Olá pessoal
no mês de agosto também comemoramos Foclore.
Roots of Brazil
Folklore is still part of the modern world
Many people do not realize that folklore is part of our daily lives
through the food and drink we consume, superstitions, songs and more
We live
in the age of the Internet, of globalization and competitiveness. Technology
has an increasing worth placed on it, and people are more and more practical
and competitive. In this modern world it seems there is no room for folklore.
However, many people do not realize that folklore remains a part of our
lives. Have you noticed that many Brazilians are afraid of walking under a
ladder or of mixing mango and milk? Our forefathers also had the same fears.
This superstition about the ladder and the myth about food and drink (mango +
milk) are part of our folklore. When we eat feijoada, or we drink chimarrão,
we are consuming our folklore’s typical cuisine. Certain things we say, or
songs we sing, in our everyday lives were also said and sung by our
forefathers. When we go to a Festa Junina we are enjoying
ourselves at a party created many centuries ago. These are just some examples
of how folklore is part of our day-to-day life.
Inheritance from Indians,
Africans and Europeans
Brazilian folklore is
very rich, as it is based on the cultural heritage left by Portuguese
colonizers, by Africans and by European immigrants. These people spread
around the various regions of Brazil throughout the centuries. This is why
every State has different forms of folklore.
Englishman created this
word in the 19th Century
In 1846 the Englishman
William John Thoms created a word that later would be used by people all over
the world. William joined the words “folk” (people) and “lore”
(knowledge) and so the word “folklore” came to be, which means a people’s
customs (or knowledge). In Brazil Folklore Day is celebrated on 22nd August.
Folklore is expressed through the most varied activities
We can say that folklore
is a mix of customs, beliefs, knowledge and “things” which have been created
and cultivated over the centuries and that have been handed down from
generation to generation to our time. For a “thing” to be recognized as
folklore this “thing” has to have an anonymous origin, that is that no one
knows who created it. And it is also necessary that this “thing” was created
a long time ago and that it has been used by a large number of people and
transmitted to other generations. Folklore is expressed through the most
diverse forms: popular lullabies, regional dances, handicrafts, parties,
religion, types of food, folguedos (a kind of street theater), clothes,
superstitions, toys and games, forms of language, mythological
characters, legends and stories, and even through “popular medicine.”
Learn
about some of our most famous traditions
Cuisine – Feijoada, bolinho caipira,
baião-de-dois, café tropeiro, cocada, acarajé and chimarrão.
Parties – Festa
Junina, Festa do Divino, Folia de Reis and Círio de Nazaré.
Music
and dance –
forró, frevo, baião, maracatu, capoeira, catira, afoxé and moçambique.
Mythological
characters –
Saci-Pererê, Curupira, Mula-sem-cabeça, Cuca and Negrinho do Pastoreio.
Toys and games – kites (pipas), spinning tops (pião), hide-and-seek (esconde-esconde),
andqueimada.
Vocabulary
1 to
realize – entender / compreender
2 daily –
cotidiano / dia-a-dia
3 age –
era
4 competitiveness –
competitividade
5 increasing –
cada vez mais
6 worth –
valor / valorizado (a)
7 there
is no room – exp.idiom. = não há espaço (lugar)
8 ladder –
escada
9 mango –
manga
10 forefathers –
antepassados
11 cuisine –
culinária / cozinha
12 inheritance (heritage)
– herança
13 to come to be – surgir / nascer
14 custom – costume
15 beliefs – credos
16 to be handed down – ser passado / transmitido
17 lullaby –
canção de ninar
18 handicraft –
artesanato
19 party –
festa
20 toy and games – jogos e brincadeiras
Folklore Month Revives Saci, Cuca & Co.
Who has not heard of Saci
Pererê, Mula-sem-Cabeça, Cuca, Curupira and so many other figures from
Brazilian folklore? These characters are part of Brazilian culture but in
these days of the Internet, cell phones and satellite TV they are losing
ground in the imagination of today’s kids. But at least during August,
Folklore Month, these myths of the popular imagination will be remembered all
over Brazil. Get to know a little more about these ever-lasting
characters
SACI PERERÊ - Saci Pererê is a smart kid that lives in the forest and has
only one leg. He uses to walk at nights and he likes to play tricks on
animals and hide toys from the kids. Saci wears a red hood and hold a pipe in
his mouth.
CURUPIRA - Curupira is ugly, with green teeth and he has a different way
to walk as if he were walking backwards. He protects the forests, the woods
and the animals, scaring away hunters and passers-by. This mythic character
appeared in the North.
CUCA - Certainly the best known myth of childhood fears (remember the
song - “Nana neném que a Cuca vem pegar...?”). It is said that Cuca
would take kids to a mysterious and distant farm to be devoured or used in
some kind of magic. In Monteiro Lobato’s books, Cuca took the form of a
great big green alligator.
MULA SEM CABEÇA (The Headless Mule) - The headless mule, so the story goes,
appeared out of the romance between a woman and a priest. This forbidden love
came at a high cost to the beautiful woman: she was punished by being turned
into a mule. Not just a normal mule, you understand, but a mule with
fire in the place of its head, a mule which only appears at night on
Thursdays or Fridays when there is a full moon.
NEGRINHO DO PASTOREIO - There is a legend that says the Negrinho do Pastoreio is pure,
without sin, and a good angel. He lives to find things that we have lost
and to put them where they can be found.
BOTO - A well-dressed, handsome, dancing man who appears at night to
charm the girls and take them to the banks of the Amazon river where they
become pregnant. However, before dawn the man turns into an Amazon river
dolphin and disappears into the waters. When night falls, the story
repeats itself.
Vocabulary
1 losing ground –
perdendo espaço
2 ever-lasting -
duradouro
3 leg -
perna
4 to
play trick – pregar uma peça (aprontar)
5 to wear –
usar (vestir)
6 hood –
capuz
7 pipe –
cachimbo
8 walking
backwards – andar para trás
9 scaring
away – afugentando
10 hunter –
caçador
11 alligator -
jacaré
12 – forbidden –
proibido
13 sin -
pecado
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quinta-feira, 1 de agosto de 2013
Brazilian Folklore
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