industrial cityscapes. In this sense, the
nightclub’s spectacle, its superficiality, its excesses, its capacity to digest
all forms of cultural rebellion, its tendency to create exaggerated schisms
based on race, class and gender and its associated propensity for fostering
insecurity in the form of lonely crowds acts an alibi for all of these
tendencies already ever-present in society at large. The nightclub as a research
site is not exceptional, just exceptionally illuminating.
“Consumption in a nightclub is voracious and it is violent”, you say.
Why?
Consumption is voracious in a nightclub because it is omnipresent and the key
idea to understanding this is its voyeuristic quality. It drives all of the
social interactions that comprise the nightclub setting. It also literally eats
up patrons because they go to nightclubs to be seen and see others. By virtue of
consumption decisions made before and during the evening, patrons relentlessly
devour and are devoured by one another, and they pay for this privilege. This is
a judgmental activity that creates crises of identity because in the context of
the nightclub you can be little more than the superficial limits of your social
and material capital captured in such attributes as attire, body image, clique
membership and even personal posture allows you. The nightclub setting sees to
it that communication is stunted so that the superficial is valorised. This is
sexy because it allows for the possibility of projection but also potentially
devastating. A scowl or sideways glance of disapproval can easily result in
violence. This rather extreme response only makes sense when you are forced to
consider that consumption itself is violent in a nightclub.
Today’s clubbers “seem to have become nothing more than walking and
dancing advertisements and corporate logos”. Even screaming “Fuck you, I won’t
do what you tell me!” is part of ‘the spectacle of consumption’. Is there any
form of revolutionary nightlife left?
No. A revolution cannot take place in a nightclub setting because before it
can gain any momentum it will have already become culturally clichéd, it will be
turned into a theme night, its proponents’ will be stylised and the nightclub
will charge cover to attend: “Revolution night on Thursdays, 80s night on
Fridays”. At the Mandalay Bay hotel in Las Vegas they have a nightclub lounge
called “Red Square” complete with a beheaded two-story statue of Lenin, a
five-foot high engraved hammer and sickle topping the bar, blood-red drapes hung
over austere Soviet-style chandeliers, and a plethora of Bolshevik propaganda
posters and portraits of revolutionary heroes. But I don’t believe Marx is
turning in his grave as a result. If you read him carefully enough on commodity
fetishism, he’s more likely chuckling in self-satisfaction.
For many cities, attractive nightlife options are becoming an ever more
important asset in the global competition between urban centres. What does this
mean for ‘security’ (the sense of security and the practice of security) in
cities?
It means that security, by definition, is something to be merchandised. But this security culture is now endemic to all social interaction. Institutions and practices are increasingly 'securitised'. It is difficult to say or do anything anymore, especially under the auspices of urban planning, without first considering the security issues. New York is a prime example. Philadelphia is another. High-end resto-bars and swanky nightclubs must go hand-in-hand with a renewed investment in order maintenance. The transgressions of the night must be circumscribed and made safe for staged risk taking. Las Vegas is the city of sin but also the most heavily policed and panoptic place in North America. It is virtually impossible NOT to be caught on CCTV. Security has become a very important subject in cities around the world.
Can you explain why? What does this imply for the future? How do you think this
increased (in)security will influence urban societies? Should we be worried?
As I mentioned, generalised insecurity is now endemic to late capitalist consumption. Of course, at core, insecurity is already built into the mechanics of capitalism. Marx said that “security is the supreme concept of bourgeois society” because the entire police apparatus is set up to ensure the contractual arrangements of private property under liberalism. In the last three decades we have seen an unprecedented concentration of
wealth and the emergence of an international bourgeoisie that is increasingly
dependent on the exclusionary practices of private security – a rather revealing
oxymoron if you think about it – and compliant police services that lend out
their officers to private interests. This will continue and will become more
automated with the spread of CCTV and RFID (radio frequency identification, ed.)
technology. Imagine your access to certain city areas based on an RFID
signature. Why not? Gates need not be physical barriers. Entire cities are
already being colour-coded by terror alerts that automatically shut down access
to particular spaces and mobilize police to follow particular security threats.
I think, however, it is more likely we will choose to be 'chipped' just as your
car might now have a transponder or GPS system because it will facilitate access
and ease consumption. Already Alzheimer patients, family pets and even young
children are being chipped because of security concerns. The interesting point
here is the intimate connection between security and consumption.
A few months ago a young woman had her driver’s license swiped by a bouncer
using a commercially available identification device at a Montreal nightclub.
This was done in order to verify her age and by extension minimize the risk of
potential legal liability or a liquor license suspension by the provincial
authority. The system also potentially makes criminals on probationary terms
reticent to enter as any violation would be detected. Even violators of more
innocuous nightclub rules can be easily tracked and digitally banned from future
entry. These are all seemingly legitimate security practices. Two weeks after
she originally attended the nightclub, the patron was sent an invitation to her
home asking her to return to the nightclub with two complimentary drink vouchers
attached as her birthday was soon approaching. Not surprisingly, the security
database was simultaneously a marketing database.
What is the alternative to the ‘security trend’? Is there another
way?
This is a colossal question to which I have no ready answer. At least no
answer that immediately satisfies the reader because my solution relates to the
material transformation of society. At a conceptual level, however, we need to
stop thinking of security as some unassailable good. The concept of security is
actually loaded with negative implications and, for me, incessant security talk
is an indicator of a sick society. As a first step researchers must have the
audacity to mount a critique of security, as Mark Neocleous has recently done.
This will illicit a more critical research agenda that will better assist in
resisting the security trend. Although the first insight we might make of this
security trend is that it is no recent trend at all but part of the ongoing
nature of capital accumulation. Security was a concern almost immediately during
the transition from feudalism and part of the logic of the establishment of
liberal governance. Knowing this, the depth of our approach to a critique of
securitization necessarily improves and becomes more rigorous and historically
nuanced.
Source: EUKN, Simone Pekelsma
LinksPhotography: Ashley Fraser Read the article about George S. Rigakos' book 'Nightclub' on the EUKN websiteRead the introduction of the book 'Nightclub' on the Policing Crowds website back |


