Ritual and Sacrifice in the Corrida
Probably no other Western tradition has greater force to deflect understanding and provoke aesthetic scrutiny than the Hispanic corrida, or bullfight. In Ritual and Sacrifice in the Corrida, Allen Josephs paints an accurate and intimate portrait of life in and around the world's most prestigious bullrings to demonstrate how and why the corrida remains a sacred and integral part of Hispanic culture.
Josephs' unromanticized account is the result of four seasons spent on the corrida circuit with Cesar Rincon, the most esteemed matador in Colombia. Following Rincon through Spain, France, and South America, through the highs and lows of his career, Josephs develops a close and privileged relationship with him and is able to reveal an insider's view of the bullfighter's life and of the Fiesta Brava ("Wild Feast") itself, never seen by the spectator.
Drawing on more than 30 years of personal participation in the culture of the Spanish Fiesta Brava, Josephs brings an intimate knowledge of taurine technique to his account. Over 150 photographs, most in full color, enhance the text. The reader is in the ring with Cesar Rincon, both visually and textually, through afternoons of great peril and of great triumph. Through this experience, Josephs conveys the deep, abiding--and ultimately mythic and religious--significance of such afternoons and why this ritual still flourishes today as it has for centuries. Allen Josephs is a world-renowned Hemingway scholar and past president of the Ernest Hemingway Foundation and Society. He has been a University Research Professor at the University of West Florida since 1986. Josephs has been awarded the George B Smith Arts & Letters Award by the National Association of Taurine Clubs.
6/18/2002. 448pp. 6 X 9.
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"Myth, ritual, and sacrifice--the corrida investigated from within."--Michael Wigram, author of 6 Toros 6 "Brilliant, flowing prose makes the often unknown and misunderstood spectacle of bullfighting comprehensible, vibrant and even impassioned to a general readership. . . . With this tremendous and impressive investigative work, Josephs' contribution to the true cause of bullfighting will be far greater than even Hemingway's Death in the Afternoon."--Muriel Feiner, author of La Mujer en El Mundo del Toro
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