Bullfighting

Regular price €56.99
A01=John McCormick
Author_John McCormick
bravos
Bregar
bullfight technique analysis
Category=ATXZ
Category=ATY
Category=DS
Category=JBFU
Category=NHT
Chest Pass
corridas
De Frente
De Toros
Devious
El Ruedo
engl
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Golden Bull
Good Life
Hold
ico
ish
La Suerte
Las Ventas
Left Horn
los
Love Lies Bleeding
matador training
McCormick John
mex
Modern Corrida
Mont De Marsan
moral philosophy of sport
performance anthropology
Plays Back
Plaza
Por Alto
publ
Rancho Seco
ritual symbolism
ruedo
Spanish cultural studies
Sunny
Sunny Side
Superb
Superimposing
toros
Toros Bravos
twentieth century Spain
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765806574
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 1999
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Ernest Hemingway, best-known to layman and aficionado alike, in his fiction described bullfighting, or toreo, as a cross between romantic risk and a drunken party, or as an elaborate substitute for war, ending in wounds or death. Although his descriptions of the "beauty"in toreo are lyrical, they are short on imaginative creation of how such beauty, through techniques and discipline, comes about. Hemingway may have sculpted a personal mystique of toreo but, in the opinion of some, he ignored or slighted the full, unique nature of the subject.

In Bullfighting: Art, Technique, and Spanish Society John McCormick sorts through the complexities of toreo, to suggest the aesthetic, social, and moral dimensions of an art that is geographically limited, but universal when seen in round. While having felt the attraction of Hemingway's approach, McCormick knew that he was being seduced by elements that had little to do with toreo. To try to right Hemingway's distortions, he named the first edition of this book The Complete Aficionado, but then realized that the volume was directed at more than just the spectator: BullFighting is written from the point of view of the torerro, as opposed to the usual spectator's impressions and enthusiasm. With the help of a retired matador de toros, Mario Sevilla Mascarenas, who taught McCormick the rudiments of toreo as well as the emotions and discipline essential to survival, the authors rescue 'toreo from romantic cliches. They probe the anatomy of the matador's training and technique, provide a past-and-present survey of the traditions of the corrida, and furnish dramatic portraits of such famous figures as Manolete, Joselito, Belmonte, and Ordonez.

Here then is an informed analysis and critique of the origins and myths of toreo and a survey of the novels it has inspired. Defending the faith in a lively as well as clear and discerning manner, this volume provides a committed and vivid approach to the rich history, ritual, and symbolism of the bullfight as it currently exists.