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Based on eighteen months of intensive participant-observation,
"Ring of Liberation" offers both an in-depth description of
capoeira--a complex Afro-Brazilian martial art that combines feats
of great strength and athleticism with music and poetry--and a
pioneering synthetic approach to the analysis of complex cultural
performance.
Capoeira originated in early slave culture and is practiced widely
today by urban Brazilians and others. At once game, sport, mock
combat, and ritualized performance, it involves two players who
dance and "battle" within a ring of musicians and singers. Stunning
physical performances combine with music and poetry in a form as
expressive in movement as it is in word.
J. Lowell Lewis explores the convergence of form and content in
capoeira. The many components and characteristics of this elaborate
black art form--for example, competing genre frameworks and the
necessary fusion of multiple modes of expression--demand, Lewis
feels, to be given "body" as well as "voice." In response, he uses
Peircean semiotics and recent work in discourse and performance
theory to map the connections between physical, musical, and
linguistic play in capoeira and to reflect on the general relations
between semiotic systems and the creation and recording of cultural
meaning.
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