Capoeira, the Afro-Brazilian dance-cum-martial art, has acquired a worldwide popularity. In this paper, we explore the relationships established by Australian students and Brazilian masters of Capoeira. We draw on and extend Wise and Velayutham's notion of everyday multiculturalism. This concept points to the need to research informal vernacular intercultural negotiations that happen at an everyday level. However, we wish to drill down beneath the surface of everyday public cultural negotiations to recognise the transactions that take place in relatively intimate settings. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted from 2006 to 2010 in Australia, we coin the concept of intimate multiculturalism to argue that it is in very close intercultura...
Capoeira is a Brazilian martial-art dance. Capoeira combines elements of dance, folklore, martial ar...
This paper is based on a qualitative study that investigated the experience of diaspora consciousnes...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...
The goal of this article is to contribute to the debate about identity and subjectivity construction...
In the port-cities of Brazil during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a distinct form of comba...
The migration of Brazilians to Australia is a relatively new phenomenon, and has been increasing sin...
The majority of the popular martial arts in Britain are of South East Asian origin. One exception is...
Tropical Australia is a multicultural mosaic fashioned by various waves of migration and ancient Ind...
This article is an unusual reflexive text. It has two authors, two voices, two embodied experiences,...
Afro-Brazilian capoeira exemplifies how communal practices connect multilocally. This article invest...
This research explored the Brazilian dance style samba de gafieira and how it is translated into Aus...
Brazilian diasporas overseas hasreceived little academic interest. Nevertheless, estimates suggest t...
Capoeira could be defined as a Brazilian martial art and game to be played. This research explored h...
The transnational process of capoeira - Afro-Brazilian element of corporal culture - expresses itsel...
Capoeira, the Brazilian dance and martial art is now globalised and taught widely outside Brazil. I...
Capoeira is a Brazilian martial-art dance. Capoeira combines elements of dance, folklore, martial ar...
This paper is based on a qualitative study that investigated the experience of diaspora consciousnes...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...
The goal of this article is to contribute to the debate about identity and subjectivity construction...
In the port-cities of Brazil during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a distinct form of comba...
The migration of Brazilians to Australia is a relatively new phenomenon, and has been increasing sin...
The majority of the popular martial arts in Britain are of South East Asian origin. One exception is...
Tropical Australia is a multicultural mosaic fashioned by various waves of migration and ancient Ind...
This article is an unusual reflexive text. It has two authors, two voices, two embodied experiences,...
Afro-Brazilian capoeira exemplifies how communal practices connect multilocally. This article invest...
This research explored the Brazilian dance style samba de gafieira and how it is translated into Aus...
Brazilian diasporas overseas hasreceived little academic interest. Nevertheless, estimates suggest t...
Capoeira could be defined as a Brazilian martial art and game to be played. This research explored h...
The transnational process of capoeira - Afro-Brazilian element of corporal culture - expresses itsel...
Capoeira, the Brazilian dance and martial art is now globalised and taught widely outside Brazil. I...
Capoeira is a Brazilian martial-art dance. Capoeira combines elements of dance, folklore, martial ar...
This paper is based on a qualitative study that investigated the experience of diaspora consciousnes...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...