1 x de R$145,90 sem juros | Total R$145,90 | |
2 x de R$72,95 sem juros | Total R$145,90 | |
3 x de R$48,63 sem juros | Total R$145,90 | |
4 x de R$40,62 | Total R$162,47 | |
5 x de R$33,36 | Total R$166,78 | |
6 x de R$27,80 | Total R$166,79 | |
7 x de R$24,33 | Total R$170,29 | |
8 x de R$21,29 | Total R$170,31 | |
9 x de R$19,40 | Total R$174,63 | |
10 x de R$17,60 | Total R$176,03 | |
11 x de R$16,00 | Total R$176,04 | |
12 x de R$14,85 | Total R$178,16 |
1 x de R$145,90 sem juros | Total R$145,90 | |
2 x de R$72,95 sem juros | Total R$145,90 | |
3 x de R$48,63 sem juros | Total R$145,90 |
What are the origins of Brazilian jiujitsu? Is it merely a by-product a rebel offspring of judo? What was the nature and content of the art that Mitsuyo Maeda, a.k.a. Count Koma , and other Japanese were teaching in the Amazon? Was it judo? Jiujitsu? His own personal fight-tested style, built on a foundation of judo and informed by his dozens and dozens of matches around the world? What was the bridge between the art he learned at the Kodokan and the Brazilian style--a style now practiced by millions worldwide and growing bigger every day--that claims him as its godfather? Should Maeda even be at the center of this story? And what role did Carlos and Hélio Gracie play in all of this? Did they "invent" BJJ? Would BJJ exist without them? And, if so, what if anything did they create? And why does this history matter to the average BJJ practitioner today?
Any history possesses its official narrative with its own favorite characters and events. But true history is seldom simple, and more oft than not the real story is far richer than the popular version that is widely repeated and handed down. The history of BJJ and MMA in Brazil doesn t escape this paradigm. The recent renaissance in research in regards to the history of martial arts in Brazil led to the author s curiosity, which in turn led to the documentary Closed-Guard: The Origins of Jiujitsu in Brazil, which in turn led to this book.
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