Escuela normal superior del Distrito De Barranquilla
Presented: Analida Carvajal
Teacher training: Tatiana Ortiz
Course: 11b
Theme: carnaval in brazil
The Brazilian Carnival is an annual event that takes place forty days before Easter (marking the beginning of Lent). It has some variations with its European counterpart and also differences over the Brazilian territory. Despite the Catholic inspiration. Its European origins date back to a kind of carnival called introitus ("entry" in Latin) and entrudo in Portuguese, which is characterized by the interplay of water thrown from one person to another to purify the body. The entrudo was banned without much success in the mid-nineteenth century, because it was considered violent by the higher social classes (it is said that some people died from infections and other diseases because sometimes threw rotten fruit). In the late nineteenth century, cordões ("links", in Portuguese) were introduced in Rio de Janeiro and consisted of groups of people walking through the streets playing music and dancing. The lambs were the ancestors of modern samba. The blocos (blocks), another name for cordões are some current popular representations of the Brazilian carnival. They consist of people who dress according to certain themes or carnival held specifically. The schools of samba are truly organizations that work all year in order to prepare for the carnival parade. The main celebration takes place in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, where the samba schools, blocos and bands occupy entire neighborhoods. Some of them are: In Rio de Janeiro, Mangueira, Portela, Salgueiro, Beija-Flor, Imperatriz, Império Serrano, Vibrant, União da Ilha, Estacio de Sá, Unidos do Viradouro. In São Paulo: Nene de Vila Matilde, Vai - Vai, Mocidade Alegre Verde e Branco shirt, Rosas de Ouro, Unidos do Peruche, Leandro de Itaquera, X-9 Paulistana, da Barroca Zona Sul. The traditional route of the carnival is the Osmar circuit from Campo Grande to Praça da Sé The blocos are on the Avenida 7 de Setembro and return to the parallel Campo Grande Rua Carlos Gomes. In Campo Grande representations are every day, day tickets are available the week before Carnival (consult Bahiatursa to know where tickets are sold). For the blocos are judged according to their performance here so give it up as it passes through Campo Grande. Of course, there is no shade and the sun is often hit hard so bring a hat and water. The other important circuit is the circuit Dodo, running from Barra to Ondina. It is known as the alternative route as in recent years the service that the silk route along the avenue has led him to many viewers as the blocos and Timbalada, the group formed by the known Carlinhos Brown. The methodology that I perform this process is to bring to my students a video where you see the importance of this carnival, take readings, images and dances typical of this. Will assess my students with a workshop and a dance they do in groups of four, the best will be featured in persencia of all students of the institution. http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia %3aPortada