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Bouncer service work: emotional labour and flexible masculinity

Thomas Friis Søgaard (Centre for Alcohol and Drug Research, Psykologisk Institut,Aarhus Universitet, Aarhus, Denmark)
Jakob Krause-Jensen (School of Education, Aarhus Universitet, Copenhagen, Denmark)

Journal of Organizational Ethnography

ISSN: 2046-6749

Article publication date: 28 August 2019

Issue publication date: 2 March 2020

473

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explore how new policies and standards to professionalise nightclub bouncing along with customer-oriented service imperatives affect bouncers’ work practices and identities.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork among Danish bouncers and uses the concept of “emotional labour” and related ideas of “interactive service work” to explore how service imperatives play out at political/commercial and organisational levels and how such initiatives are negotiated by bouncers in their work practices.

Findings

Until recently, the nocturnal work of bouncers had been relatively unaffected by labour market service paradigms. This is now changing, as policy initiatives and the capitalist service economy colonise ever greater domains of the urban night and the work conducted here. We argue that trends towards professionalisation have landed bouncers in a double-bind situation, in which they are increasingly faced with competing and sometimes contradictory occupational imperatives requiring them both to “front up” effectively to unruly patrons and to project a service-oriented persona. We show how bouncers seek to cope with this precarious position by adopting a variety of strategies, such as resistance, partial acceptance and cultural re-interpretations of service roles.

Originality/value

While existing research on nightclub bouncers has primarily focussed on bouncers’ physical regulation of unruly guests, this paper provides a theoretical framework for understanding current policy ambitions to “domesticate” bouncers and shows how attempts to construct bouncers as civilised “service workers” is fraught with paradoxes and ambiguities.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors declare no conflict of interests. The research project and the writing of the article were funded by the Faculty of Arts and by the Centre of Alcohol and Drug Research, Aarhus University, Denmark.

Citation

Søgaard, T.F. and Krause-Jensen, J. (2020), "Bouncer service work: emotional labour and flexible masculinity", Journal of Organizational Ethnography, Vol. 9 No. 1, pp. 30-43. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOE-10-2018-0044

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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