Children of the night By Maria Tan Why oh why can’t you just accept it? I’m a raver, not a f***ing drug addict! Yeah that’s right I do Es, I get plastered. Leave me alone, it’s my life, I think it’s sorted (DJ Hixxy & MC Storm, 2001).
Once an ‘underground’ youth subculture of the Gen X and Cold Gen Y age bracket in the 80s and 90s, the electronic music created by digital technologies that spawned the ‘rave’ scene and ‘dance’ culture still continues to assert its influence on youth culture and identity, on a global scale, to the present day.
The fandom created by this rave culture is evident in the continuous evolution of cultural, performative and local dimensions (de Kloet & van Zoonen, 2007) surrounding this rave and club culture community. Centred around a broad classification of ‘dance’ music with its many mutating sub genres, the idolisation of local and international DJs, as well as drugs, jargon, fashion, dance styles, and ideologies; the fans within this community discuss and ascribe to cultural elements which are neither static nor distinct for all ‘ravers’ as “rave, for the majority, is a ‘weekend’ culture of hedonism, sensation and escape” (Goulding et al 2002, p.263) that has now spanned two decades of youthful participantion throughout Australia and around the world.
Fans in this community can be actively seen representing their raver identities in the Glowsticking.com (GS.C) website <UUUhttp://www.glowsticking.com/>, dedicated to a particular prop used in the performative dance styles of rave culture, called ‘glowsticks’.
GS.C community members construct personalised profiles with the opportunity to blog, link to their existing websites, participate in various forum and chat discussions extending to Twitter and Facebook, and submit articles, photos and videos relating to rave/club culture. This allows the fan to express a representation of their identity online through a variety of textual and audio Maria Tan
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visual forms with others in the cultural community. For example, in the profile of a senior GS.C member, *+*Beautiful Starlite*+*, she states her interests in the ‘Personal Info’ section using jargon synonymous with rave culture:
Mixing 1 Trance2, Music Junkie (I love most EDM Genere's along with other Genere's) [sic], Learning new ways of Freehanding3, Living Life To The Fullest, Loving As much As I Can, Laughing Till It Hurts, Smiling, and Just Being Me! P.L.U.R.R4.o0o})i({o0o
Within the gallery and article submissions sections, GS.C members are able to upload personally created dancing tutorials, performative audio, videos and photos of themselves, friends and DJs at raves/clubs, and reinforce their online raver identities through attending GS.C’s ‘meet ups’ with others from the community, the outcome of which is documented on the GS.C website through photos and videos further establishing social proof of the community members’ cultural activism.
The online ‘narrative’ space GS.C provides, and the ‘techno’ music central to the performative rave culture are literal examples of how digital technology has shaped youth identity and social practices. This technological acculturation is noted by White & Wyn (2008) of Willis’ (2003) work:
“Young people creatively respond to electronically produced cultural products in ways that surprise their makers, ‘finding meanings and identities never meant to be there’.”
1
Mixing refers to the audio mixing of various sound sources performed by a DJ to produce the effect of a homogenous and undisrupted sequential sound. 2 Trance is a sub genre of dance music. 3 Freehanding refers to a style of dance using glowsticks. 4 P.L.U.R. is an acronym within rave culture that stands for Peace, Love, Unity and Respect.
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References Articles and Tutorials 2008, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/articles-and-tutorials.html>. *+*Beautiful Starlite*+* - Viewing Profile n.d., Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/Beautiful-Starlite-m10412.html>. Collaboration and Meetup Videos 2009, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/Collaboration-Meetup-Videos-f100.html>. de Kloet, J & van Zoonen, L 2007, ‘Fan Culture – Performing Difference’, in E Devereux (ed.), Media studies: Key issues and debates, Sage, London, pp. 323-341. Downloads 2009, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/downloads.html>. DJ Hixxy & MC Storm 2001, Just accept it, audio recording on 12” vinyl, UK, Raver Baby. Gallery 2009, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/gallery.html>. Glowsticking.com Community 2009, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/>. Glowsticking.com Facebook Group 2009, Facebook, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2204644181>. Glowsticking.com Facebook Page 2009, Facebook, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.facebook.com/pages/Glowstickingcom/14466462188>. Goulding C, Shankar A & Elliot, R 2002, ‘Working Weeks, Rave Weekends: Identity Fragmentation and the Emergence of New Communities’, Consumption, Markets and Culture, vol. 5, no. 4, pp. 261–284. Media Artbox: Member Photos, Media & Videos 2009, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/MediaArtbox-Member-Photos-Media-and-Videosf51.html>. Selene (glowstickingcom) on Twitter 2009, Twitter, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://twitter.com/glowstickingcom>.
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Videos and Media 2008, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/videos-media.html>. Videos and Tutorials 2009, Glowsticking.com, viewed 30 March 2009, <http://www.glowsticking.com/forums/Glowsticking-Videos-Tutorials-f105.html>. White R, & Wyn, J 2008, â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Youth in a digital ageâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; in R White & J Wyn, Youth and society: exploring the social dynamics of youth experience, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, pp. 210-222.
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