Literature DB >> 12227842

Regulating 'unruly' bodies: work tasks, conflict and violence in Britain's night-time economy.

Lee F Monaghan1.   

Abstract

Security work in urban licensed premises is a risky occupation in Britain's fast expanding liminal night-time economy. Sociologically, little is known about this masculinist work, including those embodied strategies used by doorstaff or 'bouncers' to regulate 'unruly' bodies in and around commercial space. Using participant observational data generated in south-west Britain, this paper describes how the door supervisors' routine work tasks (largely comprising requests and demands) provide the conditions of possibility for hierarchical conflict and (near) violence between themselves and (potential) customers inside and at the entrances to licensed premises. Besides providing a thick description of this work and the phenomenology of physical violence, the paper supports recent theoretical arguments for an explicitly embodied sociology. Centrally, the paper maintains that bodies matter and that an empirical, interpretative sociology cannot ignore the corporeal dimensions of social life if it is to arrive at an adequate understanding of everynight tensions and conflict.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12227842     DOI: 10.1080/0007131022000000572

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Sociol        ISSN: 0007-1315


  2 in total

1.  The relationship between alcohol and violence: population, contextual and individual research approaches.

Authors:  Kathryn Graham; Michael Livingston
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Rev       Date:  2011-09

2.  Behavioural indicators of motives for barroom aggression: implications for preventing bar violence.

Authors:  Kathryn Graham; Sharon Bernards; Samantha Wells; D Wayne Osgood; Antonia Abbey; Richard B Felson; Robert F Saltz
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Rev       Date:  2011-09
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.