Talk:Capoeira/Archive 1
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Archive 1 |
Removed annying animated GIF that doesn't add much and is distracting when trying to read
This GIF reallz dows distract while reading. I would also suggest removing it as it is still there. I will do so hoping i am not violating any rules. -(Unsigned) User:84.172.93.172 (talk)
- You're not violating rules by suggesting it. ^_^ Heck, you wouldn't be violating rules by editing the article to remove it. Be bold, and all. However, I suspect that people might object. Personally, I think the ginga one fits in nicely because it's very representative of Capoeira. The Au, maybe less so. -Fuzzy (talk) 19:38, 20 April 2008 (UTC)
- You're distracted while others aren't, so distraction of one's is not criterion to remove anything (nor others distraction also). I vote to keep any animations, specially animations regarding the ginga (a basic and important movement). —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr. Nighttime (talk • contribs) 13:19, 30 June 2010 (UTC)
Wikipedia:List_of_Wikipedians_by_martial_art add yourself!
Wikipedia:List_of_Wikipedians_by_martial_art
test —Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.83.81.61 (talk) 01:25, 8 September 2009 (UTC)
Reference lacking citation
It was originated by Nigerian or Angolan ethnic groups where members fought with music and the winner won a partner, usually female.
First time I read about such reference, can anyone verify this? I've moved it here pending citation. Tartaruga 13:06, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
Capoeira Ashanti
- Capoeira Ashnti (also known as Asante) is derived from the Ashanti tribe of Western Africa and Maroons in Jamaica.In 1966 the Jamaican Maroons defeated the British using capoeira adapted to suit jungle and mountainous conditions.Capoeira Ashanti relys on swift movement and constant awarness, the use of knives or samll swords was also adapted. For the Ashanti tribe in Afirca and the Maroons in Jamiaca, Capoeira Ashanti has become a way of life.
Anyone to comment about the variant mentioned above? I've never heard of this variant before and would like to get a valid cite before including it in the main article. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 60.50.250.29 (talk) 09:39, 23 February 2007 (UTC).
Proposed pruning of Music and The game sub-sections
Move to it's own pages? The Capoeira music article needs to be improved, suggest taking the bulk of the content from the capoeira article to the music article and leaving behind a summary. Will add summary for the Maculele and Puxada de rede subsections soon. Tartaruga 16:04, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
This is going to be a REALLY UNPOPULAR OPINION, but I don't think Brazilian Capoeira is a MARTIAL ART!!!! This needs to be addressed more thoroughly. IT IS A SPORT and a GAME, loosely based on martial art. As long as the basis for the game is not attacking or subduing, but only athletic feats, and dance-like moves, it is not a Martial Art. It may be based on an Angolan Martial Art, and it may have secretly been used to practice this Angolan Martial Art. While many Asian Martial Arts have also become sports and are competitive, Its very clear these are primarily geared towards combat- subduing, injuring or even killing an opponent. The issues of "Capoeira Masters" and "Schools" is very much related to the fact that these are more like games and less like combat. I also think this is one of the reasons for the Gracies success- Capoeira was not a combat oriented martial art in Brazil, and the Gracies filled this void. If anyone has information contradicting this view, especially primary info translated from Portuguese, it should be put right in the beginning, to make clear. Cuvtixo 23:06, 11 January 2007 (UTC)
- I beg to disagree. Capoeira was, apparently, a martial art, but it had to be disguised as a "dance" to become tolerated. Read any thing about Brazilian history in the late XIX and early XX century and you will see that it was feared. Nobody fears a dance, for instance, do you fear someone may use tango against you? jggouvea 01:47, 31 March 2007 (UTC)
- <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkBEQ3G42Z8">Fight Muzenza</a>
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2q3Z7UQZnBY&NR=1">Capoeira de Contato</a>
<a href="http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=56294">Bullshido: "Full" Contact Capoeira</a>
What you are looking at here is a version of Capoeira which is being developed/rediscovered that contains actual attacks (mostly kicks and a few palm strikes and throws). The main idea here is that if you are not performing a Ginga (dance) while you are fighting it is not Capoeira and thus the fight is broken up and restarted. Perhaps not the most efficient or effective of combat systems, but it is fighting.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is NOT a capoerista
- One of the challengers in Bruce Lee's Game of Death (1978) was NOT a Capoeirist. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was a JEET KUNE DO user. I don't know how the hell someone could make a mistake this huge...gawddamn, at least watch the movie before they post information.
Anyways, I changed it in the section.
Mannheim
Unless I'm mistaken, the inclusion of individual school web pages in the section titled "International School Directories" has been decided against. However, someone continually has been re-adding Capoeira Mannheim to the list. I'm wondering if this is simply an issue of misunderstanding due to language, seeing as the linked page is entirely in German. The persistance of the person adding the site has become taxing, they literally check the page every 10 hours and re-edit it. 1) Am I correct in that the page does not fit the requirements for the ISD link area, and 2) could we do something about this person's constant reposting if I am? Thank you.
Macaco 15:52, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
- I've been rv-ing Mannheim's additions as well. I've attempted to contact them with the email link given on their site to perhaps reason with them on their actions and intentions but have yet to receive their reply. Tartaruga 14:38, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
- The spamming continues... Tartaruga 16:35, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
Music
I added a section on the ladainhas, chulas and crridos. Let me know what you think. -Asbestos 26 Oct 04
I'm going to create a page on Capoeira music, with the words to many ladainhas, chulas and corridos. Wikipedia has a policy against song lyrics, but I believe that this only applies to comercial songs (especially as they do have the words to national anthems and hymns). Let me know if you think that this is a good idea, and please feel free to contribute.
New Page: Capoeira songs
--Asbestos 11:53, 8 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Another New Page: Capoeira toques --Coalhada
Internationally renowned mestres
I'm worried that this listing is going to become yet another School Listing fiasco. What's the criteria for an "internationally renowned mestre"? I've no qualms about listing mestre who've genuinely promoted the art and further developed it. I'm also agreeable to living Mestres who're still continuing their work.
But I wish to know where do we draw the line? Do we list mestres based on the number of students they have (and how do we verify this)? Years of experience? Number of DVDs and TV appearances? I don't wish to offend anyone by inadvertibly removing a link to an obscure contemporary mestre but I don't want to see the wholesale inclusion of anyone who calls themselves a mestre either.
Furthermore I also feel that a list must include the corresponding article to exist first, prior to inclusion. Otherwise, it's kinda pointless. Tartaruga 04:33, 13 October 2005 (UTC)
- I agree, though I'm not entirely sure what the solution should be. If we do create some standards of notability, I'd suggest that those who don't make the standard are listed in another article, say Capoeira mestres or something, and Mestre so-and-so can redirect to the metre's paragraph in that article. I'm not sure how to measure notability, though, since web presence would hardly be a fair ranking.
- On a slightly different topic, I'm about to start creating an Angola lineage tree at Template:Capoeira Angola lineage. Any help would be appreciated. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 17:04, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
- Hey, that Capoeira Angola Lineage template is cool. BUT i'm worried about how we can verify the accuracy when people start adding themselves to the tree... Tartaruga 01:13, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
- Well, first, I din't think that anyone but Mestres should be on the trees, so hopefully we won't get random people adding themselves. Also, the trees probably shouldn't get too deep — I'm not sure we should be including anyone more than , say, four deep from the top.
- For the Anoleiros under Pastinha I don't think accuracy is too difficult: Angola Mestres take this seriously, and I don't think anyone would claim to have been made a mestre under Joao Pequeno, say, unless they really were. I was, however, looking online for an official family tree — I saw one up on the wall at Cobrinha's school a while ago, but don't know if there is an online version.
- I don't know much about other Angoleiros who come from a different lineage than Pastinha — I know Mestre Nô and many others have different lineages. If we have articles on mestres with interesting lineages and someone wants to make one, that's fine.
- Regional I know very little about. If any of the mestres that we have articles on were taught by Mestre Bimba, then perhaps we should create a tree for that. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 15:28, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
- I've changed my mind, and have now created an article at Capoeira lineage under Mestre Pastinha. More in the section at the bottom... — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 16:52, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
- Why not rank Mestres based on their work. Mestre Jelon Vieira has multiple venues where he has demonstrated his skills, his teaching effectiveness, and his mastery of both capoeira but also Brazilian culture. Does this merit inclusion Duskshade
- I've changed my mind, and have now created an article at Capoeira lineage under Mestre Pastinha. More in the section at the bottom... — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 16:52, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
About External Links
I've often spent time removing links to schools--some really good sites (it's getting to be quite often as more and more people are discovering the Capoeira article), some really bad (a matter of opinion, but I removed them all). And as you can see, Notable Mestres are getting long, and there's even a stub for a Capoeira association linked to See Also.
I propose that all modern mestres, capoeira schools, capoeira associations and groups refrain from adding their link or cross reference to their "external link" stub (with no intention of wikifying). Instead, have those articles be categorized, and the Capoeira article will link to the respective categories. Suggestions for the categories are Capoeira Mestres and Capoeira Schools and Associations (BUT really, you ought to get your group's site listed on the DMOZ directory instead of on the Wikipedia). Tartaruga 01:13, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
- I concur that the list has become overly long and non-encyclopedic, as well as NPOV to a degree. Unfortunately, the vaste majority of writers interested in contributing to this article are capoeristas with their own loyalties to their Mestre, so you can't count on NPOV. Any arguments over who qualifies as "notable" are futile. The list is uneccessary in any case, as the category "Capoeira Mestres" is sufficient. I'd like to call for agreement to remove all Mestres but Bimba and Pastinha from the list.--Spyrral 23:18, 31 January 2006 (UTC)
- Done. All mestres with articles have been categorized, and the list deleted. I added the link to the Mastre database there, so that people can see that such a list exists elsewhere and there doesn't need to be one here. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 19:42, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
Lineage
Since I haven't seen any good resources on the web showing capoeira lineages, I thought it would be useful to start creating articles here. I've just created Capoeira lineage under Mestre Pastinha, although I'd like a little help with it:
- Getting the tree as complete as possible (since it's now its own article, it can be pretty large)
- Editing and adding to the article, to make it as encyclopedic as possible and not just a database, which might get deleted.
If anyone else wants to create lineage of Bimba, that would be fine too.
Now instead of having the entire lineage on each mestre's article, I thought we could just show the direct lineage of the mestre, i.e. in a straight line, and link back to the relevent main lineage.
As for articles on each individual mestre, I'm still unsure about that. Here's what I propose: If an article can be written on a mestre that is substantial in length (beyond "He's the mestre at my school, and this is what my school is like:..."), then that should imply that there is a lot of information out there on the mestre ands therefore notability(?). Otherwise, for mestres with only a few lines written about them, consign them all to the articles Capoeira Angola mestres and Capoeira Regional mestres, or whatever.
Thoughts/Comments? — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 16:52, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
- I can already see it now, a huge long list of names under the header "Notable Angola Mestres" with external links to their respective schools. I'm surprised the Kung Fu and Yoga articles don't have this problem (List of famous Kung Fu Masters anyone?). Tartaruga 01:33, 9 February 2006 (UTC)
Capoeira in Anglo-American popular culture?
Why did Capoeira in popular culture get changed to Capoeira in Anglo-American popular culture? I see that most of the info in that section was "Anglo-American", but the title seems needlessly specific and exclusionary — if there's interesting stuff to be said about capoeira films or games in any other cultures I don't see why it shouldn't be there. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 04:24, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
- People seem to forget that it's not only anglo-Americans who use Wikipedia. KEJ 08:50, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
See Also Kalarippayattu?
I don't see the relevance. Can we remove this reference? Tartaruga 11:44, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
- I agree. Personally, I think the link to the ICAF/FICA haedquarters should stay (www.capoeira-angola.org), as it's the most centralized organization in Capoeira Angola (and has plenty of info). However, if you don't think it belongs there, maybe we need a section for these kinds of links. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 13:17, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
- I went over the ICAF site the few times I saw it linked in (Sorry, if it was you who kept adding it back in--I was the one who kept removing it). I do agree with what you said above. But I also feel that there were many external link sites which had plenty of capoeira info/media--but was excluded for being more "commercial". I'm for the stand that as long as a site has ANY leanings towards "marketing" products or classes for monetary gains whether for non-profit (now that's a conundrum) or for profit, it should be excluded, no matter how well intended the site is (Do we link a commercial Capoeira school's site which has lots of free info, free classes, videos and free downloads of poster sized pictures of legendary Mestres? I digress). General Information has to be that, "General" NPOV information. I suppose we can have a separate page listing so called "Non Profit Capoeira Organizations/Federations" but I believe it will become a large unmanageable list-o-links which again, really should belong in a DMOZ category. Tartaruga 01:28, 9 February 2006 (UTC)
- For the record, the wu-wien.ac.at external link is the only link item which also has a text link to classes organised by the author's group (at the bottom of the page but it also links to other groups), but the information that site provides is likely to be the most comprehensive listing of Capoeira moves + pictures (and also one of the earliest pages on Capoeira I've ever known) and thus I felt it's "General" nature far outweighed it's "marketing" goals. Tartaruga 01:46, 9 February 2006 (UTC)
Capoeira in popular culture
This section is getting huge. Do we need to have every computer game in which some character made a move that looked like capoeira? Every movie where someone does a flip? Imagine what the karate article would look like if every movie with a karate scene in it was listed.
I suggest that we prune down the section considerably, including only a few noteworthy examples of games and movies in which capoeira is featured, and note that it is become quite widespread. — Asbestos | Talk (RFC) 16:16, 23 February 2006 (UTC)
- I think only things that "broke new ground" should be listed. For example, the first couple of appearances of Capoeira in videogames could be listed, but omit the rest, unless they are particularly noteworthy. The first artist to use a berimbau in a record, etc; and then these could mention the first time(s) these happened in Brazil and then the first time(s) abroad; etc. --Cotoco 16:48, 23 February 2006 (UTC)
- Time to either prune off this section or branch off a separate article. I'm all for branching--but I don't see other martial art articles setting this sort of precedence? (Kung Fu in popular culture?) Tartaruga 14:42, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
- A strong second to the call to branch this off or get it down to a single paragraph... --Focomoso 10:00, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
- I was gonna take a crack at it, but you beat me to it! Thanks! Tartaruga 16:06, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
Can anyone answer as to whether the fighting in The Mighty Quinn was Capoeira?
--Mr kitehead 03:55, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
-I made a point of removing the erroneous info, such as suggesting that "Zum Zum Zum" originated in Only The Strong and that Kareem Abdul Jabar was a Capoeirista. --Toquinha 17:56, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
- About "Zum Zum Zum" in the Mazda ads, it should be noted that the version they used in the ad (at least the original version, as they started mutating it over time) is indeed (if I remember correctly) based on the song as present in the soundtrack for Only the Strong. Note to the bass line, for example. I don't know if the information should be there or not, but it's apparently not erroneous. --Cotoco 04:18, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
I did a bit more trimming of the section recently. Including, albeit with some regrets the scene from The Protector. Yes, it was an amazing scene and it was an excellent demonstration that Capoeira can be used as an effective martial art, but it was a fairly short segment in the movie (shortened, as I understand it, due to an injury Lateef sustained during filming) where the style isn't named, and there's been use of Capoeira in prior films. I think it still can fit nicely in the Capoeira in popular culture article. -Fuzzy (talk) 14:59, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I was thinking of taking out the mention of the Capoeiristas in Never Back Down for The Up coming movie Besouro. To me, a full movie based on a Capoeira Mester and legend like besouro magangá is more worth noting then two brief fight scenes that kind of sort of shows Capoeira. What do you guys think? Would you all be OK with it? Would I have to make a page for the Film as well? Because I don't think one was made for it yet. Thanks in advance.
Pronunciation of "Regional"
- ...Regional (pronounced 'heh-jeeh-oh-nahl' or '-now')...
I think that's totally worthless. The word "regional" has the same meaning in portuguese and in english, so there's no point in describing the portuguese pronounce. The only thing is that to brazilian ears the english pronounce might sound a bit like "original capoeira", but that doesn't make it wrong. That's still not a issue of needing to explain the pronounce as if was a japanese or chinese term, with no equal/equivalent word, I think. --Extremophile 00:50, 24 February 2006 (UTC)
- Hmm... It is pronounced quite differently in Brazilian Portuguese than in English (or other languages that also have 'regional' in their vocabularies), so I think that a clarification of the Brazilian Portuguese pronuncuation is okay (it's of course pronounced differently in European Portuguese), but I'd prefer an IPA transcription rather than an orthographically based one like the one that's presently provided in the text. It's true that the word means almost the same thing in Portuguese and English, but that doesn't - in my opinion - have anything to do with it's pronuncuation. KEJ 20:20, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed. Even though the word exists with the same spelling and meaning in English, when referring to Capoeira Regional it is usually pronounced as in Portuguese, even by English-speaking Capoeiristas. --Cotoco 20:32, 27 February 2006 (UTC)
- And capoeiras that speak other languages than English and Portuguese ;-) KEJ 08:47, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
- I had expanded on it to make it somewhat more clear but I also think the bit about pronunciation is pretty unnecessary. First I think guides to (Brasilian) Portuguese translation don't really have a place in this lemma. Second, any attempt to put such guidance here (be it in IPA or not) will be hopelessly incomplete because pronunciation throughout the Portuguese speaking world varies wildly. Illustir 17:24, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
- If I may interject here, it seems to me that people use wikipedia to um...look up things they have heard about but don't know what are. If I were some guy on the street and heard somebody mention that he did capoeira regional without seeing it written, I would assume the word was spelled with an H in the absence of any experience with the Portuguese language, and would be grateful for wikipedia's assistance in correcting my misapprehension. MrGalt 22:38, 13 November 2006
I found it somewhat odd. Akin to something like "gene" being pronounced as it is in english, in any language, rather than just using the equivalent word for the language (in portuguese it would be equally "gene", but pronounced differently). But perhaps it's just some martial art's "fetishism", like karate having all those japanese terms rather than translations for things like "punch", "kick", etc. --Extremophile 05:40, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Just to weigh in, while I'm generally the sort to prefer using native language terms (English in my case) outside of formal applications of a martial art, this is a matter of a proper name. Just like we don't walk around saying "I study Chinese Hand" instead of saying "I study Karate" (and yes, I know that the etymology there is occasionally debated), we don't walk around saying "I study regional Capoeira" (or, I guess, "regional Castrated Rooster" if you take one of the name etymologies ^_^). -Fuzzy (talk) 11:44, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
Should "Capoeira" be capitalized?
The words 'Capoeira', 'Mestre' and names of Capoeira moves should be capitalized? Tartaruga 03:39, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
- As I undertand it, no, these are common nouns and should not be capitalised, in the same way that you don't capitalise 'football' or 'scissor kick'. An exception is that 'mestre' should be capitalised when used as a person's title, e.g., Mestre Bimba. Deditos 09:37, 2 May 2006 (UTC).
- Did my best to convert 'Capoeira' to 'capoeira' (including 'Capoeira Angola' to 'capoeira Angola' and 'Capoeira Regional' to 'capoeira regional') without changing proper names of schools and organizations. Sorry if I missed any. Focomoso 10:37, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
- Why should, in this context, "Angola" be capitalized, but not "regional"? I assume you decided that based on the fact that Angola is a country's name. But, in this case, we're not talking about the country, it's simply the name of the style. Therefore, I am of the opinion that both "angola" and "regional" should be treated the same way; either both or neither should be capitalized. --Cotoco 06:54, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
- This is common English usage. When a compound common noun, which should not be capitalized, includes a proper noun or adjective, the proper word is capitalized. Look at American football vs. gridiron football. Or English football vs. association football. Focomoso 23:53, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
- Someone went back and re-capitalized all the instances of capoeira. In most cases, it is not being used as a proper noun, but it is capitalized. Compare other (similar) English words, such as karate, jiu-jitsu, or break dancing. None are capitalized. It seems as though the person that is capitalizing the word believes that he is bestowing more respect upon the subject by giving it a "C" instead of a "c." This issue (as Focomoso pointed out) is about the rules of written English. I've "fixed" several instances, but don't have time to fix them all. --Lacarids (talk) 16:39, 17 May 2012 (UTC)
Cordão de Ouro
what happen to the info regarding cordão de ouro? It doesn't even have its own article. I suggest putting at least some info on the page, as i believe its quite popular in Europe.
- Someone will still have to take the initiative to write up that article. We're not paid writers you know? Tartaruga 14:45, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
Performance capoeira
Just wondering whether anyone has given any thought to adding something to this page about performance capoeira, by which I mean capoeira that is performed on stage for the benefit of impressing an audience, for example, with corporate floor shows that specialize in Brazilian forms. Like they might have a samba number, an axe, a lambada, and performance capoeira. Does anyone know enough about this to write about it? Mona-Lynn 22:23, 17 August 2006 (UTC) True, but then who took away the section?
Styles of Capoeira
I think this section needs a rewrite. A couple of points:
- While some groups/mestres identify clearly as Angola or regional, there are many who do not come from either Bimba or Pastinha's linage and fall somewhere in the middle. I think the great overlap between groups/mestres should be addressed here before the two major styles are defined.
- I don't understand the line about Angolaros mimicking regional for performances. If it's supposed to mean they make fun of them, that should be stated clearly (I think that's what it means).
- The line about Angoleiros mimicking regional for performances probably refers to the fact that some angola groups incorporate acrobatics, solos, etc. into performances to make them more exciting for a crowd to watch.
- In the Capoeira Regional section, "Regional is a ... more martially-oriented game." Really? I don't think we can say one way or the other which is more martial, Angola or regional. I recommend removing this. However, something about regional being a more systematic way of teaching capoeira might be appropriate here.
- The whole thing could use a good copy edit.
I volunteer to do the rewrite, but want a little feed back first. Focomoso 23:35, 19 October 2006 (UTC)
- It is probably worth some clarification that the pronouncement of capoeira angola was made in direct opposition to Bimba's creation of capoeira regional. Mestre Pastinha, while the most (currently) well known mestre of capoeira angola from Bimba's time, does not represent the only lineage of capoeira angola. So, while (from a strict lineage perspective) anything that identifies as capoeira regional should descend from M. Bimba, a Capoeira Angola lineage does not have to descend from M. Pastinha. Cegeddin (talk) 16:48, 18 November 2007 (UTC)
Category:Capoeira Mestres needs a clean up
Making note of it here since this is read more often. The Category of Capoeira Mestres page contains an external link, possibly a double post and a rather long description for Master Marcello. This seems incorrect but someone else should check it out. Porco-esphino 06:17, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
Its a category not an article - I just deleted all the text. Within the Category there is an article which gives the overview - this is how it should be.Peter Rehse 08:37, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
GA Fail
- Poorly written
- unreferenced
- There are 'paragraphs' containing six words. A paragraph is roughly 3-4 sentences.
- It's poorly written and choppy in almost every section.
- An article this size needs 2-3 paragraphs in the lead
- White spaces between sections
Two references used throughout the whole article and they aren't even formatted properly. M3tal H3ad 04:52, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
Abada capoeira snipe in history section
I'm showing the following in the history section: "Abada capoeira is the best team of all Brazil, however, they lack diligence since they tend to smoke lots of marijuana and use steroids to outstengthen their opponents." This doesn't seem neutral, but I can't find the text to delete it. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.231.140.218 (talk) 22:54, 10 January 2007 (UTC).
Contradictions as to origins
The first sentence says its "Angolan", the next sentence mentions Angola and Nigeria, the history sections mentions Angola, Congo and Mozambique but not Nigeria. Maybe "south-central Africa" can capture all of them? AxelBoldt 21:37, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
- Perhaps it would be better to state that Capoeira evolved out of the culture brought by the African slaves brought to Brazil. It must be noted that nothing similar to Capoeira appears to exist in Africa (its introduction there being recent and its popularity mostly due to the locals considering it "the African-originated martial art"). This article is badly in need of research. jggouvea 23:39, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
Sorry Jggouvea -- There are many martial arts in Africa today that are related to Capoeira.
Take a look at some of them http://www.myspace.com/africanmartialarts
There are the facts - there is no more need for 'subconscious' negation just becasue capoiera was invented by Africans.
In fact, about 50 martial arts found in the Americas and Africa both are African in origins.
I have listed about fifty such martial arts on the website above.
Nubianem
Excuse me for hurting your feelings ;-). I based my comment on these sourcs (sorry for the language, because Capoeira is very recent in other countries, most of the few scholarship about it is in Portuguese):
- http://www.efdeportes.com/efd90/capoeira.htm
- http://www.ccbcapoeiradecristo.hpg.ig.com.br/historiadacapoeira.htm
- http://www.capoeirasantista.com.br/origem.htm
- http://arodacapoeira.no.sapo.pt/origem.html
- http://www.unicamp.br/unicamp/unicamp_hoje/ju/out2001/unihoje_ju167pag22.html
- KASSAB, Álvaro. “A capoeira escrava e outras tradições rebeldes no Rio de Janeiro (1808-1850)”. Master Thesis. Unicamp, Brazil.
- http://www.confef.org.br/RevistasWeb/n1/CAPOEIRA.pdf
- http://grupoangolinhahp.vilabol.uol.com.br/instrumentos.htm
- http://www.centroreichiano.com.br/artigos/anais/Chiara%20e%20Helder.pdf
References in English:
- http://www.ascabcapoeira.org/history.html -- starts saying it is Brazilian to later dabble into possible African origins. unconvincing.
- http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/capoeira.html -- says it is Brazilian. Acknowledges Ngolo but says it was a different thing (a courtship dance or ritual). Not enough to support that capoeira itself originated in Africa
- http://www.capoeirasj.com/history/ -- says that the origins are obscure but hints that it 'developed' in Brazil.
- http://www.senzalaleicester.co.uk/capoeira-history.html -- supports Brazilian origin.
- http://martialarts.about.com/od/standupstyles/p/capoeira.htm -- this is for those who support African origin (a brief, non-commiting reference to it)
Notice that I did not claim that capoeira originated out of nothing. I remarked that it originated in Brazil from the culture brought by the Africans (though some authors acknowledge an important Amerindian contribution).
While capoeira seems to be related somehow to Ngolo, current researches tend to agree that capoeira incorporates elements of Ngolo (just as karate incorporates elements from kung fu).
Another important thing I remarked was that "nothing similar" exists in Africa. This does not amount to say that "nothing" exists in Africa. OK. There are many martial arts from Africa (I did not say there weren't), but until someone brings forth reference that any of them is a) has movements similar to capoeira, b) is older than it and c) includes both the rhythmic and musical elements; we must skeptically assume that any martial art from Africa is either different from capoeira or based on it.
As for the origins of African martial arts, it is not unlikely that some of them were brought "back to Africa" tby the Brazilian fred slaves who returned to Angola, Benin or Congo. Unless sufficient evidence is brought forth, one can reasonably suspect some African martial arts are of Brazilian origin. About this, read this interesting article about the "agoudas", the "Brazilians" of Benin.
Some questions regarding what you mention in your site.
- How do you know there were any martial arts in "the Aquatic Civilization of the Sahara (Zingh Empire )"
- How do you know that such civilisation, if existed at all as "one civilisation", called itself Zingh or Zung or Ixto or mud kickers or whatever else, since they did not leave any recorded history? (Oral traditions become quite unreliable after 30,000 years)
- While most references to this "Aquatic Civilisation" point to Afro-Centric propaganda sites, the few of them that are scholarly fail to mention that it was "one civilisation", that it had a name, or anything but speculations on its culture. This is because this(ese) civilisation(s) vanished long ago and left scant traces. Where do you get information on them? Please share your references.
- "Knocking and Kicking is found in the SOUTHERN US, IN MISSISSIPPI AND LOUISIANA". If "knocking and kicking" qualifies as "martial art" than anything goes.
Therefore I still hold, until proven otherwise by scholarly research, that there are people advancing an Afro-centric agenda, which includes claiming as purely "African" anything related to African diaspora. Related to this, we Brazilians assume that these people are trying to deny us our own cultural heritage by attributing it to others. jggouvea 21:31, 25 March 2007 (UTC)
Although there were occassional cases of slavery, Europe didn`t use the slavery labour, certainly it didn`t use the labour of African slaves. I do know nothing about capoiera, but, I don`t see any contradiction in the supposition it have originated in Angola (so, in *Angola*, and not in "Africa") and the fact there is no capoiera outside Brazil. While holding much of the African slave trade to Americas, it seems to me fairly reasonable that Portugese traders shipped the slaves from their own colonies in Africa, speaking the Portugese, only to their own American colony - Brazil.Kornjaca (talk) 08:23, 12 April 2008 (UTC)
Create list of Capoeira techniques
Hello, I had an idea that I would like propose to the editors that help to maintain this article and its category. I noticed a number of short article stubs about Capoeira techniques that could be organized into a single list ("List of Capoeira techniques") that could easily be expanded with other techniques that are not currently on Wikipedia. The stubs I saw that could be merged together were, Armada (Capoeira), Aú, Aú batido, Cabeçada, Ginga (capoeira), Macaco, Martelo, Meia-lua de compasso, and Raiz. Other articles can also be linked and hopefully have their roots to Capoeira explained better, like Corkscrew (trick) and Double Leg (trick). Hopefully, once the information is combined into a single article, editors will be able to expand on the information more easily than if they were separate. Only a few techniques are briefly mentioned in the main article, and I think it would compliment the main article nicely. Anyway, just a thought to help get the information organized in an appropriate manner. What does everyone else think? (Guyinblack25 21:02, 28 February 2007 (UTC))
- I think it is a good idea. Since you came up with the idea, you should get it started, I'm sure many poepl will contribute with constructive edits. Davelapo555 18:40, 28 March 2007 (UTC)
- I like the idea, so long as each move has space for a gif and description. You get the template happening and I'll help out :) Porco-esphino 03:29, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
- The artilces listed above have been merged into List of capoeira techniques and each article has been switched to a redirect page to their place in the list. I also added div tags with " style="clear: both" " in them so that the images there will all fit properly. The only one I left off was a link to the Corkscrew (trick) because I don't know the capoeira name for it. I'll also leave the inclusion of it in the main Capoeira article up to you guys since I'm sure y'all know the article better than I do. (Guyinblack25 14:59, 2 April 2007 (UTC))
Isnt it now a sport? I believed it to be Brazils oficial sport. It had a tournament set up, specifically for this porpose. It may be other things, but if it officaly a sport, I think that should be mentioned, as well as the fact that it incorparates dance, martial arts, etc.86.40.240.104 (talk) 01:29, 13 February 2008 (UTC)
Martial art?
Given the definition of martial art that we're using... Capoeira doesn't seem to qualify. At the very least, Capoeira is certainly not PRIMARILY a martial art. I checked the "Definitions" section of the archive for this talk page and didn't find anything there to contradict this. Does anyone object to me removing the characterization from the lead-in sentence and dealing with the issue of it's relative martial merits further down in the article? --Dante Alighieri | Talk 23:57, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
- I don't see a problem. The definition is: "Martial arts are systems of codified practices and traditions of training for combat. Martial arts are studied for various reasons including combat skills, fitness, self-defense, sport, self-cultivation (meditation), mental discipline, character development and building self-confidence". (Part of) Capoeira is a tradition of training for combat that is studied for various reasons including well most of the reasons they list. This qualifies nicely. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Porco-esphino (talk • contribs) 03:36, 2 April 2007 (UTC).
Well, simply put... martial arts are "about" combat. Capoeira does not seem to be. Do I have that wrong? --Dante Alighieri | Talk 06:43, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
- Whether or not you have that wrong is immaterial. What you need to do is find reputable primary sources that make the case that capoeira is not a martial art, cite them and include them here. I have seen capoeira called many things, martial art is always among them. Focomoso 22:47, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
You're missing my point... based on OUR articles on Capoeira and Martial Arts, it doesn't seem to work. There's no need for me to go out and cite additional sources, when the sources already in the article seem to bear out what I'm saying. Now, like I said, I may be looking at things the wrong way... but our article on Capoeira does not describe a Martial Art in the sense that our article on Martial Arts defines them. --Dante Alighieri | Talk 18:04, 10 April 2007 (UTC)
- I think your issue is more with the use of "combat" in the martial arts definition. Perhaps you should inquire there. Focomoso 22:11, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
- Perhaps.. but as it stands, if combat is key in the definition of martial art, does Capoeira still qualify? --Dante Alighieri | Talk 16:33, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
- Wikipedia's definition of combat: "The term 'combat' typically refers to armed conflict between military forces in warfare, whereas the more general term 'fighting' can refer to any violent conflict, including boxing and wrestling matches." Very few martial arts meet that definition, perhaps none. Capoeira clearly meets the de facto definition of martial art. And again, you're free to cite sources that argue otherwise. Focomoso 08:21, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
Having witnessed a real life brawl between a judo and capoeira instructor, and received numerous combat-oriented body blows during sparring sessions, I can attest that there's no doubt in my personal experience that capoeira is combat and martial oriented. Tartaruga 03:46, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- Well, the article needs to be altered then. We keep calling it the "game" (martial arts aren't games), and it says that it needs music and doesn't emphasize touching your opponent. All of that points to "game" or "hobby" and not "martial art". --Dante Alighieri | Talk 08:23, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- "Game" is a literal translation from Portuguese, but the word when used in this context does not have the same connotation in Portuguese as it does in English. It seems to be a misnomer in English, but it is very difficult to find the right word (fight? bout? joust? spar? ...); hence the tendency to just use "game." Mona-Lynn 11:59, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- If the word doesn't mean the same thing in Portuguese as in English, we probably shouldn't be using it. If there's problems finding an "appropriate" translation, don't translate it. Just use the Portuguese word and explain once what it means. As it stands, someone reading the Capoeira article is inclined to get a warped view of the situation. --Dante Alighieri | Talk 17:54, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- Only trouble is, much of the English-speaking capoeira world does use it. Ah - such is life. Mona-Lynn 20:52, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- If the word doesn't mean the same thing in Portuguese as in English, we probably shouldn't be using it. If there's problems finding an "appropriate" translation, don't translate it. Just use the Portuguese word and explain once what it means. As it stands, someone reading the Capoeira article is inclined to get a warped view of the situation. --Dante Alighieri | Talk 17:54, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
- Just to make clear what is being discussed here, Portuguese words for "game", "play" and "rhythm" do not map respectively to their English counterparts. It is a well-known fact among those with the slightest notion of Portuguese that "play" can be translated as "brincar" (like a child), "jogar" (cards) or "tocar" (an instrument) and both such words have other secondary meanings ("brincar" meaning to poke fun at someone and "tocar" meaning to touch). I mention these words because "brincar" and "tocar" are both used for capoeira (for, respectively, the fight and the music). Regarding the "game", the Portuguese word being translated here is "jogo" (the noun that corresponds to "jogar"). But jogo does not mean "game" only. It is also how the Brazilians call the way someone moves their legs. "Jogo", then, means "sway" or "flexibility". To have a good "jogo de pernas" (leg's "game") is to be swift, light-footed and well-trained in leg movement. So, when Brazilians say capoeira is "jogo" they are not at all meaning that it is a "game", "jogo de capoeira" is the typical leg flexibility (and movement) attained or kept by those who practice capoeira while "jogar capoeira" means to exercise such movement. Yes, Portuguese sounds difficult. But it isn't more difficult than most other languages, you can learn it if you study it the right way ;-) jggouvea 04:00, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
- "martial arts aren't games" according to whom? Cite some sources. Clearly in the current wikipedia definition of martial art, games are included. Focomoso 22:15, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
- From our article on Martial art: "Martial arts are systems of codified practices and traditions of training for combat. Martial arts are studied for various reasons including combat skills, fitness, self-defense, sport, self-cultivation (meditation), mental discipline, character development and building self-confidence. A practitioner of martial arts is referred to as a martial artist."
- Nothing about games there. Our article on games indicates that they're usually undertaken for enjoyment... not for combat. Is Judo a game? What about gymnastics? I don't know why you keep asking that I site (sic) sources when I keep indicating that the point is that Wikipedia is not being INTERNALLY consistent. How about YOU cite a section of Wikipedia that indicates that games are martial arts? --Dante Alighieri | Talk 16:31, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
- Internal consistency is not one of wikipidia's core content policies. Verifiability is; verifiability based on "reliable published sources" (which do not include other wikipedia articles). Every published source I've seen on capoeira refers to it as a martial art, including many of the books in the further reading section. I believe the consensus among the editors here is that the burden of evidence for calling capoeira a martial art has been met. If you can find sources that refute this, please cite them (thanks for catching my typo) and you may change some minds. That's the way wikipedia works. Focomoso 08:21, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
Look, if no one else sees ANY problem that some relevant articles don't seem to agree with each other (combat, martial art, Capoeira), I suppose there's nothing I can do to convince you. If you're happy that all three go about their own "verifiable" existences with no cross-pollination in an effort to keep Wikipedia internally consistent... well, I guess that's it. --Dante Alighieri | Talk 17:54, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
As a Brazilian and a capoerista, I fell I should explain a few things in this discussion. Capoeira is indeed a martial art, it DOES covert majority ( if not all ) of the "Martial Arts" article definitions. The "Game" called "Jogo" or "Roda" in Brazilian is the name given to a practise similar to sparring or a "touch-but-do-not-hit" exercice, but it's mainly the form that two capoeristas train for actual combat, and in some cases, if a capoerista challenges another for actual combat, that will happen in a "Game".
Now, for what I think it's the point of this discussion being made. Capoeira is a martial art, like I previously said, it's not a dance or a ritual of somekind like most non-brazilians think. Capoeristas are trainned for combat, yes, but it all depends on the teacher, the master, the group or the capoerista's own choices. Capoeira is masked as a dance so that it does not look like a martial art system for those who do not practise it or are watching a class or a "game" ( this can be proven by the merely fact that this "Is Capoeira a Martial Art ?" discussion has been made. The objective of Capoeira is similiar to the objective of the Drunken Fist style of Kung Fu, to give the opponent a wrong idea of the art, so the when faced, the opponent can be easily surprised and hurt.
I hope I was usefull. And please, let me state that most potential Martial Artirts or Capoeristas tend to turn on wikipedia ( even Brazilians turn on English Wikipedia) for help when it comes to getting info background on a specific Martial Art. If someone read that "Capoeira is not a Martial Art" they might give up practising it. As a representant of Capoeira outside Brazil I'd like to kindly ask that such statements aren't made, because they mainly contribute for the decay of the art itself. 189.6.81.39 (talk) 21:56, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
I believe that any arguments claiming that Capoeira is not a martial art are racist in nature, with the motive of discrediting a fighting style created by blacks. What difference does it make? All that matters is that a well-trained capoeirista can run into anyone who denies it being a martial art and beat them up, just as well as any MMA fighter. Isn't that what matters? Why is yoga classified as a martial art? The widely accepted definition seems to be centered around combat. Capoeira is used for combat, and as a test of skill, play. Just like when tae-kwon do artists spar or break bricks, it's a similar test of skill. Just because black slaves had to pretend to be dancing and playing in order to train themselves as fighters, doesn't mean we should condemn the artform they created. If kung fu had been developed in the context of slavery, the same thing would have happened. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ktheconjurer (talk • contribs) 00:00, 22 March 2009 (UTC)
Moved comment from article
I've moved another article about capoeira which was placed as a comment to Talk:Capoeira/More info. Visor 23:13, 7 May 2007 (UTC)
Axé
Has there been thought of adding the concept axé to the article? This is the equivalent of chi, qi in eastern martial art. If not and if desired I will whip up some sources and add it :). Teardrop onthefire 14:09, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
- I'm curious what sources you have for this. It's a stretch. And equivalent is certainly too strong a word. There isn't even consensus that Chinese qi is equivalent to Japanese ki and they're based on the same character. Focomoso 08:26, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
Hard of Soft?
Is Capoeira more hard or soft?--Hhielscher 22:17, 28 May 2007 (UTC)
- Hard and Soft refers mostly to Asian Martial Arts. -unsigned comment
- Based on my understanding of hard and soft, it's closer to soft. The techniques are based more on momentum than on "snapping" the technique. But I will be first to admit that I'm not entirely clear on the whole "hard and soft" distinction and how it works once you start doing the movements quickly. -Fuzzy (talk) 12:25, 7 April 2008 (UTC)
- IMHO - Hard. Capoeira is heavily based on traumatic strikes against the opponent (japanese "atemi"), and has very little, if any, throwing or subduing the opponent using his own actions against himself. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 187.0.193.168 (talk) 03:34, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
wasn't japanese?
heard a while ago it was some japanese martial arts masters in brazil (there is a ancient japanese minority there) that taught the slaves how to fight, hence the similiraty (the circle could be reminiscent of the sumo practice). is it legend or truth?? Paris By Night 03:24, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
The japanese only arrived in brazil in the early twentieth century.
- I've never read any reputable source that poses this seriously. Perhaps you're thinking of the Japanese connection to Brazilian Ju-jutsu? Focomoso 08:31, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
Atual
I've read that it's called atual and not 'contemporeano', this coming from a book i'm reading: J. Lowell Lewis, 'Ring of Liberation: Deceptive Discourse in Brazilian Capoeira'(from 1992)Domsta333 14:27, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
- Actually, I think a distinction between Atual and Contemporânea is a good idea, but I'm not the one to write it. Are you volunteering Domsta333? Focomoso 08:29, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- I have no idea what you're talking about! Atual? Contemporânea? I'd love to know more -- I'm sure not the one to write it. Amanda bee (talk) 19:28, 4 November 2011 (UTC)
- In portuguese contemporânea is nearly synonymous with atual. The former means contemporary or modern in English. The latter means ongoing or current. Regarding the name for the style, does Lewis advocate one name over the other, or did he simply choose one and not mention the other? --Lacarids (talk) 16:47, 17 May 2012 (UTC)
what is it
what is caprio —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.26.124.61 (talk) 14:17, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
it means "goat" - the thing ur mother used to fuck and give head to, my friend. gosh, besides having sex with goats (and conceiving you in the process) she must be very poor, having neglected ur education, o stupid kid. - Igor
External links
- AKBAN-wiki, a community based video Martial arts encyclopedia
As far as I know this is the only logically arranged video source of martial arts techniques. It is not affiliated with any particular Capoeira school and is actually open to revisions. Gingihan —Preceding comment was added at 04:38, 15 October 2007 (UTC)
The "whitening" section makes no sense
I don't get it. My text interpretation is really bad, or is it really suggesting that the assimilation of capoeira by white people has some sort of obscure racist underlying meaning? A sort of white conspiracy to take it away from black people or something? --Extremophile 05:51, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Nope, it doesn't quite make sense to me either. My reading of it is that Pookster87 is saying that in the 1800s white Brazilians embraced rather than rejected capoeira to help deflect accusations of racism made by Europeans. I can't be sure though. Without sources it probably shouldn't be in the article. Deditos 09:48, 30 October 2007 (UTC).
- If so, this is utterly absurd. White Brazilians only VERY recently embraced capoeira, and being racist was not something to be ashamed of in the 1800s. jggouvea (talk) 16:45, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
- My read on it is that this has more to do with a general concept called... the name escapes me right now. Basically, there's a pair of terms related to the status of someone who's of mixed race. In one interpretation, the one used in the United States for years to support rules rlated to quadroons, etc, is that the offspring of two races takes on the social status of the inferior race. So within the US, someone with a white parent and a black parent was considered to be black. Within Brazil, the opposite is true. The offspring is considered white and all rights and priveleges thereof. Similarly, by white people adopting Capoeira, it became legitimate because it had the "single drop of white blood" to whiten it. Or at least that's the way it sounds to me. -Fuzzy (talk) 14:42, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
- Ah, I see. The section disappeared from the article a while back though and I wouldn't want to see it back without some pretty solid references. Deditos (talk) 11:45, 16 September 2008 (UTC).
- My read on it is that this has more to do with a general concept called... the name escapes me right now. Basically, there's a pair of terms related to the status of someone who's of mixed race. In one interpretation, the one used in the United States for years to support rules rlated to quadroons, etc, is that the offspring of two races takes on the social status of the inferior race. So within the US, someone with a white parent and a black parent was considered to be black. Within Brazil, the opposite is true. The offspring is considered white and all rights and priveleges thereof. Similarly, by white people adopting Capoeira, it became legitimate because it had the "single drop of white blood" to whiten it. Or at least that's the way it sounds to me. -Fuzzy (talk) 14:42, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
- If so, this is utterly absurd. White Brazilians only VERY recently embraced capoeira, and being racist was not something to be ashamed of in the 1800s. jggouvea (talk) 16:45, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
This article is a translation? Where can I see the original? futurebird 22:21, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
Break dancing
Did this art form play any roll in the creation of break-dancing in the South Bronx? I've always wondered this, the two share quite a few elements. futurebird 22:21, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
I found a source:
http://www.wiretapmag.org/stories/87/ —Preceding unsigned comment added by Futurebird (talk • contribs) 22:35, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
Recent style edits
The edits of 71.178.121.207 on the 22nd of July, 2008 [1] seem like they're a bit outside of NPOV, specifically downplaying Angola versus Regional. But, then again, I'm but a beginner student who's not certain who reputable sources for Capoeira are (assuming there are reputable sources... as a style that was underground for years, I'm starting to suspect that we won't learn about its origins any more than we'll learn the origins of Kung Fu, stories of monks and iron urns burning dragons onto students aside) so I didn't dare do more than try to tone down some of it and add some citation tags. Anyone else able to help out here? -Fuzzy (talk) 12:58, 23 July 2008 (UTC)
capoeira in entertainment media
In the movie "The Kham Protector" also known as "The revenge of the warrior" or "Tom Yunm Goong" by Prachya Pinkaew with Tony Jaa as main actor the protagonist Kham has to fight against a warrior who uses the Capoeira style.He may be adapted from Eddie Gordo, a protagonist of the computer game Tekken 3. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.226.138.24 (talk) 18:47, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
Big change on 12-September-2008 by anonymous IP
I think the edit was made in good faith. It has some additional information which I think is valuable. Overall, though, it hugely changes the article from a discussion of Capoeira as a martial art into a discussion of Capoeira as a dance that mocks martial arts. I don't want to just undo it until I can pick up some of the other stuff. I will try to remember to take a look at it tonight, but I'm horrible about following up with such things. Just noting it here should others have the time to sift through... -Fuzzy (talk) 19:41, 12 September 2008 (UTC)
removed mention of groundwork
I removed the mention of groundwork from the opening paragraph, since to my knowledge Capoeira makes almost no use of it... certainly not "extensive use" in any case. I think possibly the author confused it with Brazilian Ju-Jutsu... or maybe confused groundwork with the use of sweeps. Meliadoul (talk) 05:27, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
- I suspect it has to do with a disagreement on what "groundwork" is. Currently, Wikipedia seems to separate fighting into Standup fighting, Ground fighting, and Clinch fighting. All of the articles assume that the two combatants are assuming the same position (both standing, both on the ground, both clinched, etc) whereas a number of Capoeira techniques specifically address attacking a standing opponent from a low ground position. Contrast that against many other styles, including Japanese Jiujutsu, where the general reaction when on the ground when your opponent is standing is attempting to regain a standing position, or grappling styles where you seek to bring the opponent down to your level. -166.20.24.144 (talk) 21:16, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
Moved segment that reads as 'discussion' from the main article.
The following sentence is *NOT* mine. It's what I've moved from the main article as I feel it belongs on the talk page, not the article itself.
- Actually, they don't really spar inside the roda. They move together. Even if they try to kick or hurt each other, the other person tries to dodge (in capoeira, it's called an esquiva.) With sparring, you just take the kick.
WolfWings (talk) 08:24, 2 February 2009 (UTC)
Gods of Capoeira
I have seen on television a documentary of capoeira and there was mentioned that Capoeira has several gods (protection?). This has probably something to do with the origin of capoeira. Something I don't know anything about. Who are these gods? And what was/is its function? Wereldburger758 (talk) 05:43, 13 March 2009 (UTC)
- Take a look at Orisha and Candomblé and see if it looks familiar. At the school I tend, ASCAB of Philadelphia, there are statues of the orishas and a shrine off in the corner, but for the most part, it doesn't come up in the context of class any more than Shinto does when taking Karate. -166.20.24.144 (talk) 22:24, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
Capoeira Categories
Fala everyone. I'm Cola, check out my talk page if you would like. I just added to the Categories listings for Capoeira. Capoeira now has a new subcategory called "Capoeira organizations". This Capoeira organizations subcategory is also listed under the "martial arts organizations" subcategory. Under this page are the organizations ABADÁ-Capoeira, Grupo Axé Capoeira, and Grupo Capoeira Brasil as listed on this article's "schools" section. I didn't find anymore organizations on wikipedia. Feel free to add some. This structure is exactly the same as the Aikido article category structure, which happens to be a featured article. I think it works great. Feel free to discuss this with me at my talk page, and check out the ABADÁ-Capoeira article I'm working on, it's great! Ryt 007 (talk) 17:18, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
Brazilian Martial Arts redirect
Currently, the article Brazilian Martial arts redirects to Capoeira. I don't think this is correct at all, considering at least Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu should also be listed as a popular martial art. If no one objects, I'm going to create a page either disambiguation or article style discussing Brazilian Martial arts. --Ryt 007 (talk) 13:00, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- Repaired the redirect link. Their was already a Brazilian martial arts disambiguation page. I redirected Brazilian Martial arts to Brazilian martial arts instead of Capoeira. ~ Ryt 007 | Talk 12:35, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
Adding some citations
I am adding some citations to the text that is already up. The main source I am currently using for this is Assunção, Matthias Röhrig (2005). Capoeira : A History of an Afro-Brazilian Martial Art. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0714680869. Notes heading: will be for footnotes, notes, and web sourced works cited info. Printed References: for printed references. This is following the style of the works cited of many wiki star pages. I am going to switch around the already existing works cited material to fit this classification.
When I edit I am doing three things: 1) Most important provide and correct citations for what is up; 2) Add further infomation in terms of concrete data and quotes to support the infomation already up; 3) Edit for cohesion, because when I add quotes I mess up the flow. Also I have found a few spots that needed an intro to give the reader a better idea of what was next.
I do not intend to mess up what people have posted before. I added a paragraph under Afro-Brazilian Art Form about other African-American combat sports in the Americas. Does the title of this section make sense?
I changed the title of the Status in Brazil section to say Status and Dev. as a Sport because Bimba did not just help legalize capoeira he helped develop it as a sport. I added a paragraph about Pastinha here, to be fair, and also because from my reading I understand that he developed Capoeira Angola to be seen in terms of a sport, not just a traditional folk art. By writing about capoeira he also helped capoeira be better understood by intellectuals. EDS4 (talk) 07:02, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
Angola
Capoeira isn't from Angola. This statement assumes that the majority of slaves in Brazil came from Angola, a false premise. Another mistake is to say it was born or developed in Brazil. False, since slaves fought on the slave ships or in their homeland to escape the Portuguese soldiers. Article btw needs a lot of work, a lot of false information and popular legends there. --201.79.235.243 (talk) 20:21, 30 November 2009 (UTC) (Brazilian).
I think this dance is a peice of shit and we shouldnt have to learn about things we dnt wnt to learn about !!!!!! Thankyouuuuuu
Origin
I talked to masters of capoeira in Brasília, Brazil (master Dionisio and master Eberson), and I read in brazilian books too that capoeira was created and developed in brazil because of hard situation of slaves at that time. It was not brought from Africa, thats why you wont see anything like brazilian capoeira there. Mostly of slaves were from Angola, Mozambique and Congo. That´s why I changed the text. Cadocomex (talk) 04:33, 6 May 2010 (UTC) comment added by Cadocomex (talk • contribs) 04:28, 6 May 2010 (UTC) Cadocomex (talk) 04:33, 6 May 2010 (UTC)
basic history
am i a goose? the intro paragraph says "It was developed in the region of Quilombo dos Palmares, located in the Brazilian state of Alagoas," while going to wiki on quilombo says "there is no documentary evidence that the residents of Palmares actually used this method of fighting..." yours truly, grumpy wikinote #5 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.213.227.24 (talk) 17:21, 7 August 2010 (UTC)
Bolivian origins who removed it?
Who removed the section that talked about the Bolivian origins of Capoeria? I put a text book reference for that. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.221.202.240 (talk) 03:56, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
Major edit in History section
Major edit in History section. Much of what was written before was differing to Brazilian history, along with many simplifications and misinterpretations. Not cool to see national history treated like that.
Many of the sources I've cited are in Portuguese, since I'm not a native English speaker. If anyone can update it to their versions in English, or cite other sources, please give me a hand.
I'll keep working to update / restructurate the other sections.
Danilolabbate (talk) 13:37, 15 January 2011 (UTC)
About the "Chienglee Capoeira"-section
I cleaned up the section on Chienglee Capoeira, but... is this really important enough to get a section? I edited the text because it was very ugly. I find no good references to "Chienglee Capoeira", only: [1], which is the homepage of the school itself. If every little Capoeira school, with every little mestre would get it's own form defined we'd be swamped, no?
Anyway - this is as much as I do before I get myself a log-in. Sometime... Good luck!
82.209.145.202 (talk) 16:43, 16 February 2011 (UTC)
Not African roots
Capoeira was developed by African DESCENDANTS, native Tupi-Guarani and had minor influences from white people as well. Capoeira, as almost everything in Brazil, was born of mixed races.
In Africa there is relegions very simmilar to Candomblé, there is percussion very simmilar to Afro-brazilian percussion, every trace of African culture in Brazil can be found in Africa. Capoeira can't. There is nothing simmilar to it in Africa, or in any other country with African descendants. Every try to find any lost African link failed miserably. N'golo, which some state is the closest thing to Capoeira in Africa, has absolutely nothing to do with it, except it's also executed in a Roda (like thousands of rituals around the world.
So please people, do not mess with Brazilian history.
Danilolabbate (talk) 20:31, 23 April 2011 (UTC)
This is disrespectful and borderline racist. The instruments are African (Berimbau) The rituals are African and Brazilian. And there are several African Martial arts that have similar movements. N'golo is one. Batuque, and I can go on.
- How can you undermine the African influences? It's obviously not completely African, but to say it has no African roots is flawed at best. It's just like Hapkido. It's dervied from Daito Ryu Aikijutsu. SO are you going to say there are no Japanese influences? — Preceding unsigned comment added by TheShadowStrikes (talk • contribs) 14:28, 8 February 2012 (UTC)
- Racist is the guy who wants to make Capoeira EXCLUSIVELY an African thing. Capoeira was born in Brazil, it has nothing simmilar in Africa, it's Brazilian. You can find in Africa religions simmilar to Afro-brazilian religions, you can find music simmilar to Afro-brazilian music, but you can't find Capoeira, nor you can find it in any other country which received African slaves.
- The instruments were Brazilian. Just to enlight you, before using the berimbau, they used the classic guitar in the rodas. The berimbau was a late adition. Candomblé, Quimbanda, Macumba, all have african languages as a base. In Capoeira, everything is in Portuguese.
- By the way, tell me how are performed three moves of N'golo, please. Only three, just to demonstrate you actually know what you are defending. People love to talk how N'golo was, but NOBODY has ever managed to see it. Not even the Brazilian mission which went to Angola looking for it.
I never said it was African. It's BOTH. I would never said it is anything but that.
Cite where they used guitar before the berimbau. And if they went from using a guitar to using a berimbau, how can you say that is not an African influence? What was the point then? If Brazil wanted to preserve it's roots, there would be no reason to add a berimbau.
You said nothing about Batuque either. — Preceding unsigned comment added by TheShadowStrikes (talk • contribs) 03:36, 3 March 2012 (UTC)
- Again, why isn't there anything simmilar to Capoeira in Africa or in other countries which had african slaves? India, Pakistan and the Middle East had African slaves also, why isn't there anything like Capoeira there?
- No, it isn't both. It was made by Brazilian black and mixed people, with native Brazilian and even white influences. Nothing African, for the same reason Brazilians can't be defined as Portuguese people.
- About the guitar, ask your master. Also ask him why they use the atabaque in Capoeira, as even the atabaque was a late addition. By the way, the atabaque, vastly used in every Afro religion, is not important to Capoeira as the berimbau is. And the berimbau is not an African instrument, nor is it used in Afro religions. It's first registered use was in the Middle East, vendors used the berimbau to atract the attention of costumers, so if you're looking for African evidence, forget about the berimbau.
- If you want to talk about batuque, no problem. Do you know what it was? It was a simple game in which one contestant had to remain STILL, while the other would kick him. Then they switched places, and whoever could whithstand more kicks, would be the winner. Does it look simmilar to Capoeira to you? But anyway, just to show you know what you're talking about, can you tell me how any three moves of batuque were performed?
Graduation / Cord Systems
The ranks section needs a language sweep -- it looks like it was translated from Portuguese. I edited some Portuguese out of it (changed "federations e confederations" to "federations and associations") but there's a lot more there that is unclear. I'm not sure what is meant by "He used silk scarves to separate his students, based on their skill and experience. New students had no graduation." Was there no tradition of formal graduations? Or did new students not have a scarf? Related: that could also use a cite.
I'm puzzled by the decision to emphasize Cordão de Ouro -- I have no idea whether their system is "most used" but I know that ABADA Capoeira, Raizes do Brasil, Grupo_Capoeira_Brasil use similar raw -> yellow -> orange -> blue -> green progressions. I suggest pulling this section altogether since a number of schools seem to have their own entries.
Thoughts? I'll move ahead on a cleanup of this section if folks aren't invested in the current content. Amanda bee (talk) 19:23, 4 November 2011 (UTC)
Another crap article
Parrots what promotion websites of capoeira schools say about myths of origin. And also that persecution thing. By the late 1800s, capoeira became a word for street brawling. Thus, authorities did not prohibit or sanction "practice" of capoeira. In banning capoeira they were banning outright street brawls! It's why Mestre Bimba presented his art as Luta Regional Baiana. No decent carioca would be eager to sympathise with capoeira and malandrismo. I could attempt to alter the article but it's become such a mess by now. Behemoth (talk) 17:11, 7 December 2011 (UTC)
- Capoeira was prohibited not only as a street brawl, but as a Martial-art. Not only street fights were prohibited, but also the practice, the playing and even the music of Capoeira were banned. It's good to remember that Afro-brazilian religions such as Candomblé and Umbanda were also prohibited. No, they were not banning brawls, they were banning a culture that was different from catholic standard.
Danilolabbate (talk) 14:22, 25 February 2012 (UTC)
Talk clean-up?
Reading through this article's talk is somewhat difficult, as it has lot's of obsolete comments on things already gone or fixed. Can this page be cleaned? I could do it, but I'm not sure if this is OK with the Wikipedia rules.
Danilolabbate (talk) 12:21, 12 March 2012 (UTC)
Limiting edition tool
As Capoeira is subject of very passionate views and even dogmas, I strongly suggest this article's edition should be limited to registered members only. Danilolabbate (talk) 03:04, 28 September 2012 (UTC)
Harry Potter?
One of the media representations for capoeira is listed as the film adaptation of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, with reference to some of the students ... um, am I the only one who doesn't remember that scene? Unless someone can prove this, I think it should be removed.The Talking Toaster (talk) 11:38, 6 October 2012 (UTC)
That's funny - I hadn't heard "the 1300's when the Spaniards first invaded the Inca's tribal territory" a century before Columbus. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.177.221.76 (talk) 00:21, 6 January 2013 (UTC)
This may seem a bit late, but I think the Harry Potter representation of Capoeira as mentioned above, is in the scene where the Durmstrang students enter. In the beginning of this scene there is a few boys performing. That is to what I believe they are referring to. I don't know if it has any bearing in Capoeira, especially as the wizarding population are very old school/ traditionalists who shun most muggle ideas and products. This particular school is likely in Bulgaria, and the time this takes place is in 1994 so the likelihood of them knowing Capoeira isn't very high. 117.120.18.133 (talk) 11:42, 24 January 2017 (UTC)Just a Simple Shrimp.
- I'm in agreement that, in-universe, it was a display of impressive physical specimens (subtext of them training mind and body), although out-of-universe, it was members of a Capoeira school performing, although it's basically just acrobatics. -Fuzzy (talk) 13:36, 27 January 2017 (UTC)
Before you think about African origins, read this...
From time to time someone messes up the historical section and writes down that Capoeira comes from Africa. Normally theese people talk about n'golo when they do it. I'm not going to start talking about how disrespectful this is to Brazilian culture, so I'm just going to stick to the facts:
- No evidence WAS EVER FOUND of any martial art resembling Capoeira in Africa.
- To that extent, no evidence of any martial art resembling Capoeira was ever found in ANY country which also received African slaves.
- African religions and influences exist in every colony that has descendants of African slaves. Candomblé, Santeria, Voodoo, Quimbanda, Umbanda, Macumba and many others. Capoeira developed EXCLUSIVELY in Brazil.
- African religions maintained the original African languages in their cerimonies. On the other hand, capoeira has always been sung exclusively in Portuguese.
- Since the 1960's, when the first mention to n'golo was made, Brazilian expeditions of African enthusiasts have been going to Angola to find evidence about n'golo and it's so called simmilarity to Capoeira. Up to now absolutely no evidence has been found.
Feel free to disagree, but unless anyone can provide EVIDENCE stronger than the facts above, it will be very hard for anyone to believe that Capoeira might come from Africa.
Apparently, some also believe that Capoeira is derived ultimately from Chinese martial arts. Some actually believe that the Chinese taught Chinese martial arts to various African peoples in Central Africa and West Africa Chinese martial arts when Zheng He came over from China in the 1400s, and then those Africans brought it to Brazil. And that's why Capoeira is seemingly so similar to Chinese martial arts. Meia lua frente, queixada, armada, martelo do chao, negativa, arpao, chute na lua, mariposa, au sem mao, au, are similar to some Chinese longfist moves.
I'm quite skeptical of this myself. First off, there's not much evidence of the African origins of Capoeira, secondly, Mestre Bimba was most likely the one who introduced kung fu-like movements into Capoeira with the frente and quixada and armada, not in 1400s, and thirdly, Chinese longfist adopted acrobatic movements much later in its life to appeal to the public, just like Capoeira did, not in the 1400s. Also, nevermind the fact that there is no evidence of Chinese prescence in Angola or Central Africa. The closest he got was Mozambique, and Africa is a massive continent, so it's doubtful that somehow the Chinese made contact with Angolans or people of the Congo. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.98.177.232 (talk) 17:14, 2 August 2013 (UTC)
Danilolabbate (talk) 15:34, 27 May 2013 (UTC)
Is Capoeira a game?
Some users have been editing the article stating that Capoeira is a game, and putting some out-of-context references to prove their point. Problem is, this statement is absolutely wrong and lacks sense. Here are some facts regarding it:
- Capoeira was born as a martial-art, developed as a martial-art and is still used as an effective martial-art. Check in the historic section to see how it was used for was and why it was outlawed.
- You can see fighters in the UFC that use Capoeira techniques in their fights, one of them Marcus "Lelo" Aurelio. Look for his videos in Youtube.
- The game is nothing more than an extension of the martial-art. The game's purpose, since it's creation, is to PRACTICE the correct application of kicks, defenses, counter-attacks and everything related to Capoeira as a martial-art.
- The game of Capoeira is ONE aspect of Capoeira. Stating that Capoeira is a game is reducing everything that Capoeira is to a mere fraction of it.
Hope that clears the subject, if anyone still have doubts, or just wants to talk about it, please feel free to ask.
Danilolabbate (talk) 12:30, 30 May 2013 (UTC)
- How is the reference "out of context"? 46.7.236.155 (talk) 13:02, 30 May 2013 (UTC)
- Reference points out, as described above, that the game is ONE aspect of Capoeira. It NEVER states that Capoeira is a game. Using this reference to make such a statement leaves quite clear that it's "out of context".
- Danilolabbate (talk) 15:31, 31 May 2013 (UTC)
- From the reference: "The malicia which the capoeirista refers to is an indispensable trait in the game of capoeira." The reference refers to "the game of capoeira" and yet you insist that it never states that capoeira is a game? I have no idea where you're coming from with this. 46.7.236.155 (talk) 10:22, 2 June 2013 (UTC)
- OK... I'm assuming good faith, I'm assuming you really got confused, so I'll explain it.
- The master is simply talking about the game of Capoeira. As I have stated above, and I believe you missed it, the game is ONE aspect of Capoeira, and not the whole Capoeira. The master is clearly talking about this single aspect, not about the whole.
- Saying "the game of Capoeira" is exactly the same as saying "the 100 meters of the decathlon". Would you correct the decathlon article, stating "Decathlon is a 100 meters race with aspects of olympics"?
- Ironicaly, the game of Capoeira was created as means of practicing the martial art techniques of Capoeira in a simulated combat environment. That means the game is absolutely subject to the martial art, they are not disconnected at all.
Danilolabbate (talk) 09:12, 3 June 2013 (UTC)
In the context of "The malicia which the capoeirista refers to is an indispensable trait in the game of capoeira" the "game" is not really calling Capoeria a game, any more than those who say "The fine art of fencing" are making sword figting a fine art like painting, sculpture, singing, etc, or no more when boxers say "lets dance". It is a flourish term, or perhaps a philosophical way of looking at the martial art. (indeed in a game or in a real to the death battle, tricking your enemy into a weakened position is crucial). Capoeria is a martial art, and a sport. There are game like elements to it (just as Judo or Karate have tournaments with game-like scoring) but it is incorrect to say that it IS a game. Gaijin42 (talk) 15:29, 4 June 2013 (UTC) Gaijin42 (talk) 15:29, 4 June 2013 (UTC)
- Absolutely agree with Gaijin42.
- Unfortunately the unregistered user who keeps insisting on that wrong statement, using the IP 46.7.236.155, obviously don't know the Portuguese language and obviously knows very little about Capoeira itself.
- Now the same user tried to add a second reference (writen by a non-Brazilian writer), which wrongly states not only that Capoeira is a game, but also states that Capoeira is a dance. That is a huge mistake, the most common mistake laymen do when they try to understand Capoeira.
- Unregistered user 46.7.236.155 also fails to answer to this talk section, making it hard to even try to explain the issue to him.
- Danilolabbate (talk) 19:41, 5 June 2013 (UTC)
- Dance elements is certainly well supported, and I have added many refs to that point, as well as "referred to as a game" which I think is better than sport on second thought (again reffed). Impeaching sources via assertion is not really possible under wiki policy - you would need to find contradictory sources saying that Capoeria is NOT a dance and NOT a game. Do you have such? (Note, I still hold that game is used philosophically, but as the wording is very common and easy to source, and the philosophy bit is my personal WP:OR, that leaves it somewhat stuck. Gaijin42 (talk) 19:47, 5 June 2013 (UTC)
- Actually, there's no dance at all, and references to any kind of dance is made by non practitioners. The game part is still not good, since the Capoeira game was created as a way to further practice the martial art, objective in the game is to take down your opponent or connect a kick, possibly without hurting him.
- I understand your point, and I will look for sources with such statements, but it's not an easy task. There's tons of horrible books about Capoeira, some of them plain ridiculous and laughable, others even offensive to Brazilian heritage. Unfortunately, as Capoeira came from the poorest people in Brazil and it was ilegal for so long, not many of the masters are good writers, and this kind of thing often tend to happen.
- I have changed the article before I reading this talk section. I'll try to find the sources before my next edition. I also want to improve the Martial Art section, it would surely improve comprehension of this issue. I'll try to do it when I have more time.
Danilolabbate (talk) 02:18, 16 June 2013 (UTC)
- I am reverting your change. While you may or may not be correct, your assertions are WP:ORIGINALRESEARCH and the statement that capoeria encorporates elements of dance is sourced by many reliable sources. You would need to find more authoritative sources that state the contrary. The fact that you think a book is horrible is irrelevant, unless you can find again reliable sources stating such. Gaijin42 (talk) 02:44, 16 June 2013 (UTC)
- That's a lost battle for me. The number of books making this wrong statement is enormous. As I've said before, Capoeira was born in illiterate, marginalized environments. Old masters were never good writers, and that led to so many misunderstandings, and even worse, led to Capoeira being a subject where any curious bypasser can write any impression, and that will probably be accepted by the general public.
- Just to exemplify, I can find reliable sources stating that the Pyramids of Egypt were built by aliens. I can find sources also stating that the drawings in the Nazca desert were used for flying sources as landing strips. You CAN disregard statements like that, since in both cases there's extensive documentation and studies, which leave clear how ridiculous and dissonant books like that are. That's not the case of Capoeira.
- It's extremely frustrating. I've been practicing and studying it for the last 18 years, so I can assure you I'm pretty much qualified to make the statements I did. Sadly, that doesn't mean anything, since there's little to no documentation backing me up. Saying Capoeira is a dance is exactely like saying Mohamed Ali was dancing in the ring, and not boxing. And yet I won't be able to prove it academicaly.
- Will still try to find sources. But it's a lost battle.
Danilolabbate (talk) 07:53, 22 June 2013 (UTC)
Capitalization
I would love to know which of the names of the capoeira moves are capitalized when written within a sentence and which are not. I'm making some flash cards to help my son, who has special needs. I couldn't find any consistency on the Internet about which terms are capitalized and which are not, so I'm capitalizing everything in the same way I would capitalize a headline. For instance, I assume that "do" means something like "of," so I didn't capitalize it in "Martelo do Chao," and I won't capitalize "de" either, but I'm capitalizing everything else I'm printing up. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.118.207.164 (talk) 17:02, 28 July 2013 (UTC)
Tarzan
The beginning credit sequence of one of the old Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan films shows some tribal dance moves which look a lot like Capoeira to me, with somersaults and stuff. Of course, considering how these films were, that part was not necessarily even filmed in Africa (although I remember it looking different than the rest of the movie). Unfortunately I don't remember which of the movies it was... 62.78.251.108 (talk) 22:44, 11 April 2014 (UTC)
Pop culture
Considering that there's already a separate article for capoeira in popular culture, shouldn't the badly written popular culture section of this article be removed? The same was done in articles like zuiquan and muay Thai. Morinae (talk) 15:32, 7 May 2014 (UTC)
I would be in favour of scrapping the section in place of a hyperlink, especially considering the total lack of organization in the section (Television makes the Anime and Manga Section half redundant - and there is no Anime listed under the section anyway) 207.161.128.68 (talk) 03:50, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
granted UNESCO protected status
Just quickly to mention that Capoeira has been granted UNESCO protected status http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-30219941 EdwardLane (talk) 07:34, 28 November 2014 (UTC)
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Article with several incongruities
This article makes claims as if they were truths, without proving, and enters several times in contradiction. For example, states that "The most widely accepted origin of the word capoeira comes from the Tupi words ka'a ("jungle") e pûer ("it was"), referring to the areas of low vegetation in the Brazilian interior where fugitive slaves would hide" Where is the proof?
Ahead, states that: "A vast majority of masters recognize the art form as purely Brazilian, while certain masters have been researching for over 40 years to try and find any Capoeira link in Africa." Again without proving and later in the chapter "Capoeira Angola" stated that the style is the oldest, being the name used since the origin of capoeira and is referred to as the closest style of their African origins (Angola is a former Portuguese colony, and the location where they were taken, the vast majority of slaves brought to Brazil).
I believe therefore that this article has no nexus, nor coherence, and need a thorough review and a greater cohesion context.
Lara Neto Jr. (talk) 12:15, 27 April 2016 (UTC)
- It's been a long time since I contributed to the article (I've been away from Wikipedia for a long spell due to frustration with the VtD policies). I assume you're the person who put the neutrality notice on here? Honestly, yeah, the "historical" basis of Capoeira is a mess with much of it being more legend than anything else. Perhaps it would be best if we just indicate sources for the various tales? -Fuzzy (talk) 20:20, 25 October 2016 (UTC)
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Part that talk about "wrists close together" - remove?
Hello. I'm confused about the paragraph in the current article that starts with:
It should be noted that many of the movements used in Capoeira involve a stance where the wrists are close together. This, and the fact that Capoeira is based largely on kicks, head-butts and evasions, is due to the fact that slaves often had their hands bound.
Having practiced capoeira and researched it, it seems like a strange assertion to me, given that 1. most movements in capoeira involve the wrists not being together, including for instance, the basic ginga position with one leg back and one forward (generally one arm is in front and one is on the side/back), and all ground movements, and 2. I've never heard or read this suggestion. No references are provided either.
I think this part should be removed, but thought I'd post here before I remove it, to see if someone has a reference for why it should be stated here as fact. --Guyoron (talk) 23:28, 19 September 2018 (UTC)
I noticed that this section was added recently by User:NoDramaLama - thought I'd mention you here in case you want to participate in this discussion. --Guyoron (talk) 04:28, 23 September 2018 (UTC)
FYI, I removed this section --Guyoron (talk) 23:56, 26 September 2018 (UTC)
Hi Guyoron , I did Capoeira for 7 years and trained under a Brazilian mestre, Mestre Bogado, who is recently deceased. This is simply what I learned from him. I have not added references as my information doesn't come from the internet but from my Capoeira master. I added it for interest sake. If you don't feel it belongs there, that is fine. --NoDramaLama (talk) 03:47, 9 October 2018