Visit our new beta site!

bullfighting

From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition  |  Date: 2008

bullfighting national sport and spectacle of Spain. Called the corrida de toros in Spanish, the bullfight takes place in a large outdoor arena known as the plaza de toros. The object is for one of the bullfighters ( toreros )—the matador—to kill a wild bull, or toro, with a sword.

A modern bullfight consists of three stylized parts ( tercios ). When the bull enters the ring, toreros wave capes to prod it to charge; then the picadors administer pic (lance) thrusts, which tire the animal and cause him to lower his head; in the second part, the banderilleros come out and, while on the run, plant banderillas (short barbed sticks) on the withers of the bull; these often spur him into making livelier charges. In the final segment the matador—almost always a man, although some women have entered the sport in recent decades, amid controversy—holds the muleta, a small cloth cape, in one hand, and a sword in the other. Daring passes at the bull work to dominate the animal until it stands with feet square on the ground and head hung low; the matador must then approach the bull from the front and kill him by thrusting his sword between the shoulder blades and into the heart. A matador's performance requires great skill and courage, and successful matadors reap immense awards in money and adulation. Fighting bulls are bred and selected for spirit and strength.

The Minoans of Bronze Age Crete practiced bull leaping as part of religious ritual, and later Greeks and Romans also had rites that involved the slaughter of bulls. The Moors, who fought bulls from their horses and killed them with javelins, probably introduced the sport to Spain (c.11th cent.). Originally the central figure in the Spanish bullfight was the mounted torero; Francisco Romero is generally credited with being the first (c.1726) to fight on foot. Bullfighting is also popular in the Latin American countries of Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador, and in S France. The Portuguese practice a style of fighting from horseback in which the bull is not killed in the ring. Critics contend that bullfighting is an inhumane spectacle of animal torture; aficionados respond that it is a complex ritual central to Spanish culture.

Bibliography: See A. Bollain et al., Bulls and Bullfighting (1970); E. Hemingway, Death in the Afternoon (1932, repr. 1971); B. Schoenfeld, The Last Serious Thing: A Season at the Bullfights (1992); A. L. Kennedy, On Bullfighting (2001).



Author not available, BULLFIGHTING., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

Are the French and the Spanish finally turning against bullfighting?
Belfast Telegraph; 8/24/2007; 1091 words; ... asking the question now? Opposition to bullfighting in France - weak and divided in the ... political agenda this summer. An anti-bullfighting television advertisement, narrated ... The 46- second ad showed standard, bullfighting scenes of animals being weakened with ...
Are the French and Spanish finally turning against bullfighting?
The Independent - London; 8/24/2007; JOHN LICHFIELD PARIS CORRESPONDENT; 1093 words; ... asking the question now? Opposition to bullfighting in France - weak and divided in the ... political agenda this summer. An anti-bullfighting television advertisement, narrated ... The 46-second ad showed standard, bullfighting scenes of animals being weakened with ...
Animal-rights activists trying to stop bullfighting in Mexico.(Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 11/2/1995; Schrader, Esther; 980 words; ... Mexican Matador Association. ``Bullfighting has profound roots in our cultural ... people are wasting their time.'' Bullfighting is outlawed in the United States ... officials say. Outside the ring, bullfighting is a well-worn part of Mexican ... would-be matadors take morning bullfighting classes ...
It's not 'art or culture' - so Barcelona plans to ban bullfighting City council wants to create a new identity for itself and Catalonia by abolishing 'anachronistic' ancient sport
The Sunday Telegraph London; 10/26/2003; DAVID HARRISON; 841 words; ... planning to deliver the coup de grace to bullfighting. Hemingway had a lifelong love affair with bullfighting and wrote evocatively of its "spiritual ... official ban was proposed and said that bullfighting could disappear from the city "within ...
Manolo Chopera; Manolo Chopera, tycoon of bullfighting, died on September 6th, aged 75.(Brief Article)(Obituary)
The Economist (US); 9/14/2002; 826 words; Manolo Chopera, tycoon of bullfighting, died on September 6th, aged ... that anyone should object to bullfighting. Was it not part of Spanish culture ... would dig deeper into history. Bullfighting had played a part in the very ...
Death dance of 'la corrida' as state broadcasters reject bullfighting
The Independent - London; 12/6/2007; Graham Keeley; 602 words; Bullfighting in Spain has taken another step ... was conspicuously no mention of bullfighting - the first programme that RTVE ... Regional state broadcasters can show bullfighting and transmit programmes from other ... This decision is very positive news for our campaign to end Bullfighting. It ...
France's love affair with bullfighting goes sour over 'too gruesome' advert ; EUROPE
The Independent - London; 8/17/2007; John Lichfield; 760 words; ... the once seemingly untouchable French bullfighting industry. Fierce public controversy ... advertisement calling for a ban on bullfighting has been declared unacceptable - because ... la corrida", the Spanish style of bullfighting to the death (of the bull). Bullfighting ...
Barcelona considers ban on bullfighting Campaign has ancient sport's supporters pawing the ground
Chicago Sun-Times; 10/27/2003; David Harrison; 419 words; ... planning to deliver the coup de grace to bullfighting. The author had a lifelong love affair with bullfighting and wrote evocatively of its "spiritual ... official ban was proposed and that bullfighting could disappear from the city "within ...
Fighting bulls. (bullfighting)
The Economist (US); 10/9/1993; 979 words; OPPONENTS of bullfighting are not the only people to doubt ... agree with Hemingway's exaltation of bullfighting to the status of an art or whether ... wave of talented young matadors, bullfighting has made a place for itself in modern ...
Bullfighting fans in plea for world heritage status ; EUROPE
The Independent - London; 4/27/2007; Graham Keeley; 456 words; ... Unesco World Heritage status for bullfighting. The Peruvian novelist and the Spanish ... campaign to convince Unesco to class bullfighting as part of the country's national heritage. The pro-bullfighting Platform for the Defence of the Fiesta ...
Rift over Handling Public Events in Mexico City Has Bullfighting on Hold.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 6/24/2003; 999 words; By Jenalia Moreno, Houston Chronicle Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Jun. 24--MEXICO CITY--Bullfighting has long been as much a part of Mexican culture as te ... uila and tacos. For decades after it was built in 1946, the Plaza Mexico filled its 42,000 seats almost every Sunday during bullfighting season ... .
Not in front of the children.(bullfighting in Spain)(Brief Article)
The Economist (US); 5/8/1999; 391 words; MADRID SUPPORTERS of bullfighting may think it the essence of Spain ... normally feel at the start of a new bullfighting season. In the past, all they ... Catalan example. Appreciation of bullfighting, they say, is passed from father ...
A Madrid hotel where they dressed to kill Time passes by closed bullfighting haven
International Herald Tribune; 4/11/2006; Renwick McLean; 890 words; ... 04-11-2006 In the ritualistic world of bullfighting, perhaps the most solemn ritual begins ... Victoria, the traditional hub of Madrid's bullfighting culture and the place where Spain's ... matador and an author of several books on bullfighting. ''It's the passing of an era. All ...
In the corridas of power More than half a century after Hemingway, Laura Thompson revisits the literary bullring and asks: Where's the beef?; Matadors: a journey into the heart of modern bullfighting by Eamonn O'Neill Mainstream, pounds 15.99, 224pp
The Independent - London; 8/22/1998; Laura Thompson; 724 words; Like boxing and Venice, bullfighting is a subject that lures a writer ... own obfuscatory cloak around bullfighting. In writing Matadors, Eamonn O'N ... not get, close examination. If bullfighting is not that, then what is it ...
My Other Life: Sir Mark Prescott - 'If you see a good bullfight, you see courage, beauty, art, bravery and honour; if you see a bad one; Sir Mark Prescott about his love of bullfighting.(Sports)
The Racing Post (London, England); 4/8/2004; 562 words; ... did you first develop an interest in bullfighting? When I was 15 I had a girlfriend who ... offices. But I had been bitten by the bullfighting bug. I went to Pamplona a couple of ... me a desire to find out more about bullfighting. I attended corridas [bullfights] as ...

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

RUSSIA: PATRIARCH OBJECTS TO BULLFIGHTING, LUZHKOV TO RECONSIDER.(Brief Article)
IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 8/27/2001; 103 words;
"The bullfight is not a sport": from Ernest Hemingway's death in the afternoon. (Reading-Writing Link).
Writing!; 1/1/2002; 1453 words;
Death And The Sun.(Death and the Sun: A Matador's Season in the Heart of Spain)(Brief article)(Book review)
The Bookwatch; 1/1/2006; 128 words;
(book reviews)
National Review; 7/12/1985; Meyers, Jeffrey; 987 words;
NEW YORK: Jose Gabriel Fernandez at Lombard-Freid.(New York, New York)(Review of Exhibitions)(Brief Article)
Art in America; 12/1/1998; Amor, Monica; 390 words;
Multifaith mosaic.(PBS'S 'CITIES OF LIGHT')
The Christian Century; 11/13/2007; Byassee, Jason; 1315 words;
RUSSIA: BULLFIGHT OPPONENTS DEMONSTRATE IN MOSCOW.(Brief Article)
IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 9/5/2001; 43 words;
Matador man: former entertainment executive Joe Escalante gives legal advice on the radio but that's only one of his many talents.(People)(Interview)
Los Angeles Business Journal; 3/27/2006; York, Emily Bryson; 1291 words;
Olbinski: Posters for Performing Arts.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Wisconsin Bookwatch; 3/1/2005; 127 words;
The Short Stories; Volume II. (Audiobooks: Fiction).(Audiobook Review)
Kliatt; 7/1/2003; Flick, Hugh M., Jr.; 144 words;
Browse by alphabet: