迈克尔-麦金尼著的《市场经济中的戏剧》(评论)

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER
Alex Ferrone
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In the five chapters that follow, McKinnie gathers case studies that reveal a theatre industry increasingly taking up the mantle of the “mixed economy”—i.e., the practice of “combin[ing] economic efficiency with social security, while promoting liberal democracy”—a shift that has coincided with the decline of center-left social democratic politics while “the tools of the welfare state have been used to regulate ever more closely the lives of citizens rather than the operations of markets” (2). The book covers the late 1990s to the present day, a period that McKinnie identifies as a “key transitional phase” in the Western political economy, between “the ascendancy, and then unravelling, of the centre-left ‘Third Way’ and the subsequent emergence, and then entrenchment, of the age of austerity (with the 2008 financial crisis as the linchpin connecting them)” (4).</p> <p>McKinnie’s central argument is that the theatre is not merely a subject of the political economy but an active agent and performer of political economy itself. What makes his analysis so compelling is his sober, even-handed approach: he avoids those sometimes uncritical maneuvers—not uncommon in our field—that romanticize the theatre by glossing over its more politically ambiguous practices. He points out, for instance, that the production of theatrical ephemera dovetails rather neatly with a neoliberal labor market whose output has become increasingly immaterial, wondering if “theatre—as a key player in the creative industries—has helped exacerbate the defects of an economy that speculates rather than produces actual things” (5). The theatre, ultimately, “is neither heroically resistant nor bluntly instrumental—it is a much more complicated picture than that” (23).</p> <p>This ambiguity is vertebral to McKinnie’s book: the theatrical political economies he discusses reveal that the theatre is able successfully to “capitalise upon the processes of marketisation, while resolving (or at least managing) the social antagonisms that marketisation leaves in its wake” (6). Part of his methodology involves widening the scope of what constitutes the economic. For this reason, so-called economics plays—David Hare’s <em>The Power of Yes</em>, Lucy Prebble’s <em>Enron</em>, Caryl Churchill’s <em>Serious Money</em>—are not the focus of McKinnie’s study. He explains that the genre “can sometimes treat the economy . . . as something that is external to theatre rather than something in which theatre is deeply imbricated,” an angle that ultimately “contrast[s] an ostensibly disordered and amoral political economy with an eminently sensible and incorruptible theatre” (11–12). In his book, McKinnie gives no such free passes.</p> <p>In the first chapter, he offers a reading of the blocking notes from a 2012 West End revival of Michael Frayn’s <em>Noises Off</em> and makes a compelling case for blocking as an industrial practice that reveals “the nexus of labour relations on which much theatrical production today has come to depend” (24)—after all, what blocking and its notation demonstrate is theatre’s ability to “reproduce its labour power over time and space efficiently while maintaining managerial discipline” (37). McKinnie extends this reappraisal of the theatre’s productive capacity in chapter 2, where he suggests new metrics for theatrical productivity that move away from the conventional view that the “good” produced by theatre is the show itself: “Instead of focusing on theatre’s labour process, and highlighting what happens onstage, what if we pay more attention to forms of productivity generated by other parts of its infrastructure?” (25). He looks to the brutalist architecture of the varied arts venues in London’s <strong>[End Page 122]</strong> South Bank as an example of “fixed capital” (61), their (literal) concreteness “increasingly reassuring in a financialised urban economy predicated on flows of capital” (76).</p> <p>Where these first two chapters consider the national and even global dimensions of political economy, chapters 3 and 4 zoom in on local case studies (though no less applicable to broader contexts). 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Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021; pp. 203. <p>In his lucid and insightful book <em>Theatre in Market Economies</em>, Michael McKinnie pulls no punches, something immediately evident in his pithy opening sentence: “Keynes was wrong” (1). In the five chapters that follow, McKinnie gathers case studies that reveal a theatre industry increasingly taking up the mantle of the “mixed economy”—i.e., the practice of “combin[ing] economic efficiency with social security, while promoting liberal democracy”—a shift that has coincided with the decline of center-left social democratic politics while “the tools of the welfare state have been used to regulate ever more closely the lives of citizens rather than the operations of markets” (2). The book covers the late 1990s to the present day, a period that McKinnie identifies as a “key transitional phase” in the Western political economy, between “the ascendancy, and then unravelling, of the centre-left ‘Third Way’ and the subsequent emergence, and then entrenchment, of the age of austerity (with the 2008 financial crisis as the linchpin connecting them)” (4).</p> <p>McKinnie’s central argument is that the theatre is not merely a subject of the political economy but an active agent and performer of political economy itself. What makes his analysis so compelling is his sober, even-handed approach: he avoids those sometimes uncritical maneuvers—not uncommon in our field—that romanticize the theatre by glossing over its more politically ambiguous practices. He points out, for instance, that the production of theatrical ephemera dovetails rather neatly with a neoliberal labor market whose output has become increasingly immaterial, wondering if “theatre—as a key player in the creative industries—has helped exacerbate the defects of an economy that speculates rather than produces actual things” (5). The theatre, ultimately, “is neither heroically resistant nor bluntly instrumental—it is a much more complicated picture than that” (23).</p> <p>This ambiguity is vertebral to McKinnie’s book: the theatrical political economies he discusses reveal that the theatre is able successfully to “capitalise upon the processes of marketisation, while resolving (or at least managing) the social antagonisms that marketisation leaves in its wake” (6). Part of his methodology involves widening the scope of what constitutes the economic. For this reason, so-called economics plays—David Hare’s <em>The Power of Yes</em>, Lucy Prebble’s <em>Enron</em>, Caryl Churchill’s <em>Serious Money</em>—are not the focus of McKinnie’s study. He explains that the genre “can sometimes treat the economy . . . as something that is external to theatre rather than something in which theatre is deeply imbricated,” an angle that ultimately “contrast[s] an ostensibly disordered and amoral political economy with an eminently sensible and incorruptible theatre” (11–12). 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He looks to the brutalist architecture of the varied arts venues in London’s <strong>[End Page 122]</strong> South Bank as an example of “fixed capital” (61), their (literal) concreteness “increasingly reassuring in a financialised urban economy predicated on flows of capital” (76).</p> <p>Where these first two chapters consider the national and even global dimensions of political economy, chapters 3 and 4 zoom in on local case studies (though no less applicable to broader contexts). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 迈克尔-麦金尼(Michael McKinnie)著《市场经济中的戏剧》(Theatre in Market Economies),亚历克斯-费罗内(Alex Ferrone)译。作者:迈克尔-麦金尼。戏剧与表演理论》。剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2021 年;第 203 页。迈克尔-麦金尼在其《市场经济中的戏剧》一书中观点鲜明、见解独到,从他精炼的开篇语中便可一目了然:"凯恩斯错了"(1)。在接下来的五章中,麦金尼收集了大量案例研究,揭示了戏剧产业越来越多地披上了 "混合经济 "的外衣--即 "将经济效率与社会保障结合起来,同时促进自由民主 "的做法--这一转变与中左翼社会民主政治的衰落相吻合,而 "福利国家的工具被越来越多地用于调节公民的生活而非市场的运作"(2)。本书涵盖了 20 世纪 90 年代末至今,麦金尼将这一时期视为西方政治经济的 "关键过渡阶段",即 "中左翼'第三条道路'的崛起、随后的解体,以及随后紧缩时代的出现、随后的巩固(2008 年金融危机是连接两者的关键)"(4)。麦金尼的核心论点是,戏剧不仅仅是政治经济学的主体,而是政治经济学本身的积极推动者和表演者。他的分析之所以如此引人入胜,是因为他采用了冷静、公平的方法:他避免了那些有时不加批判的手法--这在我们的领域中并不罕见--这种手法将戏剧浪漫化,掩盖了其在政治上较为模糊的实践。例如,他指出,戏剧短片的制作与新自由主义劳动力市场相当契合,而新自由主义劳动力市场的产出变得越来越非物质化,他怀疑 "戏剧作为创意产业的重要参与者,是否加剧了投机经济的缺陷,而不是生产实际的东西"(5)。归根结底,戏剧 "既不是英雄式的反抗,也不是直截了当的工具--它的情况要复杂得多"(23)。这种模糊性是麦金尼这本书的灵魂所在:他所讨论的戏剧政治经济学揭示了戏剧能够成功地 "利用市场化进程,同时解决(或至少管理)市场化所带来的社会对立"(6)。他的方法论之一是扩大经济的范围。因此,所谓的经济剧--大卫-黑尔(David Hare)的《是的力量》(The Power of Yes)、露西-普雷布尔(Lucy Prebble)的《安然》(Enron)、卡里尔-丘吉尔(Caryl Churchill)的《严肃的金钱》(Serious Money)--并不是麦金尼研究的重点。他解释说,该流派 "有时会将经济......视为戏剧之外的东西,而不是戏剧深深融入其中的东西",这一角度最终 "将表面上混乱无序、不道德的政治经济与非常明智、廉洁的戏剧形成对比"(11-12)。麦金尼在书中并没有给出这样的免费通行证。在第一章中,他解读了 2012 年在伦敦西区重新上演的迈克尔-弗拉恩(Michael Frayn)的《喧哗》(Noises Off)中的封箱说明,并提出了令人信服的理由,说明封箱是一种工业实践,揭示了 "当今许多戏剧制作所依赖的劳动关系的纽带"(24)--毕竟,封箱及其说明所展示的是戏剧 "在维持管理纪律的同时,在时间和空间上有效复制其劳动能力 "的能力(37)。麦金尼在第二章中延伸了这一对剧院生产能力的重新评估,提出了新的衡量剧院生产力的标准,摆脱了剧院生产的 "好东西 "就是演出本身的传统观点:他说:"与其关注剧院的劳动过程,强调舞台上发生的一切,不如更多地关注剧院基础设施的其他部分所产生的生产力形式"(25)。(25).他将伦敦南岸(South Bank)各种艺术场馆的野蛮主义建筑视为 "固定资本 "的典范(61),其(字面意义上的)具体性 "在以资本流动为前提的金融化城市经济中越来越令人放心"(76)。前两章考虑了政治经济学的国家甚至全球层面,而第三章和第四章则放大了地方案例研究(尽管同样适用于更广泛的背景)。第 3 章...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Theatre in Market Economies by Michael McKinnie (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Theatre in Market Economies by Michael McKinnie
  • Alex Ferrone
THEATRE IN MARKET ECONOMIES. By Michael McKinnie. Theatre and Performance Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021; pp. 203.

In his lucid and insightful book Theatre in Market Economies, Michael McKinnie pulls no punches, something immediately evident in his pithy opening sentence: “Keynes was wrong” (1). In the five chapters that follow, McKinnie gathers case studies that reveal a theatre industry increasingly taking up the mantle of the “mixed economy”—i.e., the practice of “combin[ing] economic efficiency with social security, while promoting liberal democracy”—a shift that has coincided with the decline of center-left social democratic politics while “the tools of the welfare state have been used to regulate ever more closely the lives of citizens rather than the operations of markets” (2). The book covers the late 1990s to the present day, a period that McKinnie identifies as a “key transitional phase” in the Western political economy, between “the ascendancy, and then unravelling, of the centre-left ‘Third Way’ and the subsequent emergence, and then entrenchment, of the age of austerity (with the 2008 financial crisis as the linchpin connecting them)” (4).

McKinnie’s central argument is that the theatre is not merely a subject of the political economy but an active agent and performer of political economy itself. What makes his analysis so compelling is his sober, even-handed approach: he avoids those sometimes uncritical maneuvers—not uncommon in our field—that romanticize the theatre by glossing over its more politically ambiguous practices. He points out, for instance, that the production of theatrical ephemera dovetails rather neatly with a neoliberal labor market whose output has become increasingly immaterial, wondering if “theatre—as a key player in the creative industries—has helped exacerbate the defects of an economy that speculates rather than produces actual things” (5). The theatre, ultimately, “is neither heroically resistant nor bluntly instrumental—it is a much more complicated picture than that” (23).

This ambiguity is vertebral to McKinnie’s book: the theatrical political economies he discusses reveal that the theatre is able successfully to “capitalise upon the processes of marketisation, while resolving (or at least managing) the social antagonisms that marketisation leaves in its wake” (6). Part of his methodology involves widening the scope of what constitutes the economic. For this reason, so-called economics plays—David Hare’s The Power of Yes, Lucy Prebble’s Enron, Caryl Churchill’s Serious Money—are not the focus of McKinnie’s study. He explains that the genre “can sometimes treat the economy . . . as something that is external to theatre rather than something in which theatre is deeply imbricated,” an angle that ultimately “contrast[s] an ostensibly disordered and amoral political economy with an eminently sensible and incorruptible theatre” (11–12). In his book, McKinnie gives no such free passes.

In the first chapter, he offers a reading of the blocking notes from a 2012 West End revival of Michael Frayn’s Noises Off and makes a compelling case for blocking as an industrial practice that reveals “the nexus of labour relations on which much theatrical production today has come to depend” (24)—after all, what blocking and its notation demonstrate is theatre’s ability to “reproduce its labour power over time and space efficiently while maintaining managerial discipline” (37). McKinnie extends this reappraisal of the theatre’s productive capacity in chapter 2, where he suggests new metrics for theatrical productivity that move away from the conventional view that the “good” produced by theatre is the show itself: “Instead of focusing on theatre’s labour process, and highlighting what happens onstage, what if we pay more attention to forms of productivity generated by other parts of its infrastructure?” (25). He looks to the brutalist architecture of the varied arts venues in London’s [End Page 122] South Bank as an example of “fixed capital” (61), their (literal) concreteness “increasingly reassuring in a financialised urban economy predicated on flows of capital” (76).

Where these first two chapters consider the national and even global dimensions of political economy, chapters 3 and 4 zoom in on local case studies (though no less applicable to broader contexts). Chapter 3...

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来源期刊
THEATRE JOURNAL
THEATRE JOURNAL THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.
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