| Home > Archives > Volume 17 No. 1- Fall 2002 > The Vejigante |
The Vejigante |
|
The name Vejigante comes from the Spanish word for bladder, vejiga. The Vejigante inflates a dried cow's bladder and paints it to resemble a balloon. The Vejigante's costume is made from scraps of fabric and looks like a clown suit with a cape and bat wings under the arms. During the carnival celebrations in Loíza Aldea and Ponce, the Vejigantes roam the streets in groups and chase children with their vejigas. The Vejigante is such an old character that he is even mentioned in the classic novel Don Quixote written in 1605. Fall 2002 |
CONTENTS 'Curriculum is Everything that Happens' Getting Students Off The Track The Best Discipline is a Good Curriculum Día de los Muertos: Talking with Students About Death Teachers Beware: Corporate Science Invades the Schools Black Students' Unlikely 'Emancipators' Educate for Global Justice: A Key Lesson from Sept. 11 The Fordham Foundation: Don't Think, Just Salute
|
| ORDER | Current Issue | Article Index | Archives | Web Resources | Publications | Just For Fun | Who We Are | | |||||
|
© 2002 Rethinking Schools * 1001 E. Keefe Avenue, Milwaukee, WI
53212 * Phone(414) 964-9646, or (800) 669-4192, |
|||||