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Futebol

The Brazillian Way of Life

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A passionate look at the history of the most popular sport - football - in the most romantic of countries - Brazil The Brazilian football team is one of the modern wonders of the world. At its best it exudes a skill, flamboyance and romantic pull like nothing else on earth. Football is how the world sees Brazil and how Brazilians see themselves. The game symbolises racial harmony, flamboyance, youth, innovation and skill, and yet football is also a microcosm of Latin America's largest country and contains all of its contradictions. Travelling extensively from the Uruguayan border to the northeastern backlands, from the coastal cities of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo to the Amazon jungle -Bellos shows how Brazil changed football and how football shaped Brazil. He tells the stories behind the great players, like Pele and Garrincha, between the great teams, like Corinthians and Vasco de Gama, and the great matches, as well as extraordinary stories from people and pitches all over this vast country. With an unerring eye for a good story and a marvellous ear for the voices of the people he meets, Alex Bellos describes the startling range of football spinoffs found in Brazil; from Autoball, literally football with cars and a giant leather ball to Ecoball, played in the heart of the rainforest, from Button football and its highly regulated procedures organised by fearsome Buttonistas to the truly alarming Footbull (yes with bulls).

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 29, 2002
      After just a couple of pages into this account of the world's most popular sport, it becomes apparent that there is no American sporting equivalent to Brazil's obsession with soccer, and perhaps no equivalent worldwide either. Bellos, a Rio-based correspondent for the U.K.'s Guardian
      and Observer
      newspapers, covers virtually every acre of Brazil, from traffic-choked São Paulo to the barren backlands, to study the country's effect on soccer and, more importantly, soccer's effect on the country. He treks beyond its borders, too, arriving amid the frigid isolation of the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic to chart the progress of Brazilian footballers living there. The book comprises 15 chapters, each a compelling stand-alone focusing on an individual or group and their unique relationship with the sport. Alternately funny and dark, the book covers Brazil's introduction to soccer in the late 19th century, when the locals altered it from an orderly British game to "a dance of irrational surprises," according to one sociologist. One journalist in 1896 wrote, "It gives them great satisfaction or fills them with great sorrow when this kind of yellowish bladder enters a rectangle formed by wooden posts." Bellos offers a cast of characters as colorful as a Carnival parade: Joe Radio, the certified "most irritating fan in Brazil"; the terrifyingly violent Hawks supporters club; the beautiful contestants of the Kickabout Queen pageant; and, most fascinatingly, Garrincha—a tragic, crooked-legged national team player with talent to rival Pelé. Unlike Pelé, however, Garrincha possessed zero ambition or wit, and died an ignominious and premature death.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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