Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/002149260/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 30 of
30
with 100 items per page.
- catalog alternative "Carnavais, malandros e heróis. English".
- catalog contributor b3090999.
- catalog coverage "Brazil Social life and customs.".
- catalog created "c1991.".
- catalog date "1991".
- catalog date "c1991.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1991.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-279).".
- catalog description "Preface to the English edition.--Introduction: The approach: Social anthropology or comparative sociology. Time, History, and the Social anthropology of ritual life. The role of rituals. Some thoughts on ritual and social life.--1. Carnivals, military parades, and processions: Of routines and rites. Carnival and Independence Day: A comparison: historic time and cosmic time. Authorities and the common people. Of uniforms and fancy costumes. Some theoretical problems. The basic mechanisms of ritualization. Conclusions.--2. The many levels of carnival: Two basic social domains: The house and the street. The house and the street: Dialectics, symbolization, and ritualization. Basic forms of displacement. The invention of carnival: A special space. A manifold space. A rite without a patron. The groups of carnival. Conclusion: The dramatization of carnival.--3. Carnival in Rio and Mardi Gras in New Orleans: A contrastive study. "Carnival" in Brazil and the United States. The two carnivals: social organization and ideologies. Carnivals of equality and hierarchy. --4. "Do you know who you're talking to?!" The distinction between individual and person in Brazil. The expression in theory and practice. The expression as a dramatization of the social world. On the distinction between individual and person. The dialectic between individual and person. The individual, the person, and Brazilian society. Zones of passage.--5. Pedro Malasartes and the paradox of roguery: A triangle of dramas, a triangle of heroes. The myth of Malasartes. The origins of Pedro Malasartes. Mediations: (a) Mediation by honesty. (b) Mediation by vengeance.--6. Augusto Matraga and the hour of renunciation: Names, persona, and social trajectory. Marginality, renunciation, and vengeance. The hour of renunciation. Of rogues, avengers, and renouncers.--References.".
- catalog extent "xii, 279 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Carnivals, rogues, and heroes.".
- catalog identifier "0268007802 :".
- catalog identifier "0268007942 (pbk.)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Carnivals, rogues, and heroes.".
- catalog issued "1991".
- catalog issued "c1991.".
- catalog language "eng por".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Notre Dame, Ind. : University of Notre Dame Press,".
- catalog relation "Carnivals, rogues, and heroes.".
- catalog spatial "Brazil Social life and customs.".
- catalog spatial "Brazil.".
- catalog subject "394.2/5/0981 20".
- catalog subject "Carnival Brazil.".
- catalog subject "GT4233.A2 M38 1991".
- catalog subject "National characteristics, Brazilian.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Preface to the English edition.--Introduction: The approach: Social anthropology or comparative sociology. Time, History, and the Social anthropology of ritual life. The role of rituals. Some thoughts on ritual and social life.--1. Carnivals, military parades, and processions: Of routines and rites. Carnival and Independence Day: A comparison: historic time and cosmic time. Authorities and the common people. Of uniforms and fancy costumes. Some theoretical problems. The basic mechanisms of ritualization. Conclusions.--2. The many levels of carnival: Two basic social domains: The house and the street. The house and the street: Dialectics, symbolization, and ritualization. Basic forms of displacement. The invention of carnival: A special space. A manifold space. A rite without a patron. The groups of carnival. Conclusion: The dramatization of carnival.--3. Carnival in Rio and Mardi Gras in New Orleans: A contrastive study. "Carnival" in Brazil and the United States. The two carnivals: social organization and ideologies. Carnivals of equality and hierarchy. --4. "Do you know who you're talking to?!" The distinction between individual and person in Brazil. The expression in theory and practice. The expression as a dramatization of the social world. On the distinction between individual and person. The dialectic between individual and person. The individual, the person, and Brazilian society. Zones of passage.--5. Pedro Malasartes and the paradox of roguery: A triangle of dramas, a triangle of heroes. The myth of Malasartes. The origins of Pedro Malasartes. Mediations: (a) Mediation by honesty. (b) Mediation by vengeance.--6. Augusto Matraga and the hour of renunciation: Names, persona, and social trajectory. Marginality, renunciation, and vengeance. The hour of renunciation. Of rogues, avengers, and renouncers.--References.".
- catalog title "Carnavais, malandros e heróis. English".
- catalog title "Carnivals, rogues, and heroes : an interpretation of the Brazilian dilemma / by Roberto DaMatta ; translated by John Drury.".
- catalog type "text".