Theatre system
The term Theatre system (or Theatrical system), refers to the dynamic network of activities and interactions that go into the making of theatre industry in a country, shaping the nature of each of the specific performances or theatre events taking place.
Contents
Origins of systemic thinking
Based on early sociological thinking about open systems (or systems theory)[1], the biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy (1901–1972)[2] developed a concept he called general systems theory[3]. These ideas were adopted by others in the 20th century, including people working in mathematics, psychology, biology, game theory and social network analysis, including Talcott Parsons and Niklas Luhmann, who used the approach in order to describe society.
It was first applied to literature and the arts by , **
The theatre as system
Starting from the creative activities of writers, performers, designers, directors, etc, through administrative and other basic and support activities, such as marketing, ticket-sales, agencies. It also includes external matters (censorship processes, copyrighting, publishing, sponsorship, etc). The notion is a simplified version of the more complex ideas espoused by general systems theory[].
Polysystem theory
A useful variation of this thinking is Itamar Even-Zohar's concept of polysystem theory[4], which evolved from his attempts at modelling and describing the interdependency of socio-cultural systems and explaining the complexity of culture within a single community and between communities. In his view such systems are heterogeneous, versatile and dynamic networks.
South African theatre as (poly)system
The idea of applying a systemic approach to the study of South African theatre was first explored by theatre sociologist and historian Temple Hauptfleisch in the 1980s. Adopting Even-Zohar's idea of a polysystem, he later explored the idea in a series of models, papers and articles, in which he sought to articulate an inter-disciplinary and encompassing view of complex dynamics active in the multi-cultural South African setting. These ideas have been most comprehensively articulated in his 1997 monograph Theatre and Society in South Africa: Reflections in a Fractured Mirror.
See also entries on matters such as Theatrical event, Performance, Production, Theatre tradition
Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systems_theory
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_system_(systems_theory)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_von_Bertalanffy
Hauptfleisch, Temple 1997. Theatre and Society in South Africa: Reflections in a Fractured Mirror. Pretoria: Van Schaik[5].
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