ESAT

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{{{logo}}} Encyclopaedia of South African
Theatre, Film, Media and Performance
(ESAT)

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Founded by: Temple Hauptfleisch
Status: Active
Language: English
Edit mode: ByInvitation
Wiki engine: MediaWiki
Wiki license: Public Domain (generic)
"Public Domain (generic)" is not in the list of possible values (Custom license, Attribution to contributing authors, Copyright to contributing authors, Site retains copyright, WTFPL, Licence Art Libre, Open Content License, Apache License, BSD Documentation License, FreeBSD Documentation License, GNU Free Documentation License, GNU General Public License, GNU Lesser General Public License, Creative Commons Public Domain, Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication (CC0), Creative Commons Attribution, Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike, Proprietary license, Copyright to original source author, Fair use, Unknown license, Multi-license, No license, Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, Creative Commons Attribution No Derivative Works, Creative Commons Share-Alike, Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives, Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike, Public domain (generic)) for this property.
Main topic: Arts
Wiki size: 22,217 article pages see stats
wikiFactor: 42 info / verify

The Encyclopaedia of South African Theatre, Film, Media and Performance (ESAT) project was conceived as an interactive resource for researchers interested in the evolution, history and forms of performance and media in South Africa, and it is based on research originally undertaken by the Centre for South African Theatre Research under the auspices of, and with the support of, the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) between 1979 and 1987. In 1988 the research was transferred to, and continued at, the University of Stellenbosch by the Centre for Theatre and Performance Studies, with the support of the University's Division for Research Development, the former Centre for Science Development (CSD) and the National Research Foundation (NRF). The website was opened for public use in 2011.

The project is currently headed by Temple Hauptfleisch (founder, editor and project director of the undertaking), with Freddy Ogterop, Ivor Markman and Miriam Terblanche as assistant editors, while numerous contributors across the globe have helped in collating and writing the information since its first inception. It is published on the web with the assistance of the Drama Department (http://www.sun.ac.za/drama) and its former Centre for Theatre and Performance Studies, the J.S. Gericke Library and the division for Information Technology at the University of Stellenbosch (http://www.sun.ac.za/index.asp). The format of the work thus derives from the format used for the University of Stellenbosch's Libopedia project, and uses the same Wiki format and programmes.