275 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This is the first book to explore martial arts and combat sports in Latin societies. Covering well-known and rarely studied forms of fighting systems, it considers how the schools of thought, organisation, and stylistics of martial arts can shine new light on the culture, history, and social issues of Latin countries and postcolonial societies.

    Featuring the work of leading international martial arts scholars from around the world – some of whom are experienced practitioners, some apprentices, and some cultural critics of the martial arts – the book adopts a multidisciplinary approach, including anthropology, cultural and media studies, history, physical education, and sociology. It includes fascinating and in-depth case studies of topics as diverse as Capoeira and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, martial arts in urban Argentina, traditional wrestling forms from the Amazon region and Spain, boxe popolare in Italy, armed combat in the Philippines, and women’s wrestling in Spain.

    This book is fascinating reading for anybody with an interest in the sociology, history, culture or politics of sport, exercise, or physical culture as well as Latin American, European, or Asian studies or any of the diverse and broad traditions of martial arts.

    Part I: From the Past to the Present: The Evolutionary Journey of Martial Arts

    1. Tracing Historical and Kinetic Connections between Filipino and European Martial Arts

    Rachelle U. Peneyra and Felipe P. Jocano Jr.

    2. The Evolution of Leonese Wrestling: From Tradition to a Vernacular Sport

    José Antonio Robles-Tascón and Carlos Gutiérrez-García

    3. Diverse Dimensions of Brazilian Martial Arts and Combat Sports: Exploring History, Sociocultural Impact, and Educational Integration

    Mariana Simões Pimentel Gomes, Rafael Carvalho Da Silva Mocarzel, Lívia De Paula Machado Pasqua, Bruno Avelar-Rosa, and Walter Roberto Correia

    4. Canarian Wrestling (1840–2023): From the Guanche That We Hold within to the Peasant That We Must Exorcise

    Víctor Lorenzo Alonso Delgado

    Part II: Culture in Combat: Martial Arts as a Reflection of Cultural Identity in the Latin World

    5. Luchadores, Monsters, and Karate Killers: The Early Reception of East Asian Martial Arts in Mexican Cinema

    Eduardo González de la Fuente

    6. Kendo, Culture, and (Dis)Continuities: The Chilean and Spanish Way of the Sword – An (Auto)Ethnography of Kendo Transculturation

    Sebastián Francisco Chávez Hernández

    7. Marajoara Wrestling, the Amazonian Rural Martial Art: Its Culture, Its People

    Leonardo Fernandes Coelho, Cristiano Roque Antunes Barreira, and Fabio José Cardias-Gomes

    8. Is This Where They Teach the Philosophy of "Tai Chi"?: A Look at the Transformations of Chinese Martial Arts in Argentina

    Marcos Buccellato

    9. Organisational Development of Judo in Brazil: Acculturation and Internationalisation of a Traditional Japanese Sport

    Gustavo Goulart Braga Maçaneiro and Emerson Franchini

    Part III: Teaching and Learning: The Educational Legacy of Martial Arts in the Latin Context

    10. The Educational Paradigm of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu: From Self-Defence to Cognitive Development

    Carlos Aurelio Andreucci

    11. Capoeira Pedagogy and Bodily Knowledge in Mexico City: Me diga quem foi seu Mestre?

    David Sebastian Contreras Islas, Erick Serna Luna, and Sergio González Varela

    12. Martial Arts and Combat Sports at the Instituto Superior de Educación Física: Education of the Body and Technique

    Bruno Mora, Gastón Meneses, and Javier Castagnino

    Part IV: Current Challenges: Martial Arts in the Latin Social Context

    13. Representation of Women in Wrestling: "Fighting" against Industry Practices and Stereotypes

    Patricia Rivera Robles

    14. The Changing Sensitivity to Violence in MMA: A Case Study from Spain

    Raúl Sánchez-García

    15. Identity and Citizenship in Boxing: The Journey of Pamela Malvina Noutcho Sawa

    Elisa Virgili and Lorenzo Pedrini

    Part V: Martial Arts without Borders: Globalisation in the Latin Context

    16. Capoeira and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu: Race, Movement, and Cultural Exchange in Brazilian Martial Arts

    Thabata Castelo Branco Telles and Cristiano Roque Antunes Barreira

    17. Power Dynamics in Gendered Sports Karate: Inclusivity and Hierarchies

    Fabiana Turelli, Alexandre Fernandez Vaz, and David Kirk

    18. Taekwondo at the Intersection of Inequalities, Disability, and Production of Futures: Red Belt, Black Tag

    Henrike Neuhaus and Cintia Schwamberger

    Biography

    Augusto Rembrandt Rodríguez-Sánchez is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Physical Education and Sport, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain. His research interests are physical education, martial arts, and combat sports, as well as social aspects related to the practice of physical and sporting activity.

    Joaquín Piedra is a Senior Lecturer at the Universidad de Sevilla, Spain. He is head of the Critical Approach on Sport (CASport) research group and a specialist in the analysis of sport from a gender perspective. He has published on masculinities, gender, and coeducation in sport and physical education, and he is a Member of the National Network on LGBTIQ+ on Physical Education and Sport.

    George Jennings is a Senior Lecturer in Sport Sociology at Cardiff Metropolitan University, Wales, UK. His research is mainly focused on the relationships between martial arts cultures, pedagogies, and philosophies. His research interests include gender and masculinity, the body and embodiment, ethnicity and nationalism, religion and spirituality, and health and pedagogy.