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Ring of Liberation: Deceptive Discourse in Brazilian Capoeira

Ring of Liberation: Deceptive Discourse in Brazilian Capoeira

List Price: $20.00
Your Price: $20.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Another biased account of Capoeira!
Review: Another biased account of Capoeira which lacks the scientific rigor to connect Capoeira with its African roots. Ring of Liberation, attempts to assert Capoeira as a Brazilian art form and strips it of its African roots. Lewis's basic premise traces Capoeira to samba circles in 19th century Brazil. It remains to be seen how Capoeira could develope its fighting elements through urban samba circles in Bahia. Lewis utilizes anthropological jargon to complicate the story of Capoeira, it seems to be a mask to hide his agenda. An agenda which seeks to undermine Capoeira as an empowering agent for its descendants (Africans in the Diaspora). Ring of Liberation should be praised as another book about Capoeira, but severly critisized for its biased nature and cultural disempowering approach!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Another biased account of Capoeira!
Review: Another biased account of Capoeira which lacks the scientific rigor to connect Capoeira with its African roots. Ring of Liberation, attempts to assert Capoeira as a Brazilian art form and strips it of its African roots. Lewis's basic premise traces Capoeira to samba circles in 19th century Brazil. It remains to be seen how Capoeira could develope its fighting elements through urban samba circles in Bahia. Lewis utilizes anthropological jargon to complicate the story of Capoeira, it seems to be a mask to hide his agenda. An agenda which seeks to undermine Capoeira as an empowering agent for its descendants (Africans in the Diaspora). Ring of Liberation should be praised as another book about Capoeira, but severly critisized for its biased nature and cultural disempowering approach!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: To date, the finest book on Capoeira in the English language
Review: Having played Capoeira for several years it has been a constant problem finding reliable historical and cultural reference. Not speaking Portuguese is a problem, because most books will be written in that language. This book was written by the author to fulfil his research requirements at the University of Chicago and was published by the U of C Press. it is exhaustively researched and candidly honest about both the history of Capoeira and it's modern role in Brazil. It also covers notable personalities who have practiced the style and goes into great detail regarding the music. No techniques are diagramed in this book, but capoeira techniques are very interperative and the only way to really learn them is to play, so the lack of pictures is not really a concern. An amusing sidebar is that this book is sold shrinkwrapped. this means that martial arts dorks who by it to practice pre-rehearsed moves then go out to say that they know Capoeira find themselves out of l! uck when they get home and take the wrapping off. I think that is funny.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: To date, the finest book on Capoeira in the English language
Review: Having played Capoeira for several years it has been a constant problem finding reliable historical and cultural reference. Not speaking Portuguese is a problem, because most books will be written in that language. This book was written by the author to fulfil his research requirements at the University of Chicago and was published by the U of C Press. it is exhaustively researched and candidly honest about both the history of Capoeira and it's modern role in Brazil. It also covers notable personalities who have practiced the style and goes into great detail regarding the music. No techniques are diagramed in this book, but capoeira techniques are very interperative and the only way to really learn them is to play, so the lack of pictures is not really a concern. An amusing sidebar is that this book is sold shrinkwrapped. this means that martial arts dorks who by it to practice pre-rehearsed moves then go out to say that they know Capoeira find themselves out of l! uck when they get home and take the wrapping off. I think that is funny.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: DAMN IT, IT'S GOOD!
Review: I found that this is a VERY true to actual accounts of Capoeira. I've been practising Capoeira myself for a while now, and this book reflex the views that I, and most of my Groups shares. It would seem very one-sided, but you NEED to be a Capoeirista to fully understand the concpts and ideas and history of this book. To me, A VERY GOOD BOOK ON WHAT I BELIEVE

PEACE

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Biased, perhaps, but not an "agenda of subjugation"
Review: I used this book, along with a host of other books, transcripts, articles and recordings of capoeira to complete my undergraduate thesis in anthropology. Regarding an earlier post here, i don't think that Lewis was trying to necessarily undermine the black African origins of capoeira, but rather his experiences with capoeiristas around Brazil led him to focus on the wholly Brazilian cultural aspects (samba, too, is a cultural phenomenon with roots in Africa). While i do belive that his treatment of the African origins of capoeira were sketchy, this is to be expected as the data on capoeira's African origins is not very clear, and to the best of my knowledge is to date a matter of conjecture. The only truth regarding that matter is that capoeira did come from Africa with the (primarily West African) slaves and developed into modern capoeira while in Brazil. This last part, "in Brazil", is something that I stress in the sense that although many Caribbean and South American nations received slaves from the same parts of Africa, only Brazil's slaves and mulattos produced capoeira.

More to the point of this type of entry: the book is a definite must-read for anyone (capoeirista or not) interested in the modern expressions of african diasporan culture.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Biased, perhaps, but not an "agenda of subjugation"
Review: I used this book, along with a host of other books, transcripts, articles and recordings of capoeira to complete my undergraduate thesis in anthropology. Regarding an earlier post here, i don't think that Lewis was trying to necessarily undermine the black African origins of capoeira, but rather his experiences with capoeiristas around Brazil led him to focus on the wholly Brazilian cultural aspects (samba, too, is a cultural phenomenon with roots in Africa). While i do belive that his treatment of the African origins of capoeira were sketchy, this is to be expected as the data on capoeira's African origins is not very clear, and to the best of my knowledge is to date a matter of conjecture. The only truth regarding that matter is that capoeira did come from Africa with the (primarily West African) slaves and developed into modern capoeira while in Brazil. This last part, "in Brazil", is something that I stress in the sense that although many Caribbean and South American nations received slaves from the same parts of Africa, only Brazil's slaves and mulattos produced capoeira.

More to the point of this type of entry: the book is a definite must-read for anyone (capoeirista or not) interested in the modern expressions of african diasporan culture.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A nicely writen book about a misterious sport
Review: This book brings a good deal of information on the history of capoeira and on the phylosophy behind it. After a few years practicing it, I finally had in my hands some background to understand some of the the principles, and part of the history of this sport. The author apparently has had contact with many mestres, both in Brazil and in the US, and has done quite an intensive survey on historical records, to get to his conclusions. Furthermore, he analyzes capoeira under an anthropological light, giving a scientific taste to the book that we don't find in most publications about it (although I don't agree with some of his interpretations). My only complain is that I would like to see more figures in the book, which would make it more interesting to people with less knowledge on the subject.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Capoeira at the border to Brazil.
Review: Yes, I think this book deserves five stars, because it gave me insight; both professional and personal. Training Capoeira for seven years (including two trips to Brazil for the same reason) has taken me to the strange border between two cultures: my own Danish average European socio-historic background, and the Afro-brazilian transcultural vegetation in which Capoeira flourishes. Alouring - and as Lewis notes: deceptive, Capoeira as a performance reveals conflictuality on the Afro-brazilian social and historical level, which differs from the writers own background; in this case quite similar to my case. The task of relating to this difference is met by Ring of Liberation through respect of the ontic 'way' of the capoeirista, and at the same time maintaining an epistemic approach. What this means, is that Ring of Liberation can be read by the intellectual layman as well as the non-brazilian capoeira enthusiast, as a guide to experiences already had or about to happen...great stuff!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Capoeira at the border to Brazil.
Review: Yes, I think this book deserves five stars, because it gave me insight; both professional and personal. Training Capoeira for seven years (including two trips to Brazil for the same reason) has taken me to the strange border between two cultures: my own Danish average European socio-historic background, and the Afro-brazilian transcultural vegetation in which Capoeira flourishes. Alouring - and as Lewis notes: deceptive, Capoeira as a performance reveals conflictuality on the Afro-brazilian social and historical level, which differs from the writers own background; in this case quite similar to my case. The task of relating to this difference is met by Ring of Liberation through respect of the ontic 'way' of the capoeirista, and at the same time maintaining an epistemic approach. What this means, is that Ring of Liberation can be read by the intellectual layman as well as the non-brazilian capoeira enthusiast, as a guide to experiences already had or about to happen...great stuff!


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