Why Spanish bulls are now deadlier
Austerity and thrill-seeking are undermining an ancient tradition
DAVID GONZALEZ was trying to capture a charging bull on his mobile phone camera during a village fiesta in Villaseca de la Sagra in central Spain on August 9th. Instead it was a bull that caught him. The 32-year-old became one of nine people gored to death at festivals this summer (four alone on the most recent weekend), raising questions about Spain’s love-hate relationship with bulls.
Sophisticated Spaniards are dismayed that foreigners associate their country more with stomping beasts and strutting matadors than with painting, music or technology. Whether romantic or revolting, Spain conjures up visions of fearless, sequinned, cape-waving fighters dancing around half-tonne bulls and sinking swords into their necks—or being gored.
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline "Why Spanish bulls are now deadlier"
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