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Gringa Mansa

Sunday, 31 August 2008

Photos of Dembe - traditional boxing in Nigeria

See slideshow here:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/08/africa_traditional_boxing_in_nigeria/html/1.stm
Posted by Sabrina Gledhill at 20:57

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THIS IS THE STORY OF HOW CAPOEIRA, THE AFRICAN-BRAZILIAN MARTIAL ART/DANCE, BECAME PART OF LIFE FOR A BRITISH WOMAN WHO NOW LIVES IN BRAZIL
It will be told in instalments - with a few interruptions to mention present-day events - so be sure to come back and read the next exciting chapter ;-)

Note: comments are fully moderated to exclude spammers, so they might not show up right away.

Sabrina (right) playing
berimbau at UCLA in the early 80s

What is Capoeira?

A martial art, a dance? More like a form of self-defence and offense camouflaged as a dance in the round. Enslaved Africans - chiefly people from the Bantu area of southwestern Africa and what is now Angola - brought a martial art used to win brides without paying a bride price to Brazil and adapted it to the harsh realities of forced labour. We now know it was originally called N'golo. Naturally, it was banned and practiced in secret - possibly in forest clearings (capoeiras). After Abolition in 1888, it was still outlawed and associated with criminal gangs. When the police rode up on their horses, the berimbau - an African musical bow that was added to the mix in Brazil - sounded out a warning (the rhythm of galloping hooves).
The Angola style was preserved and taught in Bahia by Mestre Pastinha. Finally, a dictator decided to legalise (or co-opt) Capoeira by authorising Mestre Bimba to develop the Regional style in the 1930s. Now we have two main forms: Capoeira Angola - slow, sly, close to the ground - and Capoeira Regional - high kicking, flashy, popular with tourists. There are also other styles and different varieties in other countries, but Capoeira - given its melding of musical and martial arts traditions and even its indigenous name (a Tupi word that means both 'clearing' and 'chicken coop') - is as uniquely Brazilian as it is African, which helps explain why it is fast gaining popularity around the world.

The Mestre and "Gringa Mansa"

The Mestre and "Gringa Mansa"
Sabrina playing berimbau alongside
João Grande in NYC in February 2007

Interesting links

  • Berimbau
  • FICA blog (in English)
  • FICA website
  • GCAP website
  • Capoeira Fort blog (in Portuguese)
  • Revista de História page on Capoeira (in Portuguese)
  • The Last Wrestlers (the book that inspired this blog)
  • The Zebra Dance (in Portuguese)

Video Bar

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My Amazon Shop

Capoeira: The History of the Afro-Brazilian Martial Art
Fighting for Honor
Capoeira and Candomble
The Last Wrestlers
Capoeira Angola music I
Capoeira Angola music II
Kindle 2

Blog Archive

  • ►  2009 (5)
    • ►  July (1)
      • Trailer: Mandinga in Colombia
    • ►  April (2)
      • Event in honour of Mestre Pastinha
      • Mestre Joao Grande Workshop in NYC
    • ►  February (2)
      • The Black Power of Capoeira
      • Celebrating Yemanjá Day
  • ▼  2008 (16)
    • ►  November (5)
      • Spreading the word about Capoeira and its roots
      • Mestres João Grande and Cobrinha
      • My last roda?
      • João Grande on Berimbau
      • João Grande - one of Capoeira's greatest "jazz sty...
    • ►  October (1)
      • Mestre Cobra Mansa (Cobrinha) & Jamaica
    • ►  September (3)
      • Back to 1987 - Jumping ship (part 2)
      • Nice to be included
    • ▼  August (1)
      • Photos of Dembe - traditional boxing in Nigeria
    • ►  July (3)
      • Nas on Colbert Report re Racism on Fox
      • Fox petition delivered
      • Capoeira joins Brazilian heritage list
    • ►  June (3)
      • Exhibition - VEM JOGAR MAIS EU, CAMARÁ
      • Documentary on Mestre Russo
      • Curso vai formar capoeiristas-educadores
  • ►  2007 (38)
    • ►  October (1)
      • A plug for a worthy book
    • ►  August (4)
      • Back to 1987 - Jumping ship (part 1)
      • International event at Capoeira Fort
      • Back to the present (with a jolt)
      • Training and more
    • ►  July (7)
      • Blog-to-blog
      • João Grande
      • More about Cobrinha
      • Moraes, Cobrinha and GCAP
      • "Jack of all trades, and master of none"
      • December 21, 1986
      • December 20, 1986
    • ►  June (10)
      • Wednesday, December 16, 1986
      • Monday, December 14, 1986
      • Salvador, Sunday, December 13, 1986
      • Rio, Thursday, December 10, 1986
      • Rio de Janeiro, Wednesday, December 9, 1986
      • Cobrina and Joao Grande in 1986
      • "Eu vou pra Bahia"*
      • Capoeira, California style
      • More musings on "race"
      • Interlude (part 2): Musings on "gender"*
    • ►  May (9)
      • Interlude (part 1): Musings on "race"*
      • Mestre João Grande
      • Learning the ginga and berimbau (not in that order...
      • Cobrinha - Master Angola stylist
      • "If only I knew Capoeira"
      • Catching the Capoeira bug
      • Video - Mestre Moraes
    • ►  April (7)