Navigation dans la catégorie :

Vous êtes actuellement sur :

<< Retour
 DOMINGOS Nuno - Football and Colonialism. Body and Popular Culture in Urban Mozambique

Plus de vues

  •  DOMINGOS Nuno - Football and Colonialism. Body and Popular Culture in Urban Mozambique

DOMINGOS Nuno

Football and Colonialism. Body and Popular Culture in Urban Mozambique

Ohio University Press - Athens - 2017
ISBN: 9780821422625
342 p., 15 ill., avant-propos de Harry G. West - 6 x 9 in.

Disponibilité éditeur: Disponible chez l'éditeur.


L'Offre de Soumbala

Référence Etat de l'exemplaire Disponibilité Soumbala Prix Commander
X67587 livres neufs, brochés, à partir de: 5 à 8 jours
29,52 €
Chez Amazon

 In articles for the newspaper O Brado Africano in the mid-1950s, poet and journalist José Craveirinha described the ways in which the Mozambican football players in the suburbs of Lourenço Marques (now Maputo) adapted the European sport to their own expressive ends. Through gesture, footwork, and patois, they used what Craveirinha termed “malice”—or cunning—to negotiate their places in the colonial state. “These manifestations demand a vast study,” Craveirinha wrote, “which would lead to a greater knowledge of the black man, of his problems, of his clashes with European civilization, in short, to a thorough treatise of useful and instructive ethnography.”

 
In Football and Colonialism, Nuno Domingos accomplishes that study. Ambitious and meticulously researched, the work draws upon an array of primary sources, including newspapers, national archives, poetry and songs, and interviews with former footballers. Domingos shows how local performances and popular culture practices became sites of an embodied history of Mozambique. The work will break new ground for scholars of African history and politics, urban studies, popular culture, and gendered forms of domination and resistance.
Nuno Domingos is a research fellow at the Institute of Social Sciences of the University of Lisbon and a research associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies Food Studies Centre. A social anthropologist by training, his research concerns the history of Portuguese colonialism in Mozambique and of the Portuguese Estado Novo (1933–1974) through the study of cultural practices and consumptions.