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OverviewThe lottery called the jogo do bicho, or “animal game,” originated as a raffle at a zoo in Rio de Janeiro in 1892. During the next decade, it became a cultural phenomenon all over Brazil, where it remains popular today. Laws of Chance chronicles the game’s early history, as booking agents, dealers, and players spread throughout Rio and the lottery was outlawed and driven underground. Analyzing the game’s popularity, its persistence despite bouts of state repression, and its sociocultural meanings, Amy Chazkel unearths a rich history of popular participation in urban public life in the decades after the abolition of slavery in 1888 and the establishment of the Brazilian republic in 1889. Contending that the jogo do bicho was a precursor to the massive informal economies that developed later in the twentieth century, she sheds new light on the roots of the informal trade that is central to daily life in urban Latin America. The jogo do bicho operated as a form of unlicensed petty commerce in the vast gray area between the legal and the illegal. Police records show that players and ticket sellers were often arrested but rarely prosecuted. Chazkel argues that the animal game developed in dialogue with the official judicial system. Ticket sellers, corrupt police, and lenient judges worked out a system of everyday justice that would characterize public life in Brazil throughout the twentieth century. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Amy ChazkelPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.522kg ISBN: 9780822349884ISBN 10: 0822349884 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 28 June 2011 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIllustrations ix Tables xi About the Series xiii Acknowledgments xv A Note on Brazilian Currency and Orthography xix Introduction 1 1. Origins of the Jogo do Bicho 27 2. The Rules of the Game 69 3. An Underworld of Goods 101 4. Playing with Money in Republican Rio de Janeiro 141 5. Lives of the Players 165 6. Vale o Escrito 205 Epilogue 253 Notes 269 Glossary of Portuguese Terms 313 Bibliography 315 Index 339Reviews"""Taking the origins and evolution of a seemingly innocuous and commonplace informal lottery--the Brazilian 'animal game'--as a foundation, this study builds concentric rings of information and analysis to explore relationships: between law and practice, state and society, formal institutions and everyday life. The result is an illuminating essay on modernity and urban culture more broadly."" Thomas Holloway, University of California, Davis ""Focusing on a fascinating place and time, Amy Chazkel casts unprecedented light on the tangled relations among gambling, market culture, and the modern state. She also tells a lot of good stories. Laws of Chance is a delight to read, as well as a major work of imaginative historical scholarship.""--Jackson Lears, author of Something for Nothing: Luck in America" Taking the origins and evolution of a seemingly innocuous and commonplace informal lottery--the Brazilian 'animal game'--as a foundation, this study builds concentric rings of information and analysis to explore relationships: between law and practice, state and society, formal institutions and everyday life. The result is an illuminating essay on modernity and urban culture more broadly. Thomas Holloway, University of California, Davis Focusing on a fascinating place and time, Amy Chazkel casts unprecedented light on the tangled relations among gambling, market culture, and the modern state. She also tells a lot of good stories. Laws of Chance is a delight to read, as well as a major work of imaginative historical scholarship. --Jackson Lears, author of Something for Nothing: Luck in America Taking the origins and evolution of a seemingly innocuous and commonplace informal lotteryothe Brazilian 'animal game'oas a foundation, this study builds concentric rings of information and analysis to explore relationships: between law and practice, state and society, formal institutions and everyday life. The result is an illuminating essay on modernity and urban culture more broadly. Thomas Holloway, University of California, Davis Taking the origins and evolution of a seemingly innocuous and commonplace informal lotteryothe Brazilian 'animal game'oas a foundation, this study builds concentric rings of information and analysis to explore relationships: between law and practice, state and society, formal institutions and everyday life. The result is an illuminating essay on modernity and urban culture more broadly. Thomas Holloway, University of California, Davis Focusing on a fascinating place and time, Amy Chazkel casts unprecedented light on the tangled relations among gambling, market culture, and the modern state. She also tells a lot of good stories. Laws of Chance is a delight to read, as well as a major work of imaginative historical scholarship. oJackson Lears, author of Something for Nothing: Luck in America Author InformationAmy Chazkel is Associate Professor of History, City University of New York, Queens College and the CUNY Graduate Center. 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