Knort Out Goddess
EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO
(In My Husband’s Robe)
Special ‘dank’ to C. P. Knorr.
A moving image message from Viviana M. C. De La Barca productions reinterpreting, reframing and re-staging boxing as a cultural item of identity.
Why boxing?
Boxing is a sport where fighters develop not only physical skills but also distinct personalities and philosophies in the ring. Mexico is a boxing nation and a key part of the nation’s sportive heritage.
Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO, is a conscious artful approach by Viviana, on the cultural sociology of boxing. Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO aims to drag attention to grow the rather small niche of social scientists interested in the polyvalent capacities of boxing and sports. Sociologists continue to punch safe and chicken out from topics in social realms that are considered unserious or too risky for a bet. With this artistic approach to cultural sociology, Viviana is inclined to combine boxing as a serious topic with the study of social symbols, art and culture. The goal is to make boxing and sports seem less predictable and more creative. Sports are socially transformative equally artistic.
Why?
Art is at the crossroad of sociology. Sports is intertwined with societal and cultural behavior. Take the fashion of sports where the culture of masculinity is embedded. This is key to understanding gender discrimination.
Are sports femme phobic?
Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO portrays the need to move beyond sociology favorite ethical mistakes topics and prejudicial view of sports. Sports are transformative. Boxing is one of many sports part of the cultural multifaceted existential sphere imbued with aesthetically identity inequalities.
Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO is a moving image documenting themes of anthropology of dress, sports, culture, identity and sociology. The title mixes the Dutch, English and Spanish languages, part of the author’s identity.
A moving image message from Viviana M. C. De La Barca productions reinterpreting, reframing and re-staging boxing as a cultural item of identity.
Why boxing?
Boxing is a sport where fighters develop not only physical skills but also distinct personalities and philosophies in the ring. Mexico is a boxing nation and a key part of the nation’s sportive heritage.
Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO, is a conscious artful approach by Viviana, on the cultural sociology of boxing. Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO aims to drag attention to grow the rather small niche of social scientists interested in the polyvalent capacities of boxing and sports. Sociologists continue to punch safe and chicken out from topics in social realms that are considered unserious or too risky for a bet. With this artistic approach to cultural sociology, Viviana is inclined to combine boxing as a serious topic with the study of social symbols, art and culture. The goal is to make boxing and sports seem less predictable and more creative. Sports are socially transformative equally artistic.
Why?
Art is at the crossroad of sociology. Sports is intertwined with societal and cultural behavior. Take the fashion of sports where the culture of masculinity is embedded. This is key to understanding gender discrimination.
Are sports femme phobic?
Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO portrays the need to move beyond sociology favorite ethical mistakes topics and prejudicial view of sports. Sports are transformative. Boxing is one of many sports part of the cultural multifaceted existential sphere imbued with aesthetically identity inequalities.
Knort Out Goddess EN LA BATA DE MI MARIDO is a moving image documenting themes of anthropology of dress, sports, culture, identity and sociology. The title mixes the Dutch, English and Spanish languages, part of the author’s identity.