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Chinese Martial Arts in the News: April 6th, 2015: Ip Man 3, Books and Global Kung Fu

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A still frame from the highly controversial 2013 Johnnie Walker advertisement featuring a digitally rendered Bruce Lee re-imagined as a some sort of real estate tycoon.

A still frame from the highly controversial 2013 Johnnie Walker advertisement featuring a digitally rendered Bruce Lee re-imagined as a some sort of real estate tycoon.

 

 

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story or event that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Lets get to the news!

 

 

 

Mike Tyson in Las Vegas, 2006.  Photo by Octal.  Source: Wikimedia (CC).

Mike Tyson in Las Vegas, 2006. Photo by Octal. Source: Wikimedia (CC).

 

 

Kung Fu Cinema

 

Our first major story this week relates to the upcoming movie Ip Man 3 (directed by Wilson Ip with an expected Hong Kong release date of December 2015).  After a somewhat slow start this project is picking up steam and making waves.  Right now some of the casting choices are generating the most discussion.  It has been announced that Mike Tyson will be appearing in this latest iteration of the Ip Man saga.  The South China Morning Post has run some of the more detailed coverage on this story, and it appears that the retired boxing champion will have a notable role in the upcoming film.

More controversial was the announcement that a CGI rendered likeness of Bruce Lee will also be appearing in the same film.  This will not be the first time that Lee has been digitally resurrected.  Readers will no doubt recall the Johny Walker’s advertisement featuring Lee pontificating on the nature of his success.  That project was met with mixed reviews.  Still, after failing to find an actor who could replicate Lee’s explosive energy, Wilson Ip decided to create his own CGI version of Lee.

Not everyone has greeted this plan with enthusiasm, and the Bruce Lee Estate is now threatening to sue the project to prevent it from going forward.  They point out that Wilson Ip does not have the rights to use Lee’s likeness.  Nor does it seem likely that the parties are interested in reaching a negotiated deal on this point.  It has been reported elsewhere that there are at least two other Bruce Lee bio-pics in production at the moment, and one of these actually has the explicit backing of the Lee Estate.  It looks like we will be seeing quite a bit of the Little Dragon on the big screen over the next couple of years, and these projects are likely to be accompanied by some fireworks of their own.

Ip Man 3 is by no means the only Kung Fu film project making headlines right now.  After a rough year following the arrest of his son (and a number of other controversies) Jackie Chan is back in the news promoting a new project.  His latest action film is titled Kung Fu Yoga and it will be one of the first big budget collaborations between the Indian and Chinese film industries.  The project appears to be in its infancy and it doesn’t look like they have a script hammered out yet, but title of the film signals its central premise.

The Chinese martial arts are also expected to play a substantial role in the AMC’s new sword and intrigue drama, Into the Badlands.  The network has recently released a short teaser trailer.  This story is expected to be a modern adaptation of the Chinese classic, “Journey to the West.”  Its also one of the upcoming projects that I personally am looking forward too.

There are also a couple of stories for those of you who are more interested in vintage martial arts films.  The first of these is a oral history of the challenges that went into producing the original (1990) Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film.  I have always had a soft spot for this story so I found the interview to be particularly interesting.  Apparently a hit comic book, popular cartoon series and highly successful line of merchandise was not enough to convince movie studios that this might be a profitable franchise.  Go figure?  You can read more about the difficulties in bringing the Turtles to the big screen here.

 

Page from volume 6 of the 15-volume Hokusai Manga (sketches collection).  Source: Wikimedia (cc).

Page from volume 6 of the 15-volume Hokusai Manga (sketches collection). Source: Wikimedia (cc).

 

Those of you who are in the New York area will also want to remember that the “Old School Kung Fu Fest” is set to run from April 16-19 this year.  This season’s film festival kicks off with a look at a number of classic ninja films before heading off into Kung Fu territory.  This looks like it will be a great event.

Lastly, the Academy for International Communications of Chinese Culture has recently finished a multi-country survey and report looking at the impact of Chinese film on foreign audiences.  Unsurprisingly they found that Chinese martial arts and action films were popular, but individual actors and directors still lacked name recognition overseas.  More interesting was some of the cultural analysis that was included with this report.  I suspect that it may be helpful for students of film and culture studies.  Here is one short quote dealing with the cultural impact of martial arts film from the AICCC’s final report:

“The raw spectacle of martial arts combined with Chinese characters, settings and costumes satisfied the audiences “orientalistic interest”, without challenging their underlying perceptions about China.”

There is a lot more in this report as well.

 

 

A Chinese soldier using his head to break a number of bricks.  Source: www.chinawhisper.com

A Chinese soldier using his head to break a number of bricks. Source: http://www.chinawhisper.com

 

 

 

Global Kung Fu

 

Over the last few weeks there have been a number of interesting articles discussing the evolving place of the Chinese martial arts in a global context.  The first of these comes from China itself.  There has been a new batch of stories in the news detailing the Chinese military’s movement way from hard Qigong and Wushu demonstrations.  In addition to dissolving the “special performance” units that carried out many of these demonstrations, it looks like other sorts of troops will also be spending less time on the martial arts to free up additional resources for other sorts of military training.  You can see the latest news on this round of changes here.

There have also been a number of news items focusing on the expanding appeal of the Chinese martial arts in Latin America.  These address a range of topics from promoting Olympic Wushu to new TV shows.  This article instead looks at these fighting systems as a gateway from the introduction of Chinese culture to the region.

 

 

Afghan Kung Fu

 

 

Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine is currently running a multi-part series on the growth of Chinese martial arts in Afghanistan.  It looks fascinating and the first two installments are already out.  You can find them here (Part 1: Kung Fu Masters, Job Creation, Refugees and the Free Press) and here (Part 2: Grandmaster Abdul “Rahim Kung Fu” and a Refugee Camp).

I also ran across a human interest story that briefly introduced the Taijiquan program at Folsom Prison (in the USA).  The story itself focused on a wrongly convicted (and recently released) man who was introduced to Taijiquan while incarcerated.  I found a slightly more detailed version of the story here, but I would like to hear a lot more about this program and its success rate in the future.

Our final story in this section takes us back to Hong Kong.  The South China Morning Post recently ran a story discussing the growing popularity of MMA training in Hong Kong.  They note that many individuals are turning to MMA gyms as a fitness program rather than as a form of fight training.  That is certainly something that I have seen here in the USA, so its interesting to find the same thing in Hong Kong.  Nevertheless, what really caught my attention in this article was a statistic quoted from a study conducted by authors at the University of Toronto claiming that 30% of all MMA bouts end with one fighter sustaining traumatic brain injury!  Needless to say that study has generated push-back.  Still, given what is going on in the NFL, this might be the MMA’s next big public relations challenge.

 

kendo.cover

Kendo: Culture of the Sword by Alexander C. Bennett. University of California Press, 2015.

 

 

Books and Martial Arts Studies

 

Do you ever find yourself sitting around wondering what you need to read to get up to speed on martial art studies?  If so you are in luck.  Paul Bowman has recently put together a short (one page) reading list broken down by category.  Take a look at see what you have missed.  I know that I found one or two things on there that I still haven’t gotten around to reading.

If you did not find anything there you can still look forward to some of the upcoming books expected later this summer.  Students of identity and youth culture will want to check out Fighters, Girls and Other Identities: Sociolinguistics in a Martial Arts Club by Lian Malai Madsen (Multilingual Matters, August 15, 2015).  This ethnographic study doesn’t appear to focus directly on the martial arts so much as it uses them as a location for exploring a number of larger theoretical issues surrounding identity politics.  The author is an Associate Professor of Psychology of Language at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

The University of California Press will be releasing a new book titled Kendo: Culture of the Sword by Alexander C. Bennett on July 31, 2015.

 

Kendo is the first book in English to provide an in-depth historical, cultural, and political account of the Japanese martial art of swordsmanship, from its beginnings in military training and arcane medieval schools to its widespread practice today as a global sport. Alexander Bennett shows how kendo evolved through a recurring process of “inventing tradition,” which served the changing ideologies and needs of Japanese warriors and governments over the course of history. Kendo follows the development of Japanese swordsmanship from the aristocratic-aesthetic pretensions of medieval warriors in the Muromachi period, to the samurai elitism of the Edo regime, and then to the nostalgic patriotism of the Meiji state. Kendo was later influenced in the 1930s and 1940s by ultranationalist militarists and ultimately by the postwar government, which sought a gentler form of cultural nationalism to rekindle appreciation of traditional culture among Japan’s youth and to garner international prestige and respect as an instrument of “soft power.” Today kendo is becoming increasingly popular internationally. But even as new organizations and clubs form around the world, cultural exclusiveness continues to play a role in kendo’s ongoing evolution, as the sport remains closely linked to Japan’s sense of collective identity.

 

Alexander C. Bennett is a Professor at Kansai University. He also serves as vice president of the International Naginata Federation, a member of the International Committee of the All Japan Kendo Federation, director of the Japanese Academy of Budo, and head coach of New Zealand’s national kendo team. He is cofounder and editor in chief of Kendo World.

Readers looking for a more theoretical treatment of embodiment and physical practices as knowledge may want to check out What a Body Can Do by Ben Spatz (Routledge Press, March 25 2015).  This book does not appear to be solely focused on hand combat, but it addresses a number of question that are central to certain discussions that are happening within some corners of martial arts studies.  In terms of his background Ben Spatz is currently a Lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, UK. He holds a Ph.D. in Theater from the City University of New York.

Finally, readers will want to check out the following book review by Barnard Kwan (the editor of the excellent blog “Be Not Defeated By the Rain.”)  Here he looks at the recently published Chinese language edition of, The Hong Kong Martial Arts Community.  This overview is very helpful for those of us who cannot access the Chinese language version of this volume.  Hopefully this is a work that will see an English language edition soon.

 

An assortment of Chinese teas.  Source: Wikimedia.

An assortment of Chinese teas. Source: Wikimedia.

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We looked at the life history of a Republic era “Sword Saint,” learned about the growing popularity of the Filipino Martial arts and watched an exhibition of Ru Jia Quan from Fuzhou.  Of course joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing!

 

 

 

 



Chinese Martial Arts in the News: April 27th, 2015: Swords, Shaolin and Martial Arts Studies

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Jia Huaijin inspecting an unmounted blade.  Source: dailymail.com

Jia Huaijin inspecting an unmounted blade. Source: dailymail.com

 

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Lets get to the news!

 

 

 

Jia Huaijin in his workshop.  Source: dailymail.com

Jia Huaijin in his workshop. Source: dailymail.com

 

Martial Arts in the News

 

Swords

Our first set of stories focuses on the “rediscovery” of various aspects of Asian sword culture.  First off, we head to central China.  Multiple newspapers have run a story discussing  Jia Huaijin, a 33 year old entrepreneur and businessman who quit his day job with a state owned company, headed to the countryside, and has begun to research the traditional methods used to produce ancient Chinese swords and other bladed weapons.  Based in the outskirts of Zhengzhou, he has apparently succeeded in catching the eye of wealthy collectors in both China and the West.  You can read more about his story here.  The photos with this article are particularly nice.  Unfortunately I haven’t been able to find much information on his work independent of this latest batch of reports.

If you are looking for something a little different, consider heading over to Black Belt magazine’s homepage.  They are currently hosting a two part article series looking at the traditional swords and sword arts of Korea.  The first article (which also has some nice photos) focuses more on the weapons, while the second part looks at their practice.  See here for part 1 and part 2.

 

 

Tourists at the Shaolin Temple.  Henan, 2012.

Tourists at the Shaolin Temple. Henan, 2012.

 

Shaolin

It would not be a news update without a quick look at what the Shaolin Temple is up to.   After fending off accusations of over-commercialism in March following the public announcement of the new branch temple/luxury hotel complex in Australia, Abbot Shi Yongxin once again finds himself in the news.  It was reported that one of the temple’s monks recently forced a visiting journalist to increase the size of his donation from 20 to 100 Yuan.  The discussion of this story on Chinese social media has been strongly negative.  In response the Abbot is promising increased education and emphasis on “monastic principals” for his monks.

 

An image of Juan Carlos Aguilar originally taken from his social media accounts.

 

Juan Carlos Aguilar, the self-styled Shaolin “monk” accused of torturing and killing two women, has been back in the news.  His trial in Spain has generated a large number of media reports.  You can see two of them here and here.   He pled guilty to murdering his victims on the first day of the proceedings.

Shifu Carlos Alvarez, Master of the Shaolin Temple Spain, gave a statement to the press distancing the Order from Aguilar.  He pointed out that Aguilar (like so many others claiming a Shaolin heritage) had studied at one of the many martial arts schools in the area run by a monk or a lay disciple, and not at the Temple itself.  Nor had he taken vows in the order.   The Temple in China issued the following statement: “Juan Carlos Aguilar was neither a monk nor master and lacked all the essential prerequisites to be one.”  That must be the biggest understatement of the week.

On a more cheerful note, the Fightland blog just ran a post looking at Meir Shahar’s work on the evolution of traditional Shaolin combat methods in the Ming and Qing dynasties.  Titled “From Staff to Fist: The Origins of the Shaolin Martial Arts” this piece (authored by Sascha Matszuak) is yet another example of the growing presence of martial arts studies in popular discussions.

 

Bruce Lee Graffiti.  Source: Wikimedia.

Bruce Lee Graffiti. Source: Wikimedia.

 

News from all Over

 

Bruce Lee has made a number of appearances in the news over the last few weeks.   Obviously references to the Little Dragon are never hard to find.  One of the more thoughtful pieces that I ran across was this article titled “Consider the Dragon – Reflections on the legacy of Bruce Lee” in the Washington State Magazine.  It draws on an interview with a sports sciences professor named John Wong and looks at Lee’s influence on both physical culture and film.  Readers should note that I have also included an academic paper by Wong and Rinehart in the final section of this post.  If you follow the discussion of Bruce Lee these are two pieces that you will want to check out.

Lee’s association with the Filipino art Escrima is the subject of our next piece.  It includes some information from Dan Inosanto on Lee’s conflicted feelings about the style.

Lastly, it appears that the Time magazine blog is hopping on the “daily wisdom” of Bruce Lee bandwagon.   I will admit that this has never been my favorite genera (though I am interested in the development of Lee’s thought).  Still, the fact that he keeps popping up in unexpected places points to his ongoing relevance.

 

Tiger Claw Elite Championship

There is still time to register for this years Tiger Claw Elite Chinese Martial Arts Tournament, to be held on May 16th.  Given that I live on the other side of the country I have never had an opportunity to visit this event, but I see footage of it every year and it always looks impressive.  You can read more about this, and other related announcements, here.

In entertainment news, the reviews of Donnie Yen’s “Kung Fu Killers” have arrived and they are mixed.  Everyone agrees that it is a competent and enjoyable film with great fight sequences.  But the general feeling is that it never tried to break new ground or tell a compelling story.  The New York Times pretty much sums up this sentiment in its own lukewarm reviewThe Guardian gave it 3/5 stars.

 

 

Ip-Man-3-Poster

 

More interesting was the following interview with Donnie Yen in which he recounts some of his major struggles over the last 30 years.  Long story short, being a Kung Fu action star may be less glamorous and financially rewarding than it appears.  Yen also talks about his preparation for Ip Man 3 and deteriorating health.  He suggests that Ip Man 3 may be his last action role.

Our final article for this section is a public service reminder about why you really do have to pay attention to the character of your students before agreeing to train them.  It turns out that not everyone shows up at a martial arts school hoping to use their powers for good.  Some people are just really serious about attacking foreign workers.

 

Martial Arts Studies by Paul Bowman (2015)

Martial Arts Studies by Paul Bowman (2015)

 

 

 

Martial Arts Studies

 

I am happy to announce that Paul Bowman’s book Martial Arts Studies: Disrupting Disciplinary Boundaries has just been released by Rowman & Littlefield International.  I had the distinct pleasure of reading an advance copy of this manuscript and actually cited it in a recent article here at Kung Fu Tea.  By introducing a number of important theoretical considerations and perspectives, this book is sure to have an important effect on future discussions of martial arts studies.  Here is what the publisher has to say:

The phrase “martial arts studies” is increasingly circulating as a term to describe a new field of interest. But many academic fields including history, philosophy, anthropology, and Area studies already engage with martial arts in their own particular way. Therefore, is there really such a thing as a unique field of martial arts studies?

Martial Arts Studies is the first book to engage directly with these questions. It assesses the multiplicity and heterogeneity of possible approaches to martial arts studies, exploring orientations and limitations of existing approaches. It makes a case for constructing the field of martial arts studies in terms of key coordinates from post-structuralism, cultural studies, media studies, and post-colonialism.

By using these anti-disciplinary approaches to disrupt the approaches of other disciplines, Martial Arts Studies proposes a field that both emerges out of and differs from its many disciplinary locations.

 

As if that was not enough, Dr. Bowman has also publicly launched the Martial Arts Studies Research Network.  Click here to see its new homepage.  This cooperative academic endeavor will be hosting multiple conferences, seminars and networking events over the next few years.  You can also find all of the information about the June conference (including its programs and schedules) there.  Head on over and see what is in the works.  Be sure to check out the call for papers for the new edited volume, Inventing of the Martial Arts.

Chinese Martial Arts Cinema by Stephen Teo (Edinburgh University Press, 2009).

Chinese Martial Arts Cinema by Stephen Teo (Edinburgh University Press, 2009).

Our next item will be of interest to film and cultural studies students.  Stepen Teo’s 2009 Chinese Martial Arts Cinema has rapidly become a critical text for the discussion of martial arts films.   Edinburgh University Press has just announced that they will be releasing an expanded and updated version of this book later in 2015.  It will be interesting to see what changes between editions.

As I mentioned earlier in this blog, John Wong and Robert E. Rinehart have an article that contributes to the Martial Arts Studies discussion.  This paper (published in Sports History Review) is titled  “Representations of Physical Prowess, the Body, and National Identity in Selected Bruce Lee Films.” While originally published in 2013 it is certainly relevant to a number of ongoing conversations in the field.

Demonic Warfare: Daoism, Territorial Networks, and the History of a Ming Novel by  Mark R. E. Meulenbeld.

Demonic Warfare: Daoism, Territorial Networks, and the History of a Ming Novel by Mark R. E. Meulenbeld.

 

Lastly, researchers interested in the links between opera, popular literature and the Chinese martial arts will want to take a look at Mark R. E. Meulenbeld’s recent book, Demonic Warfare: Daoism, Territorial Networks, and the History of a Ming Novel (Hawaii University Press, 2015).

Revealing the fundamental continuities that exist between vernacular fiction and exorcist, martial rituals in the vernacular language, Mark Meulenbeld argues that a specific type of Daoist exorcism helped shape vernacular novels in the late Ming dynasty (1368-1644). Focusing on the once famous novel Fengshen yanyi (Canonization of the Godso), the author maps out the general ritual structure and divine protagonists that it borrows from much older systems of Daoist exorcism. By exploring how the novel reflects the specific concerns of communities associated with Fengshen yanyi and its ideology, Meulenbeld is able to reconstruct the cultural sphere in which Daoist exorcist rituals informed late imperial novels.

He first looks at temple networks and their religious festivals. Organized by local communities for territorial protection, these networks featured martial narratives about the powerful and heroic deeds of the gods. He then shows that it is by means of dramatic practices like ritual, theatre, and temple processions that divine acts were embodied and brought to life. Much attention is given to local militias who embodied demon soldiers as part of their defensive strategies.

Various Ming emperors actively sought the support of these local religious networks and even continued to invite Daoist ritualists so as to efficiently marshal the forces of local gods with their local demon soldiers into the official, imperial reserves of military power. This unusual book establishes once and for all the importance of understanding the idealized realities of literary texts within a larger context of cultural practice and socio-political history. Of particular importance is the ongoing dialog with religious ideology that informs these different discourses. Meulenbeld’s book makes a convincing case for the need to debunk the retrospective reading of China through the modern, secular Western categories of literature, society, and politics. He shows that this disregard of religious dynamics has distorted our understanding of China and that religion cannot be conveniently isolated from scholarly analysis

Scott Philips has written a detailed review of the book discussing its relevance to the Chinese martial arts and opera titled “Literature as Ritual Combat.”

 

Its facebook time!

Its facebook time!

 


Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We looked at a CCTV documentary on the Ming dynasty Shaolin author Cheng Zong You, discussed the problem of cultural appropriation in the martial arts and saw some rare footage of Hung Gar forms.   Of course joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing!

 

 


Guest Post: ‘The Shaolin Temple’ and the Cultural Significance of the ‘Star Wars’ of Chinese Cinema

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A promotional poster for the Japanese release of "Shaolin Temple" staring Jet Li.

A promotional poster for the Japanese release of “Shaolin Temple” staring Jet Li.

 

Introduction

Greetings from the University of Cardiff where I am currently attending the 2015 Martial Arts Studies conference.  This is the third guest post by Sascha Matuszak in his ongoing series here at Kung Fu Tea.  I thought that for this update we would do something a little different.  While his first two essays looked at historic figures and texts, this piece examines one of the most important popular culture events in the modern history of the Chinese martial arts.  Indeed, its hard to imagine what the 1980s and 1990s would have been like for folk martial artists in mainland China without Jet Li’s hit film, The Shaolin Temple.  Why?  Read on….

 

 

‘The Shaolin Temple’ and the Cultural Significance of the ‘Star Wars’ of Chinese Cinema” by Sascha Matuszak

Right when Return of the Jedi was about to hit theaters across America, bringing the epic Star Wars trilogy to a resounding close, China was experiencing its own Star Wars-esque craze following the 1982 release of The Shaolin Temple.

Chinese had been force-fed propaganda screeds for decades, featuring impossibly brave Communists and sneering, evil Japanese invaders, or at best kitschy musicals on the resplendence of Mao Zedong and how gloriously red the east was, and always would be. By the 1980s, Chinese were glassy-eyed followers of a defunct cult. Mao had died in 1976, taking the insanity of the Cultural Revolution with him. Suddenly, a short Sichuanese veteran of the rebellion, Deng Xiaoping, was talking about opening up and reform, about making money instead of weaving together red sashes and smelting pig iron in a backyard furnace.

Right at that critical point in time, a classic kung fu flic was released, and it blew a billion minds. The Shaolin Temple was filmed in and around an ancient Buddhist temple, the cast were almost all national wushu champions or opera troupe vets, and the director hailed from Hong Kong, an adventurous territory flaunting shiny, once-forbidden baubles. It was a raucous plot, thick with violence and rebellion and religious undertones. There was dog meat, righteous drunkenness, and every kung fu move you could dream of. Not a single red flag, Communist trope, or ode to Mao.

It hit China like a Super Star Destroyer into a beleaguered Death Star.

 

Click here to read the rest!

 

 

Super_Star_Destroyer's_defeat_2


Guest Post: Jose Figueroa: From Bronx B-boy to Chen Style Master

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Jose-VICE-650

 

Introduction
New York City is a place that gets under your skin.  Live there long enough and you will always be up for a good New York story.  I had a chance to explore the city while I was in graduate school at Columbia, but unfortunately I believed that I didn’t have the time to the study martial arts. (In my defense those courses did involve an ungodly amount of reading).  Now I view it as a missed opportunity.

If all has gone according to plan, I have just arrived back in the United State from the Martial Arts Studies conference at the University of Cardiff and am recovering from jet lag.  As such this will be the last guest post by Sascha Matuszak in his short series covering for me in my absence.  Keeping with the recent theme I thought that we would take another look at the many connections between the Chinese martial arts and popular culture, but this time Sascha will be exploring a story a little closer to home….

 

 

“Jose Figueroa: From Bronx B-boy to Chen Style Master” by Sascha Matuszak

 

I stumbled across Jose Figueroa’s studio while wandering around the old Schmidt Brewery and Artist Lofts in west St. Paul. The lofts hold seminars and events from time to time and Sundance was in town holding a filmmaking workshop. I left to catch some air and found myself at the end of a hallway, staring slack-jawed at a bunch of kung fu memorabilia taped up to the walls outside of one of the studios.

Photos and clippings from the 70s and 80s, a large poster of Sanshou champs Jason Yee vs. Cung Le from the 1997 Kungfu Championships, the first ever televised kung fu event. To one side movie posters for films I’d never heard of like “Final Weapon” with Lou Reed, “Hunting Buddies” and a documentary called “Urban Dragons,” all produced or choreographed by a Chen style Taiji master named Jose Figueroa. I looked at the pictures of a man with a ponytail in a “whip” pose sporting shiny white taiji robes and contemplated how the universe works in such mysterious ways. Did a quick search, sent a text, set up a meeting.

Jose was born and raised in Santurce, Puerto Rico, where he “grew up like Mowgli in the Jungle Book” with his three brothers. They moved with their parents to the Bronx when Jose was little, but he remained in Santurce with his grandmother for a few years (“It was a family thing, she said this one stays with me”), not joining up with the rest of the family till he was eight or nine years old. Growing up in the Bronx in the 70s meant you were probably at The Art movie theater watching old kung fu movies, at the jams dancing or fighting or deejaying, or on the streets bombing all night.

 

Click to read the rest of the story!

 


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: June 22, 2015: Swords, Combat Sports and Martial Arts Studies

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Liu Xio Yang.  Source: Yahoo Sports.

Liu Xio Yang. Source: Yahoo Sports.

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Lets get to the news!

 

Jian found by farmer in Chongqing.  Source:  shanghaiist.com

Jian found by farmer in Chongqing. Source: shanghaiist.com

 

 

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the News
Readers of Kung Fu Tea will probably have noticed my interest in traditional Asian weaponry.  As such I am happy to start this round-up of events with an account of a recent “archeological” discovery.  It seems that a farmer in Chogqing found the remains of what was probably a (pretty nice) Qing era Jian while working on his property.  The blade had already lost its handle and tip.  Undisturbed the man polished and sharpened it (revealing both some carving and an inscription) and proceeded to use it as a vegetable knife in his kitchen for a couple of years.  You can read more about the case (and see a picture of the blade) here.  A slightly more extensive article that compares this case to another recent find (this time of a much older bronze blade) can be found here.

Over the last month a number of stories looking at the more competitive aspects of the Chinese martial arts have been published.  A few of these have focused on the effort to get Wushu adopted as an Olympic sport for the 2020 Tokyo games.  This article in Yibada is pretty typical of the preliminary sorts of discussions that are being reported.  Given that Judo, the first Asian martial art to be adopted as an Olympic event, was first introduced during the 1964 Tokyo games, such a development would be poetic.

 

Cung Le, whose knockout victory in Macau made him a favorite of Chinese MMA fans.  Source: http://www.sanjose.com/news/2012/11/07/cung_le_returns_to_the_octogon

Cung Le, whose knockout victory in Macau made him a favorite of Chinese MMA fans. Source: http://www.sanjose.com/news/2012/11/07/cung_le_returns_to_the_octogon

 

Nevertheless, most of the recent discussion of the traditional Chinese arts and modern combat sports has instead focused on the mixed martial arts.  The Yahoo Sports Blog recently ran a piece titled “5 MMA Fighters with Backgrounds in the Chinese Martial Arts.” Another article playing to similar themes promised readers “Three Reasons Mixed Martial Artists Should Study Gongfu.” Given the number of people who see Bruce Lee as a forefather of the MMA movement, its probably not a coincidence that this article adopted his preferred spelling of the term “Kung Fu.”  Readers might also want to take note of this short catalog of “Bruce Lee’s 5 Contributions to Modern MMA.”  And while we are on the subject, what is up with all of these lists posing as articles?

 

An image from the southern Chinese martial arts manuscript collection known in Japan and Okinawa as the Bubishi.

An image from the southern Chinese martial arts manuscript collection known in Japan and Okinawa as the Bubishi.

 

In more substantive terms, Jack Slack (who writes on MMA and occasionally martial arts history for the Fightland blog) wrote an article looking at the Bubishi.  He gives an overview of the text for readers who may be unfamiliar with it and then delves into reconstructions of a few specific techniques.  Better yet, he promises to return to the discussion of this late Qing southern Chinese martial arts manual in future posts.  Again, its always fascinating to see these more historically informed discussions working their way into contemporary treatments of the martial arts and combat sports.

 

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

Over the last couple of years we have seen a number of discussions of the ways in which the Chinese government has integrated the promotion and display of the traditional martial arts as one aspect of its larger public diplomacy strategy.  In a sense this is not surprising.  While China has faced some challenges in this area, its martial arts enjoy an immense amount of public recognition and popularity around the world.  Various government backed institutions have promoted demonstrations of traditional crafts, arts and performance disciplines (including both the martial arts and opera) in an effort to educate the public about Chinese culture and to promote the state’s “soft power.”  In fact, this recent reports (with some nice video) of a Beijing Opera performance that was hosted in South Africa as part of the ‘Year of China’ observance is a nice illustration of this trend.

Readers who are interested in the question of ‘Soft Power’ and how all of this relates to the state’s promotion of traditional practices, will probably want to check out a story titled “China’s Soft-Power: The Search for Respect” which recently ran in Foreign Affairs.  This article (like most of those published in Foreign Affairs) tends to be more of a policy piece than a theoretical exploration.  At the same time it does a nice job of introducing a basic discussion of the idea of “Soft-Power,” points readers to a couple of important theorists (hint: read Joseph Nye) and offers some conclusions about why Chinese public diplomacy efforts have struggled in the past.  More importantly, it provides one possible context for thinking about the many sorts of reports (such as the South African account above) that we are currently seeing in the news.  While not directly about the traditional martial arts (though they do get mentioned), its one of the more important things that seems to have come out in the last month for those of us interested in the international relations aspect of martial arts studies.

Also interesting is the following account of the growing popularity of martial arts among Hazara youth (a Persian speaking Shia minority community) in Quetta (Pakistan).  This article is a little more detailed than most of the pieces that we see on subjects like this.  It also delves a little bit deeper into the question of personal motivations and community impact.  Anyone interested in the role of the martial arts in the Middle East or South Asia may want to have a look at this one.

Kung Fu Panda 3 Movie
Kung Fu and Popular Culture

Dream Works has just released the trailer for the much anticipated third installment of the Kung Fu Panda franchise.  I have always enjoyed these films and the next installment promises to reveal important truths about Po’s past (specifically the identity of his biological father).  You can see the trailer here.  We have also seen an uptick in reporting on this project, including this article from the La Times exploring the implications of the film for Dream Works and some of the details of the joint partnership which is supporting its release directly into the Chinese film market.  Click to read more.

There are also some interesting developments afoot on the small screen.  The buzz surrounding AMC’s new series “Into the Badlands” sounds good with the network promising that their project is going to “bring the martial arts back to TV.”

And no discussion of the place of the Chinese martial arts in popular culture would be complete without taking a look at the viral videos making their way around the internet.  My particular favorite as been the music video by Gener8ion + M.I.A. for “The New International Sound Pt. II.”  It is basically a three minute remix of footage taken from Inigo Westmeier’s (excellent) 2012 documentary “Dragon Girls.”  If you haven’t seen this one yet be sure to check it out.

 

The Collected Works of Sun Lutang.

The Collected Works of Sun Lutang.

 

 

Martial Arts Studies

Earlier this month (June 10-12th) the first annual martial arts studies conference was held at the University of Cardiff.  I was very happy to have been able to attend this event and even had the opportunity to discuss some of my own research in a keynote address.  The quality of the work that I saw in the various panels was matched only by enthusiasm of the presenters.  In short, the conference exceeded my expectations and suggested that martial arts studies has a bright future ahead of it.  You can read some of my more detailed thoughts on the event and its significance here.  Also be sure to watch Academia.edu where a number of papers, abstracts and slide presentations from the conference are currently being posted.

The event was so successful that plans are already being made for next year!  As part of this initial planning process the conference organizers have announced something new.  In order to help offset the costs for students to attend the 2016 meetings, a short film contest is in the works.  Interested parties are being encouraged to make a five minute film on any aspect of the martial arts or martial arts studies.  These should be submitted to the conference organizers who will broadcast the entries on their various media channels and reward selected winners with free conference registrations, meals and possibly accommodations.  Head on over and take a look at the announcement for the details.

Are you interested in getting some of your research out there but you need to stick a little closer to home?  Don’t forget about the call for papers for inclusion in the upcoming volume the Invention of the Martial Arts.  You find the details on this project here.

 

 

leathal spots vital secrets

 

Two new books have also been announced that may be of interest to students of martial arts studies.  First, Oxford University Press has just released Lethal Spots, Vital Secrets: Medicine and Martial Arts in South India by Roman Sieler.  This work will discuss both esoteric medical and martial practices .  Sieler is an Assistant Professor of anthropology at the South Asia Institute and runs their Masters Degree program on “Health and Society in South Asia.”  This looks like an important text for anyone interested in the Indian martial arts.  Here is the publisher’s note:

 

Lethal Spots, Vital Secrets provides an ethnographic study of varmakkalai, or “the art of the vital spots,” a South Indian esoteric tradition that combines medical practice and martial arts. Although siddha medicine is officially part of the Indian Government’s medically pluralistic health-care system, very little of a reliable nature has been written about it.

Drawing on a diverse array of materials, including Tamil manuscripts, interviews with practitioners, and his own personal experience as an apprentice, Sieler traces the practices of varmakkalai both in different religious traditions–such as Yoga and Ayurveda–and within various combat practices. His argument is based on in-depth ethnographic research in the southernmost region of India, where hereditary medico-martial practitioners learn their occupation from relatives or skilled gurus through an esoteric, spiritual education system. Rituals of secrecy and apprenticeship in varmakkalai are among the important focal points of Sieler’s study. Practitioners protect their esoteric knowledge, but they also engage in a kind of “lure and withdrawal”—a performance of secrecy—because secrecy functions as what might be called “symbolic capital.” Sieler argues that varmakkalai is, above all, a matter of texts in practice; knowledge transmission between teacher and student conveys tacit, non-verbal knowledge, and constitutes a “moral economy.” It is not merely plain facts that are communicated, but also moral obligations, ethical conduct and tacit, bodily knowledge.

Lethal Spots, Vital Secrets is an insightful analysis of practices rarely discussed in scholarly circles. It will be a valuable resource to students of religion, medical anthropologists, historians of medicine, Indologists, and martial arts and performance studies.

 

Second, Lauren Miller Griffith has a forthcoming volume titled In Search of Legitimacy: How Outsiders Become Part of the Afro-brazilian Capoeira Tradition.  Obviously this book will be important for those who follow Capoeria, but beyond that it appears to touch on a number of questions that are central to current discussions martial arts studies. Unfortunately we will have to wait to until January of 2016 to get our hands on a copy.  Lauren Miller Griffith is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Hanover College. She studies performance, tourism, and education in Latin America.

 

Its facebook time!

Its facebook time!

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook


As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We explored Xingyi Quan, discussed the links between opera training and the wooden dummy, and looked at some cool swords.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing!


Imagining Ip Man: Globalization and the Growth of Wing Chun Kung Fu (Keynote Address Delivered at the 2015 Martial Arts Studies Conference).

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Ip Man.Title Image

 

Introduction

 

In a recent post I discussed some of the major themes and ideas to emerge from the keynote addresses delivered at the recent Martial Arts Studies held at the University of Cardiff.  Astute readers may have noticed that something was missing.  Due to the constraints of time I omitted any mention of my own presentation from that first report.  Now that a few weeks have passed and I have had a chance to get settled, its time to rectify this omission.

This task was made even easier when I received an email from the conference organizer letting me know that a recording of my talk was going to be made available on Youtube.  A number of presentations were taped (with permission) and some of the graduate students at Cardiff have been editing and compiling footage so that this can be shared with the public.  Rather than simply reading my account of my paper, you can go and watch the original presentation here.  The total running time on this video is just over an hour.  Special thanks go to Ester Hu and Ning Wu for their hard work in preparing this and the other recordings.

I am also happy announce that two of the other keynote addresses have also been uploaded and are made available to viewers.  These are the conferences opener by Stephen Chan (“Martial Arts: The Imposture of an Impersonation of an Improvisation of Infidelities (amidst some few residual fidelities”)  and D. S. Farrer (“Efficiency and Entertainment in Martial Arts Studies: Anthropological Perspectives”).  While by no means exhaustive, I think that together these three presentations do convey a sense of the work being done in this newly emerging interdisciplinary field.

Of course not everyone loves video.  I for one would always prefer to read a paper.  For those of you who share my inclination I am also posting the text of the remarks that I prepared below.

Before launching into the substance of this discussion a few words of explanation may be in order.  This paper summarizes some of the final arguments made in my forthcoming volume (with Jon Nielson) The Creation of Wing Chun: A Social History of the Southern Chinese Martial Arts (State University of New York Press, 2015).  It can almost be thought of as a public reading of the volume’s concluding chapter.  Except that it isn’t.  The conclusion would have been too long and it presupposes that one has just read the preceding book.  So this talk combined discussions from both the books introduction and conclusion, as well as some other material bringing it all together.  Still, one might think of this as a “reading” from the upcoming volume. Enjoy!

 

 

Flight Crew.Wing Chun 1

 

 

Imagining Ip Man: Globalization and Growth of Wing Chun Kung Fu

 

In April of 2011 Hong Kong Airlines did something seemingly out of character. Most airlines seeking a share of the lucrative business class market attempt to impress the public with photos of their genteel and sumptuous cabins. Some seem to be engaged in an arms race to find ever more attractive and demure flight attendants. Instead Hong Kong Airlines announced that their flight crews would be taking mandatory training in a southern Chinese form of hand combat called Wing Chun. Having earned a reputation as a street fighting art on the rooftops of Hong Kong in the 1950s, this move appears paradoxical. It is one thing to quietly train cabin crews in rudimentary self-defense skills. It is quite another to offer press releases, give interviews, and post internet videos of how an unruly customer might be restrained.

It would be wrong to suggest that there is no glamour attached to Wing Chun. This was the only martial art that the iconic Bruce Lee ever studied. Nevertheless, when one juxtaposes the image of a bloody Lee (straight from the promotional material for Enter the Dragon) with a petite flight attendant from any competitor’s television commercial, one must ask what the advertising executives of Hong Kong Airlines know about their regional markets that we do not.

On purely historical grounds, it is rather odd that anyone seeking the past should “remember” Wing Chun, or any other traditional martial art, at all. The blunt truth is that for most of China’s history, the martial arts have not been very popular. While there has always been a subset of people who took up these pursuits, they were something that the better elements of society studiously avoided.

In the mid-1950s, when Bruce Lee was learning Wing Chun from his teacher Ip Man, there were probably less than a 1000 practitioners of the art in all of Hong Kong. When Ip Man learned the style from his teacher (or Sifu) in Foshan at the turn of the 20th century, it seems likely that there were less than two dozen students of his version of the art in total. The first realization that we need to wrap our minds around is that in many ways studying the “traditional” Chinese martial arts is actually a quintessentially modern activity.

Given this disconnect, much of my research over the last couple of years has sought to understand how exactly these arts have come to be such effective symbols of local identity and continuity with the past in southern China. But in today’s address I would instead like to shift my focus slightly and ask why some arts, like Wing Chun, have succeeded in the global system while others slipped quietly into obscurity.

What does this success indicate about the nature of the martial arts in general? And what does it suggest about the challenges that individuals perceive in the face of rapid economic, social and cultural dislocation?

The techniques of the traditional Chinese martial arts have a history that stretches back hundreds if not thousands of years. Yet the story of Ip Man, Bruce Lee, and the success of Wing Chun nicely illustrates the degree to which these arts have succeeded precisely because they are modern and global practices. Of course this is not how we generally think about or discuss the “traditional” martial arts.

While Ip Man and his student Bruce Lee are headlining today’s address, in many ways it is “globalization” that actually provides the terrain that we will explore. Originally rooted in the birth of European modernity this system of rapid social, economic and cultural change has since expanded to mark every corner of the globe.

Like much of the world China was first touched by globalization during the rush to construct a free trade system based on open markets during the 19th century. One simply cannot dismiss the influence of larger systemic forces when thinking about critical events in recent Chinese history like the Taiping Rebellion, the growth of regional imperialism or the Opium Wars.

It is also fascinating to note that so many of the martial arts that are popular today, including practices like Taijiquan or Wing Chun, were actually either created or reformulated and disseminated during this late period. Authors like Douglas Wile have suggested some reasons as to why this should not be a surprise. And then we see these same practices explode onto the global scene in during the 1960s-1970s as globalization hit another peak.

Yet just as the martial arts are a complex subject that must be examined from multiple perspectives, there is more than one way of thinking about the challenges posed by globalization. A more conventional, empirically driven, reading of the phenomenon claims that globalization is present when we see three things: the increased flow of goods (meaning trade), capital (or money) and labor (people) crossing state boundaries.

This rather simple conceptualization of globalization is the sort of thing that I was introduced to in my graduate economics training. It’s a very materialist approach to the problem. But it does direct our attention to some factors that are absolutely critical in understanding the challenges that an art like Wing Chun faced as it has sought to expand its presence throughout international markets.

Yet this isn’t the only way to think about globalization or the obstacles and opportunities that it has presented the Asian martial arts. Peter Beyer, in his work on the survival and evolution of religion in a modern era, suggests that we can also conceptualize globalization as the increased flow of ideas or “modes of communication” between previously isolated communities.

Beyer goes on to note that this sort of transformation can have important implications for any social institution responsible for transmitting fundamental social values, and during the late 19th and early 20th century, that is exactly how the Chinese martial arts came to be understood.

Modernization theorists long suspected that traditional types of identity such as ethnicity and religion would vanish in the modern era, and for the most part China’s May 4th intellectuals agreed. They also claimed that the traditional martial arts with their feudal and backwards values could not survive in the current era. Needless to say this hasn’t actually happened. Regional identity is strong, religions still exist in the world today, and more people are currently practicing Wing Chun than at any other time in its past.

So how do practices survive in a hanged world? By evolving. More specifically, while rapid modernization may resolve one set of dilemmas, it often creates a whole host of secondary problems.

This presents the guardians of more traditional ways of defining social meaning with an opportunity. On the one hand they can either find a new problem to offer a solution for, in essence turn themselves into a purveyor of a specialized skill and conform to the demands of modernization. Or they can double down on the more basic question of identity and meaning in a world where these things have become somewhat scarce commodities. But the critical thing to realize is that both of these strategies represent a transformation to accommodate modernity, even if one continues to market your brand based on its long history.

This is where the debates about Ip Man, who he was, what he taught, what sort of art Wing Chun really is, enters the picture. As we look at discussions within the Wing Chun community and other traditions we see exactly this discussion taking place. Do the martial arts need to evolve in order to survive, or does their value come from the timeless message of who we really are? Note also that this dynamic can help us to make sense of the powerful drive to find the supposedly “ancient” and “authentic” roots of these practices that currently dominates so many discussions of the martial arts including, once again, Wing Chun.

 

Bruce Lee.  Detailed portrait.

Bruce Lee. Detailed portrait.

Wing Chun as a Commodity in the Global Marketplace

 

Ip Man did much to increase Wing Chun’s profile as a regional martial art after 1949 and he set the stage for its eventual rise to prominence within the larger hand combat community. Still, one cannot understand the global growth of this system, or any of the Asian fighting arts, without appreciating the role of his better known student, Bruce Lee.

Lee is the axiomatic figure in any discussion of the late 20th century internationalization of the martial arts. While some individuals in both North America and Europe had been exposed to these systems during the tumultuous middle decades of the 20th century, often as a result of military service in the Second World War, the Korean War or Vietnam, the appeal of the traditional Asian hand combat systems had remained limited.

These limitations manifest themselves in different ways. Fewer individuals in the west practiced these arts in the 1950s and 1960s than is the case today. Nor did they enjoy the almost constant exposure in the popular media that we have become accustomed to.

A survey of the pages of Black Belt magazine, then the largest American periodical dedicated to the martial arts, shows that most of the articles published in the early to middle years of the 1960s focused on Japanese hand combat systems. Karate and Aikido were probably the best known alternatives to Judo. Indeed, much ink was spilled during the decade debating the relative merits of these different systems.

Bruce Lee’s initial appearances on television, where he played the role of Kato on the Green Hornet (1966-1967), and then on the big screen in the 1973 sensation Enter the Dragon, had a profound effect on the place of the Asian martial arts in western popular culture. Given their current popularity we often forget that prior to the 1970s very few individuals were familiar with the term “kung fu” or even knew that the Chinese had also produced hand combat systems of their own.

Bruce Lee’s appearance on the Green Hornet had an immediate impact on the North American martial arts community. What was not evident at the time was that the boundaries of this still relatively small community were about to be fundamentally redrawn. 1973 saw the release of both Enter the Dragon and the news of Lee’s death at the shockingly young age of 32. The film captivated western audiences with its innovative fight choreography, nods to Asian philosophy (something else which had been growing in popularity with western consumers since WWII) and unabashed violence.

Concerned that the public might not identify with a single leading Asian actor, the film featured a diverse cast which gave important roles to both John Saxon and Jim Kelly. These fears proved to be unfounded as audiences around the globe were drawn to Lee’s charismatic performance. Still, the self-conscious decision to feature an ensemble cast of martial artists from a variety of racial, national, economic and social backgrounds had a powerful impact on viewers. It broadcast once and for all that the potential for both self-realization and group empowerment promised by the martial arts lay within every human being regardless of their personal circumstances or nation of origin.

Lee’s untimely death in 1973 crystallized his image at a single moment in time. He became a prophet to his followers, snatched away at the very moment of revelation. Rather than looking forward to what Lee would have done next, those who struggled to understand the promise of this message were instead forced to look back to his previous films, television appearances, interviews and assorted writings. All of these things could be easily commoditized.

Martial arts instruction could also be commoditized and distributed to the public. The wave of enthusiasm unleashed by Lee’s sudden eruption into the popular consciousness filled martial arts classes of seemingly every style with new students. As one might expect, the previously obscure Chinese martial arts were major beneficiaries of this new attention. Wing Chun’s development was forever shaped by its association with Bruce Lee.

While Lee had been involved with the film industry since his youth (when he starred in a number of movies as a child actor), he was also a dedicated martial artist. Lee had first been introduced to Wing Chun in Hong Kong in the 1950s when he became a student of Ip Man.

After coming to the United States he continued to teach and promote the Chinese martial arts. His skills, personable nature and TV roles led to appearances in Black Belt magazine where he mentioned his background in Wing Chun and his teacher. Multiple articles published in this period actually featured images of Ip Man sitting beside, or practicing chi sao with, his increasingly famous student.

Given how little western media exposure the Chinese arts as a whole received, this was an unprecedented amount of publicity. Even before the advent of the “Kung Fu Craze” in 1973, Bruce Lee had assured that his Sifu would be among the best known Chinese martial artists in the west.

The Bruce Lee phenomenon boosted the ranks of many different Asian martial arts styles. In truth Karate schools, because of their popularity, probably benefited more from his appearance than anyone else. Yet this transformation in the way that the global public perceived these fighting systems was not enough to preserve every fighting style that had been practiced earlier in the 20th century. At the same time that arts like Wing Chun, Taijiquan and the various schools of Karate were reaping the benefits of this unexpected windfall, other traditional Chinese systems were slipping into obscurity.

What are some of the other more material factors that may have facilitated Wing Chun’s spread throughout the international system?

The first, and possibly most critical variable to consider, is geography. Exporting any good, whether physical or cultural, is expensive. All forms of trade are ultimately limited by the size of the “transaction costs” associated with the exchange. These costs include factors such as the expenses of adapting, translating and shipping goods for sale in other markets.

Ip Man’s flight to Hong Kong late in 1949 was, without a doubt, the single most important factor in explaining the subsequent success of his art. Why? This city occupied a unique place in the post-WWII economic order. It had traditionally been a major transit port for trade between western markets and China. As a result residents of Hong Kong were connected to global markets in ways that most individuals on the mainland were not.

These links were manifest in many areas, all of which served to reduce Wing Chun’s transaction costs. Hong Kong itself was one of the most urban and modernized sections of southern China. It had a highly efficient educational system which actually produced more students than the local universities could absorb. Some of these individuals were fluent in English and had either family or business connections abroad. In fact, a number of Ip Man’s younger students in the 1950s and 1960s came from relatively affluent middle class families and traveled to North America, Europe or Australia to pursue additional educational opportunities.

Ip Ching, the son of Ip Man, has noted that this pattern of out-migration was one of the main ways in which the socioeconomic status of his father’s students contributed to the spread of the Wing Chun system. When the Bruce Lee phenomenon hit in the early 1970s, there were already a number of individuals studying and working in various western cities who were able to take on students and begin to teach the Wing Chun system. More soon followed. The transnational flow of labor, in this case students and young adults, was critical to Wing Chun’s eventual success.

Other arts, even ones that had been very popular, had fewer opportunities to take advantage of this outpouring of enthusiasm if they were located in areas less connected to the global transfer of capital, ideas and individuals. The various martial systems of south-west China struggled to gain a foothold within the global market as comparatively few individuals from this region had emigrated to the west prior to the 1970s. Likewise, not all of Hong Kong’s arts were blessed with a relatively affluent group of students who had access to international employment and educational opportunities.

It is also important to consider the general attitude of these students and how that may have interacted with their socio-economic status. It seems to me that in the current era there seems to be a push to reimagine the Wing Chun of the 1960s as something more “traditional” than it actually was. This can be seen in a number of areas, from the re-emergence of the “discipleship” system in a number of schools to the enthusiasm with which some students have greeted the rediscovery of “lost lineages” claiming direct descent from either the Shaolin Temple or late Qing revolutionary groups.

While discussing the Wu Taijiquan community from Shanghai Adam Frank has argued that the shifting economic opportunities presented by global expansion will not always lead to more openness within a fighting style. At times the pressures and potential profits of international markets may actually lead to a renewed emphasis on secrecy and exclusion as organizations attempt to differentiate their product and control the flow of financially valuable teaching opportunities. We should not assume that the process of globalization will necessarily lead to more open or liberal styles.

So how did Wing Chun, and its various students, appear to observers prior to the explosion of interest that would make it a leading Chinese art? Did it give the impression of a forward looking system, or one that was basically reactionary, seeking to preserve tradition?

In 1969 a Wing Chun student named Rolf Clausnitzer and his teacher Greco Wong published a book titled Wing-Chun Kung-Fu: Chinese Self-Defence Methods. Clausnitzer had lived in Hong Kong as a youth and was one of the first westerners to practice and closely observe the Wing Chun system. He had initially interviewed Ip Man in 1960 and later studied with his student Wong Shun Leung. After moving to the UK he continued his studies with Greco Wong, who was a student of Moy Yat.

Readers should carefully consider the timing of this publication. In 1969 the general explosion of interest in the martial arts (and Wing Chun in particular) that would be unleashed with Enter the Dragon was still a few years off. So this early work offers us a suggestion of how Ip Man’s Wing Chun system might have appeared to western martial artists prior to the launch of the “Kung Fu Craze” and the orientalist urges that it seems to have embodied.

Originally from Kwangtung province he migrated to Hong Kong where he still resides. An outspoken man, Yip Man regards Wing Chun as a modern form of Kung Fu, i.e. as a style of boxing highly relevant to modern fighting conditions. Although not decrying the undoubted abilities of gifted individuals in other systems he nevertheless feels that many of their techniques are beyond the capabilities of ordinary students. Their very complexity requires years if not decades to master and hence greatly reduced their practical value in the context of our fast-moving society where time is such a vital factor. Wing Chun on the other hand is an art of which an effective working knowledge can be picked up in a much shorter time than is possible in other systems. It is highly realistic, highly logical and economical, and able to hold its own against any other style or system of unarmed combat.

Even more thought-provoking is Clausnitzer and Wong’s description of Ip Man’s students and how they compared to other groups in Hong Kong’s hand combat marketplace.

An interesting characteristic common to most practitioners of Wing Chun lies in their relatively liberal attitude to the question of teaching the art to foreigners. They are still very selective when it comes to accepting individual students, but compared with the traditional Kung Fu men they are remarkably open and frank about the art. If any one Chinese style of boxing is destined to become the first to gain popularity among foreigners, more likely than not it will be Wing Chun.

Bruce Lee’s rise to superstardom ushered Wing Chun onto a wider stage than Clausnitzer and Wong could have imagined in 1969. Yet, as we have seen, the system did possess certain characteristics that allowed it to capitalize on this windfall during a time when other traditional Chinese styles were falling into obscurity. Perhaps the most important of these were Ip Man’s decision to streamline the art following his move to Hong Kong and the nature of the students that his school attracted. Clausnitzer and Wong’s early observations appear almost prophetic in light of the system’s subsequent emergence as one of the most popular fighting arts within the global arena.

 

 

Ip Man visiting Ho Ka Ming's School in Macau.

Ip Man visiting Ho Kam Ming’s School in Macau.

Two Visions of the Wing Chun Community

 

Some accounts (such as those left by Chu Shong Tin) suggest that Ip Man liked to play the role of the Confucian gentleman. This embodiment of traditional cultural values attracted a certain type of student during the Hong Kong period. Yet, as the previous quotes remind us, Wing Chun succeeded in large part because Ip Man understood it as a modern fighting system.

Even Lee’s films, while examples of visual fantasy, retained a veneer of gritty social reality. His protagonists stood up to racial, social, national and economic oppression in an era when those problems were acutely felt. And Lee’s fame has done much to facilitate the subsequent success of Ip Man as a media figure.

Still, the Ip Man that seems to be the most popular with audiences today is a different sort of hero than his later student. Whereas Bruce Lee’s early films appeared to carry a politically radical subtext, Ip Man as he is imagined on-screen has been a much more conservative figure. Portrayed as a local and national hero, he fights to retain the values and hierarchies of the past rather than to overturn them.

There are a number of ways to approach this disjoint. When reimagining Ip Man for the big screen it is no longer enough to see him only as a local kung fu teacher. For these movies to be a commercial success they had to be embraced by wide audiences in both Hong Kong, on the mainland and in the west. As such a dual discourse was adopted where Ip Man found expression as both a local and a national figure. Wilson Ip’s 2008 effort succeeded precisely because it managed to strike a masterful balance between these various audiences.

So what is the significance of the current reimagining of Ip Man’s legacy for those of us in martial arts studies? Peter Beyer might remind us that there is more than one way to think about the process of globalization. While ultimately a continuation of the drive towards modernity that was launched in 19th century Europe, we can also understand it as a transformation of the ways in which meaning is communicated between society and individuals. This more conceptual understanding of globalization may shine a different light on the sorts of roles that the martial arts, and Wing Chun in particular, are being called on to perform in the current era.

According to Beyer, the process of globalization has resulted in traditional means of value creation being displaced by schools of thought that privilege efficiency and professionalism. Religious modes of communication have been one of the great losers in this process. Indeed, Beyer’s work is centrally concerned with the fate of organized religion in an increasingly global world.

To create systems of meaning (which can then be used to support a variety of administrative and political functions) Beyer argues that religions, and other “generalized” modes of communication, begin by positing the existence of two realms, a “transcendent” and an “imminent.”

Given that the imminent defines the totality of our daily existence, we actually have trouble talking about it as we have no exterior points of reference from which to define abstract values and concepts. This problem is overcome by postulating the existence of a “transcendent” state in which none of the basic conditions that define daily life are said to exist. Through their monopoly on socially meaningful communication, religions (and other ritual systems) were traditionally able to make themselves essential in all sorts of social spheres.

This balance was upset by the rise of more professionalized modes of action during the modern era. Why? Highly focused types of communication are more efficient than those based on general cultural ideas. Modern societies value this increase in efficiency. As a result the priests and nuns that had overseen so many elements of western life were replaced with doctors, nurses, teachers, counselors, lawyers and bureaucrats.

This same process of increased specialization and professionalization has now found expression all over the globe. Nor are religious institutions the only ones to be challenged by these fundamental shifts in social values. Any “generalist” mode of communication can potentially find its social influence threatened by the rise of professionalism and increased rationalization. In fact, when individuals talk about the declining popularity of many martial arts in mainland China today, it is often this sort of narrative that they turn to. The traditional martial arts are seen as incompatible with the demands of modernity.

This is a very brief summary of Beyer’s complex argument as presented in his volume Religion and Globalization (2000). Yet contrary to the expectations of the early modernization and secularization theorists, religion, ethnicity and the like has not simply vanished. Instead the disruptions created by globalization have presented new opportunities for these institutions to retain some degree of social relevance.

On the one hand, they can focus on new aspects of “public performance” by addressing the secondary problems caused by this massive economic and social transformation. This more liberal strategy proved to be popular and can be seen in places as diverse as the rise of “liberation theology” in Latin American or the increased concern with environmental protection by a number of different types of churches in the more affluent west.

Other organizations have instead adopted a more conservative approach by refocusing their energies on the question of “fundamental communication” about the transcendent.
This second strategy is especially useful if one wishes to address questions of identity, and hence the definition and boundaries of the community, in the face of increased global pressures and dislocation. Such approaches have proved to be popular and their influence can be seen in the rise of fundamentalist communities in many world religions.

Nor is there any reason to think that these two adaptive strategies are restricted to discussions of religion. Douglas Wile has noted that the disruptions which imperiled the Chinese empire in the middle of the 19th century (including the Taiping Rebellion and the Opium Wars) badly shook society’s self-confidence. This, in turn, became a critical moment in the formation of modern Taijiquan.

He argues that the Wu brother’s subsequent research and development of the Taiji Classics can be understood as an attempt to find, reevaluate and reassemble what was valuable in Chinese culture in the face of a rapidly evolving existential challenge from the modern west. While Taijiquan clearly has technical roots which stretch back for centuries, it is this late 19th century social agenda, expanded and reimagined in explicitly nationalist terms during the 20th century, which defines how many people experience the system today.

Still, there are debates as to what Taiji should become. On the one hand there are groups who see in the art a cultural repository of what is essentially “Chinese.” While foreign students might learn the techniques, it is doubtful that they could even gain the deep cultural knowledge necessary to correlate and perfect this mass of material. For some practitioners what lies at the root of the system is an essentialist ideal of racial or national identity.

Other reformers have claimed that for Taiji to survive in the modern world it must adapt. Specifically, it must evolve to meet the needs of its changing student. An aging population can benefit from the increased feelings of health, balance and well-being that come with daily forms practice. Busy corporate executives can turn to simplified versions of the art for stress relief and lifestyle advice. I think that the idea of Sifu as life coach is something that many of us are probably familiar with.

Here we see the two adaptive strategies that Beyer suggested were open to all traditional modes of communication threatened by globalization. The first camp has focused on the question of primary communication, which in the modern era so often finds its expression in the exploration of cultural and national identity. The second group has instead sought to adapt the art to deal with the ancillary problems created by life in an increasingly fast paced and interconnected modern society.

This same process can also be seen in the Wing Chun community. Certain schools continue to focus on the “solutions” (be they self-defense, health or psychological well-being) that Wing Chun can provide. Yet not every discussion of the art trends in this utilitarian direction. The endless debates of the deep (and basically unknowable) origins of this style signal an ongoing interest in the idea that a hidden and somehow more “real” identity is out there. It is interesting to note how often that search leads back to nationally motivated myths of resistance grounded in either the Shaolin Temple or legendary rebel groups.

Indeed, the impulse to see Ip Man as something more than a martial arts teacher is not confined to recent films. It also reflects a fundamental current within the Wing Chun community. What defines the heart of this system, and what should it become in the future? Is this a style built around the solutions to pressing technical and social problems? Or is it instead one that attempts to imagine a space in which its members have a better, and more empowered, understanding of who they are?

 

ip man.chair
Conclusion

 

In conclusion I would like to turn to a few lines of dialogue from a more recent reimagining of Ip Man, one that seems almost self-reflective about what he is becoming not just in Chinese popular culture but on the world stage. In an early scene of Wong Kar-wai’s 2013 film The Grandmaster we find Ip Man accepting a challenge from a northern master looking to pass on the mantle of leadership. When mentioning the divide between the Southern and Northern styles of the martial arts Ip Man asserts:

“The world is a big place. Why limit it to “North” and “South?” It holds you back. To you this cake is the country, to me it is so much more. Break from what you know, and you will know more. The southern [martial] arts are bigger than just the North and South.”

This scene is fascinating as it seems to contemplate the rise of Ip Man as a cultural icon and then goes on to address this debate in almost explicit terms. What is the value of the Southern Chinese martial arts? Are they an expression of local identity? Are they subservient to nationalist dreams? Or do they somehow transcend this? Can they become more? Nor, if Beyer is correct, should we expect to see this debate resolved in the near future. A dispute between positions representing such fundamentally different sets of possibilities simply cannot be resolved.

The dialectic tension between these two competing visions generates much of the emotional power that drives the Chinese martial arts today. While these fighting systems may appear to be “traditional,” in their present form they are inescapably the product of a modern global world. Ip Man’s actual genius lay in his perception and embrace of this fundamental truth.

oOo

 

If you enjoyed this presentation you might also want to see the Keynote addresses by Stephen Chan (“Martial Arts: The Imposture of an Impersonation of an Improvisation of Infidelities (amidst some few residual fidelities”)  and D. S. Farrer (“Efficiency and Entertainment in Martial Arts Studies: Anthropological Perspectives”), which have also been uploaded to Youtube!

oOo


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: July 13, 2015: The Passing of Yu Chenghui and the Birth of a Chinese Jedi?

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Yu Chenghi, 1939-2015.

Yu Chenghui, 1939-2015.

 

 

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Lets get to the news!

 

 

News from All Over

 

Our first story this week is a sad one.  The recent passing of the martial artists and noted film star Yu Chenghui has been widely reported and discussed in the last week, both in Chinese and English language outlets.  The Yahoo entertainment news ran a short piece on his life and career.  Chinatopix went with a different sort of article that focused on his early training in the martial arts and introduction to film.  As always, those sorts of biographical accounts are fascinating.  Gene Ching, the editor of Kung Fu Tai Chi Magazine offered the most detailed and heartfelt discussion of Yu which I saw.  His story included personal reminisces and some of his Yu Chenghui’s more memorable magazine cover appearances.  Be sure to check that one out.  It is clear that Yu’s many contributions to the Chinese martial arts and film will not soon be forgotten.

 

International Students Fall in Love With Wushu. Source: ECNS.CN

International Students Fall in Love With Wushu. Source: ECNS.CN

 

ECNS.CN recently ran a piece titled “International students fall in love with Wushu.”  Human interest articles in this genera are pretty common, but this one was certainly a cut above average.  It profiled three different international students at Chinese institutions of higher learning who had taken up Wushu training and briefly explored their motivations and experiences.  After reviewing their experiences the author concluded:

“Unfortunately few international students can endure the hard work and patience to really learn Wushu well, but their solitary accomplishments still make them feel connected to Chinese culture.”

One suspects that there is a lot to unpack in this sentence.

The same theme of identity moving (and even traveling) through the martial arts was also the subject of our next article.  The Global Post ran a piece looking at a public performance of Shaolin Kung Fu in Milan Italy.  Apparently the display was one aspect of a larger event attempting to promote Italian tourism within Henan province.  This is an interesting article as it points to a trend (seen in other places as well) of individual cities and provinces using the martial arts to promote their local image abroad separately from other state centered campaigns of public diplomacy.  This is an interesting issue for me as it brings to the surface certain tensions in how the martial arts will be understood in the future, as a national project or a product of local culture and history.

 

 

A Chinese martial arts and dragon dance display in Qatar.  Source: http://www.gulf-times.com

A Chinese martial arts and dragon dance display in Qatar. Source: http://www.gulf-times.com

 

 

The compliment of the previous story can be found here.  This short note discusses a “Chinese Kung Fu Show” held at “Dragon Mart” on Barwa Commercial Avenue in Doha, Qatar.  This display of traditional martial arts and dancing was part of the lead-up to the larger “Qatar-China, Year of Culture 2016” event.  This event was one of many organized by the Chinese Embassy in Qatar.  In it various performers displayed unique styles from China’s many martial arts schools and regions.  The goal of the year long event is to “strengthen the cultural ties” between Qatar and China.

Along similar lines I saw the following note in the Shanghai Daily.  Directors of “Confucius Institutes” from around the world recently arrived at East China Normal University for a nine day conference on the sharing of Chinese culture.  These Institutes are often involved with the promotion of events like martial arts demonstrations and traditional opera performances in local communities around the globe as part of their mission of promoting cultural exchange and understanding.

The Chinese community of Liverpool was also getting more press over the last few weeks than one might expect.  Much of this focused on the declining fortunes of the city’s Chinatown (one of the oldest in Europe.)  But the following story was more upbeat.  It profiled the career of Kwong Ngan (known locally as Kenny Tam) for his years of public service to the Liverpool Chinatown community.  In reconnection of his contributions he has been awarded the British Citizen Award.  It turns out that Kenny Tam is also responsible for the introduction and promotion of Taijiquan within his local community, and its interesting to think about how these two sides of career (community organizer and martial artists) may have intersected over the years.  Congratulations!

 

Donnie Yen, who is reported to have beat out Jet Li for the opportunity to appear in the new Star Wars franchise.  Source: http://www.ibtimes.com.au

Donnie Yen, who is reported to have beat out Jet Li for the opportunity to appear in the new Star Wars franchise. Source: http://www.ibtimes.com.au

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the Entertainment Industry

It looks like Donnie Yen has finally found a way to avoid being forever typecast as “Ip Man” in the minds of Western viewers.  Multiple sources are reporting that the well known actor beat out Jet Li in a competitive audition process to play the role of a Jedi who would befriend and appear with Han Solo in the upcoming Star Wars Episode VIII.

The Apple Daily is reporting that Yen’s price of a paltry $4 million USD per film (compared to Jet Li’s $10 million) may have helped to sway studio executives in his direction.  None of this has been confirmed by Disney or Lucasfilm, but casting an actor like either Li or Yen would certainly help to expand the films appeal in the lucrative Chinese market.  It should also be noted that fans have been actively discussing the lack of Asian characters (and Jedi) in the Star Wars Universe for at least the last decade.  Given the debt that this franchise owes to both the Asian martial arts and cinema, this seems like a remarkable oversight.  Even NPR got in on the act attempting to discover the fate of the first Asian actor in the series to have an (uncredited) speaking part.

I for one would very much like to see a lightsaber master who fights with a “Chinese accent,” so you can be sure that we will be following this story as it develops.  Maybe it will even inspire me to work on a couple of those Star Wars posts I have been kicking around…..

 

A still from the trailer for AMC's Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 Comicon.

A still from the trailer for AMC’s Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 San Diego Comicon.

 

 

AMC’s new martial arts/action series Into the Badlands has been getting a lot of press.  This series, based very loosely on the Chinese classic “Journey to the West” has been promising to bring martial arts excitement back to the small screen.  Yet until recently we had very few visual clues about what to expect.   All of that changed with the show’s recent Comicon presentation where fans got a lot of information and a lengthy, high detailed, trailer.  The aesthetic of the film appears to be based on a feudal post-apocalyptic world placed somewhere in the deep south.  And there are opium poppies.  Lots of opium poppies.

Check out this article for more, including links to both the trailer and another (to me more interesting) short film proving an inside look at the martial arts training camp that has been set up for the show’s cast and various stunt teams.

Are you more interested in Hong Kong Cinema?  Have you ever wondered about the evolution of the industry?  Do you only have five minutes to find answers to all of your questions?  If so, Timeout Hong Kong has an info-graphic for you.  This easy to follow chart will walk you through the evolution of the industry.  With these facts you are sure to amaze your friends at the next cocktail party where Kung Fu films come up (because don’t they always?)

 

Jim Kelly on the set of "Enter the Dragon."

Jim Kelly on the set of “Enter the Dragon.”

 

 

While on the subject of nostalgia, Black Belt Magazine recently published piece providing some personal reminisces of Jim Kelly.  Best known for his supporting role in Enter the Dragon opposite Bruce Lee, Kelly proved to be a highly charismatic and popular actor who went on to star in a number of martial arts films.  A nice piece for fans of the 1970s Kung Fu films.

Of course the entertainment industry’s fascination with the Chinese martial arts goes well beyond the world of film.  Many of my more historical posts have touched on the role of Wuxia novels in supporting and transmitting “martial culture.”  Nor is this all in the past.  These stories are still highly popular and exist in an reciprocal relationship with both the world of practicing martial artists as well as more visual mediums of story telling such as film and tv.

Beijing Today recently ran a piece that picks up on some of these themes.  It introduces a collection of Wuxia stories authored by Xu Haofeng.  At the moment Xu is probably best known as the screen writer for the Ip Man biopic “The Grandmaster,” but he is also a martial artist and writer in other genres.  But if you are in the market for summer reading, this might be it.

 

"Chinese Stage Shows" Cigarette Card.  Source: Digital Collections of the NY Public Library.

“Chinese Stage Shows” Cigarette Card. Source: Digital Collections of the NY Public Library.

 

 

Opera has always had an important relationship with the Chinese martial arts.  Indeed, one suspects that prior to WWII most individuals received their first exposure to these skills and the cultural complex that surrounds them through opera performances.  Unfortunately the popularity of traditional opera declined rapidly in recently years as fewer young people have taken up an interest in the art form.  But the Shanghai Daily recently ran an article detailing successful efforts to counter this trend.  A group of Beijing Opera performers have been holding workshops to introduce younger people to the traditional arts of singing, acting, and martial performance which comprise these shows.  Head on over to read more about these efforts to cultivate a more educated and enthusiastic audience.

 

 

 

Yuen Woo Ping's 1994 movie "Wing Chun" is notable for its comical, yet nuanced, discussion of the role of gender and social expectations in the Chinese martial arts.

Yuen Woo Ping’s 1994 movie “Wing Chun” is notable for its comical, yet nuanced, discussion of the role of gender and social expectations in the Chinese martial arts.

 

 

 

 Martial Arts Studies

 

 

First off, we are happy to announce that the interdisciplinary Journal Martial Arts Studies is now an imprint of Cardiff University Press.  Check out this post to learn more about this partnership.
At the recent martial arts studies conference held at Cardiff University I had an opportunity to see dozens of papers.  But perhaps the single most entertaining (and intriguing)  presentation I personally witnessed was given by Luke White and Susan Pui San Lok.  Their paper, titled “Exiting Through the Window: Wing Chun as Woman Warrior,” provided a finely grained examination of Yuen Woo Ping’s 1994 comedic masterpiece “Wing Chun.”  For my money this is still the best film that has ever been filmed on the system.  While over at Academia.edu I noticed that they had posted an abstract of their paper.  Head on over and check it out.  Hopefully the full version will be out soon.

Also new at Academia.edu is Steven Trenson’s article “Cutting Serpents: Esoteric Buddhist Dimensions of the Classical Martial Art of Drawing the Sword.”  This paper on the history of Japanese swordsmanship was first published in a Polish journal in 2014, so I suspect that most of us are just becoming aware of it now (the piece itself is in English).

On a related note readers should remember that we are only weeks away from the release of Alexander C. Bennett’s new book Kendo: Culture of the Sword.  Published by the University of California Press this new addition to the Martial Arts Studies literature should hit the shelves on July 31st.   The publisher’s note reads as follows:

Kendo is the first in-depth historical, cultural, and political account in English of the Japanese martial art of swordsmanship, from its beginnings in military training and arcane medieval schools to its widespread practice as a global sport today. Alexander Bennett shows how kendo evolved through a recurring process of “inventing tradition,” which served the changing ideologies and needs of Japanese warriors and governments over the course of history. Kendo follows the development of Japanese swordsmanship from the aristocratic-aesthetic pretensions of medieval warriors in the Muromachi period, to the samurai elitism of the Edo regime, and then to the nostalgic patriotism of the Meiji state. Kendo was later influenced in the 1930s and 1940s by ultranationalist militarists and ultimately by the postwar government, which sought a gentler form of nationalism to rekindle appreciation of traditional culture among Japan’s youth and to garner international prestige as an instrument of “soft power.” Today kendo is becoming increasingly popular internationally. But even as new organizations and clubs form around the world, cultural exclusiveness continues to play a role in kendo’s ongoing evolution, as the sport remains closely linked to Japan’s sense of collective identity.

 

Military Accomplishments of Japan, slide 2.  Photo by Tamamura.  Source: Author's Personal Collection.

Military Accomplishments of Japan, slide 2. Source: Author’s Personal Collection.

 

Readers may also recall our extensive three part discussion of Denis Gainty’s book Martial Arts and the Body Politic in Meiji Japan.  While making an important contribution to the Martial Arts Studies literature, the heft price tag of this book (originally over a hundred dollars) probably restricted it sales to university libraries.  But it looks like it is now due for a paper back release!  That should knock about $50 off the price tag and get this work some of the discussion that it deserves.

If you are looking for a more popular (though still informative) bit of “beach reading?”  If so why not try Tuttle’s new release Samurai and Ninja: The Real Story Behind the Japanese Warrior Myth that Shatters the Bushido Mystique. 

 

The Creation of Wing Chun: A Social History of the Southern Chinese Martial Arts by Benjamin Judkins and Jon Nielson.  State University of New York Press, 2015.  August 1.

The Creation of Wing Chun: A Social History of the Southern Chinese Martial Arts by Benjamin Judkins and Jon Nielson. State University of New York Press, 2015. August 1.

 

Recently I have been working on a couple of projects to prepare for the August 1st release of my own book The Creation of Wing Chun: A Social History of the Southern Chinese Martial Arts (State University of New York Press).  One of these was an interview with the University of Rochester’s magazine, the Rochester Review.  It proved to be an interesting discussion as I was given an opportunity to frame my project and explain its theoretical significance to a much more general audience than the one that I normally write for.  I like the way the interview came out, and now that it has been released you can read it here.

 

An assortment of Chinese teas.  Source: Wikimedia.

An assortment of Chinese teas. Source: Wikimedia.

 

 

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We explored the martial arts of various Chinese ethnic minorities, saw a 19th century military training manual, and learned about upcoming Martial Arts Studies conferences.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Guest Post: Grappling with History – Martial Arts in Classical Hollywood Cinema

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James Cagney – Oscar-winning Judoka (ca. 1943)

James Cagney – Oscar-winning Judoka (ca. 1943)

 

 

Introduction

 

Upon the gracious invitation from Dr. Judkins, I thought about what I could add to a historical perspective on the martial arts. After considering various topic ideas, I settled on the topic of martial arts in the context of American cinema, in particular the classical Hollywood cinema. In academic film studies, classical Hollywood cinema refers to the period of time from the late-1920s/early-1930s (when synchronized sound replaced the practices of silent filmmaking) to the late-1950s/early-1960s (when the fallout from the infamous 1948 Supreme Court case known as the “Paramount Decree” led to changes in the way films were produced, distributed, and exhibited).  At this time Hollywood studios controlled all aspects of the filmmaking process and these efforts were conducted in accordance with a standardized “mode of production” (the standard academic text on this period remains The Classical Hollywood Cinema by David Bordwell, Janet Staiger, and Kristin Thompson).

This was the era of Gone with the Wind, Casablanca, It’s a Wonderful Life, Singin’ in the Rain, and 12 Angry Men. It was also the era of ‘G’ Men, Behind the Rising Sun, Blood on the Sun, Tokyo Joe, and Pat and Mike. If most people haven’t heard of the films on the second list, that’s to be expected. They haven’t been canonized in the academic literature nor have they managed to secure a place in the popular cultural imagination. The history of cinema has for the most part lost track of these films, while the history of martial arts cinema has yet to even recognize them, but thanks to TV, DVDs, and the Internet, history is always a mouse click or channel change away from being (re)discovered.

In typical historical accounts of martial arts cinema, Hollywood tends to be either ignored or denunciated on the basis of a confirmation bias which precludes the possibility of there being an American inheritance of cinematic martial arts. In the first issue of the Martial Arts Studies journal, I will attempt to counter a number of theoretical claims against American cinematic representations of the martial arts throughout Hollywood history, but here, I would like to show on historical grounds that there is, indeed, an American inheritance of cinematic martial arts with a lineage that can be traced back nearly a century through a number of intriguing and ambitious films.

 

James Cagney. G-Men

James Cagney. G-Men

‘G’ Men

 

The first film I want to discuss in this post is ‘G’ Men. Made in 1935 at Warner Brothers studios, the star of ‘G’ Men is James Cagney, the unique and iconic Hollywood figure who was part song-and-dance man, part gangster tough guy, and part martial artist (though the third part is the aspect that often gets overlooked). Following his star turn a few years earlier in the gangster classic, The Public Enemy, Cagney was one of the most in-demand stars in Hollywood. He also ended up being something of a savior for the Hollywood studios following the institution of the Motion Picture Production Code and the moratorium on gangster films (for information on the history of and the consequences stemming from the censorship battles fought in the early-1930s over gangster films, see Fran Mason’s American Gangster Cinema, Jonathan Munby’s Public Enemies, Public Heroes, and Kendall R. Phillips’ Controversial Cinema).

Amidst this controversy, Hollywood studios were scrambling to figure out a way to continue to produce stories involving the violent and seductive criminal underworld without offending the sensibilities of groups such as the Catholic Legion of Decency, the Protestant League, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Police Benevolence Association, just a few of the many groups that had started protesting the continued production of such “dangerous” films. Their solution: Give the most popular and recognizable cinematic gangster a badge and let him use his gangster tactics in the name of law and order.

I have discussed elsewhere the ideological implications of this transitional period in gangster films for the formation of the contemporary American action movie, but for the sake of historical context, this was the turbulent climate in which ‘G’ Men was produced, and it ended up being one of the biggest financial successes for Warner Brothers in the 1930s and a huge turning point in cinematic depictions of law enforcement and criminality. For my purposes here, however, the importance of ‘G’ Men has less to do with its depiction of cops and criminals and more to do with its depiction of the martial arts. In the film, Cagney’s character (a lawyer who grew up on the wrong side of the tracks but who fought to make an honest living for himself) trades his law books for an FBI badge to avenge the death of his childhood friend at the hands of a notorious gangster. In an early scene upon Cagney’s acceptance into the FBI, he receives instruction in self-defense, first with a boxing lesson and second with a Jujitsu lesson.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTBozSkd9So

 

I consider it quite significant that the very first lines spoken during the Jujitsu scene involve the agent teaching Cagney (played by Lloyd Nolan) talking about how the utilization of leverage in Jujitsu is “practically the same as in wrestling.” This idea of relating wrestling to Jujitsu speaks to the neglected historical legacy of grappling in the Western (especially American) context. While there is one historical (but not necessarily teleological) trajectory for striking that proceeds from the UK/US boxing heritage to the incorporation of kicking-inclusive styles such as Karate and Taekwondo, there is also a historical (and again not necessarily teleological) trajectory for grappling that proceeds from the UK catch-wrestling tradition and the UK/US professional wrestling tradition (not to mention the illustrious histories of US high school, collegiate, and Olympic wrestling) to the incorporation of the throws, trips, joint-locks, and chokes from the more elaborate groundfighting arts of Judo and Jujitsu (both the Japanese or, as is more prevalent today thanks to MMA, the Brazilian variety).

While by no means a comprehensive history of grappling, this rough sketch does shed light on the conditions of possibility for the American fascination in the first half of the 20th Century with grappling. In addition to introducing the existence of Jujitsu, though, ‘G’ Men also attempts to introduce the techniques of Jujitsu, and the method for shooting and editing grappling devised by the filmmaking team on ‘G’ Men showcases a uniquely American action aesthetic I have previously termed (in an essay entitled “Action Aesthetics: Realism and Martial Arts Cinema”) martial suture. As a way to explain the importance of ‘G’ Men for my conceptualization of martial suture, we can look at Cagney and Nolan’s “live drills” from near the end of the scene.

We enter the Jujitsu scene after Nolan has already had Cagney drill a couple of techniques, at which point he encourages Cagney to try employing them while facing active resistance. The two grappling sequences that follow establish the aesthetic blueprint of martial suture in relation to cinematic grappling. On the basis of what, in my “Action Aesthetics” essay, I call the attack-defense-counterattack pattern, grappling sequences in film typically follow a pattern where the first step is an attacker trying to grab, throw a punch or kick, or strike with an object; second, the grab is neutralized, the punch or kick is blocked or caught, or the strike is slipped or blocked; and third, having committed to and missed an offensive attack, the attacker is thwarted with a counter grappling technique.

We can see the attack-defense-counterattack pattern at work here in ‘G’ Men. Consider the first grappling sequence:

 

http://i1028.photobucket.com/albums/y344/MichaelAnthonyHunt/Bullitt/G-Men-Ba1_zpsd073328f.gif

 

In Shot A, Cagney attacks with a wristlock but Nolan successfully defends himself, after which, in Shot B, he flips Cagney with a counterattack (in the interest of increasing the visceral impact of the scene, a third shot is added to cap the sequence to emphasize Cagney’s rough landing on the mat). Utilizing a two-shot AB dyad, the attack-defense-counterattack pattern is rendered clearly and expressively via martial suture. The second sequence follows a similar pattern:

 

http://i1028.photobucket.com/albums/y344/MichaelAnthonyHunt/Bullitt/G-Men-Ba2_zps10b2f10e.gif

 

Once again, in Shot A, Cagney attacks with a wristlock but Nolan successfully defends himself, after which, in Shot B, he throws Cagney across the mat with a counterattack, the impact of which is registered once again in a third shot as Cagney comes to rest on the other side of the mat.

As I maintain, martial suture is a conceptually rigorous yet aesthetically flexible method for shooting and editing sequences of grappling action in martial arts cinema, and these two examples by no means exhaust the aesthetic variety of martial suture. They do, however, provide a solid foundation for the concept and highlight the intuitive visual schema for cinematic grappling still in use today, from the films of Steven Seagal (e.g. Above the Law, Marked for Death, and On Deadly Ground) to the Bourne trilogy and Donnie Yen’s Flash Point among innumerable others (see my “Action Aesthetics” essay for a more detailed discussion). ‘G’ Men thus exemplifies an element of martial arts cinema history lost to the passage of time but available to us today to be restored to its rightful place.

 

James Cagney.  Blood on the Sun

James Cagney. Blood on the Sun

 

 

Blood on the Sun

 

Ten years after Cagney first showed off his martial arts prowess in ‘G’ Men, he would once again incorporate the martial arts into one of his films, this time in a political thriller entitled Blood on the Sun. For years prior to (and for years after) this film, Cagney practiced Judo in his day-to-day life. His instructor was a former LAPD officer named John Halloran, who also appears in the film as the villainous Captain Oshima with whom Cagney battles in a climactic fight scene near the end of the film (Halloran appears in yellowface the offensiveness of which is hopefully mitigated by Cagney’s pragmatic decision to cast a known Judo expert and someone with whom he was very familiar for the sake of the integrity of the fight scene similar to the decisions made by Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan to cast real martial artists like Bob Wall, Chuck Norris, and Benny the Jet in their films).

Even though ‘G’ Men includes sequences of martial arts action, Blood on the Sun is the film with the best case (although, if anybody knows of other candidates, I would love to hear about them) for claiming the distinction of being the first American martial arts film (with Cagney thus having the best case for claiming the distinction of being the first American martial arts star). The plot of this film involves Cagney (here playing an American newspaperman in 1920s Japan) stumbling upon an evil plot by the Japanese military to take over the world (the story was inspired by the infamous Tanaka Memorial).

Blood on the Sun was one of a number of films (including, among many others, Dragon Seed, The Purple Heart, and the film I will be discussing next, Behind the Rising Sun) made in Hollywood during World War II which encouraged a pro-American sentiment against the evil machinations of the Japanese. However, despite its reactionary politics, Cagney strove to be pro-America without being too anti-Japan, and his disciplined practice of Judo gives his character in the film sympathy for and insights into Japanese culture distinct from most treatments of Japanese characters and culture from that era. I feel I should also call attention to the fact that the trope of an American mastering a martial art and, by extension, learning about and appreciating the culture responsible for the art has, of course, since become a hallmark of American martial arts movies, which is yet another plus for Blood on the Sun and its heraldic position in the history of martial arts cinema.

In any case, while I believe the politics in this film and the cultural representation of the Japanese are far from indefensible, my interest here is not to defend the film on political grounds. Rather, I am more interested in Cagney’s continued efforts to push American cinematic representations of the martial arts forward. It is interesting to note that (in a move that points towards the way Seagal would introduce himself in Above the Law) Cagney’s character is first introduced while he attends a Judo class.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BAvuYnFhUkM

 

This introductory scene serves a number of different functions. First, it introduces us to Cagney; second, it introduces us to Cagney as a Judoka; and third, it introduces us to Cagney as someone familiar with and respectful of Japanese culture and customs. Despite being an American, Cagney is by no means an outsider in this country/culture, and the key to his survival over the course of the film is his reliance on both his cultural and martial savvy. A good example of this is in a scene where members of the Japanese police (led by Captain Oshima) have entered his home in search of the film’s version of the Tanaka Memorial and intend to take him in for questioning. Aware of the fact that the police will not hesitate to turn his place upside down and inside out looking for the document, Cagney hides it behind a picture of the Emperor, which he knows is the one thing the police would dare not disturb in their search.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1J9tdjDm_U

 

Added to which, when Cagney realizes the seriousness of the situation, he is prepared to fight and takes on a number of police officers in a fight scene that anticipates many later scenes from the likes of Chuck Norris, Steven Seagal, and their martial arts movie peers. Half a century before Austin Powers, the all-powerful “Judo Chop” also appears as the technique that ultimately brings Cagney down, with the dastardly Captain Oshima showing his masterful skill by virtue of his ability to incapacitate Cagney with a single strike. Cagney would get his revenge, though, in the climactic one-on-one showdown

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WlejMy9zLdI

 

Today, this fight scene appears rather crude, but the ambition is commendable. Firstly, there are a number of skillfully sutured sequences of grappling, in particular the early sequence of Oshima countering an attempted punch from Cagney with a throw. Also of note beyond the standing throws and the martial suture is the choreography of the groundfighting. A lot of films even up to the present day have struggled to depict groundfighting in a manner both realistic and exciting (a dilemma discussed by Paul Bowman in his recent excursus on groundfighting), but Blood on the Sun is remarkable for its willingness to experiment with an aspect of cinematic martial arts still troubling to contemporary filmmakers.

Early in the fight, Cagney scores a big hip toss on Oshima and lands in kesa gatame (an alternative side mount position also known as the scarf hold). This sequence of action may be familiar to MMA fans who witnessed Ronda Rousey defeat Alexis Davis at UFC 175:

 

http://oi58.tinypic.com/sqgjtk.jpg

 

Cagney is able to keep Oshima pinned while the latter struggles to strike Cagney with his free arm, but eventually, Oshima hits an escape by bringing his hips in tight to Cagney’s body, grabbing him around the waist (sometimes referred to as a “seatbelt grip,” although this is not quite the grip used by Oshima here), and rolling him over in the opposite direction with the added leverage and momentum created.

Back on the feet, Cagney hits another takedown and then goes for a straight armbar. Oshima’s ability to kick Cagney in the face to escape the armbar is questionable at best, but lazy counter aside, the presence of an armbar attempt in the first place highlights once again the sophistication of the grappling choreography on display here. They continue to struggle, and in a scramble, Cagney dives for Oshima on the ground and manages to take his back. Cagney is only able to get one hook in, though, and while Oshima is fighting to escape the position, Cagney is struggling to secure a one-arm lapel choke from the back.

With reference to MMA again, this submission attempt on Cagney’s part calls to mind Royce Gracie’s victory over Remco Pardoel at UFC 2.

 

http://oi62.tinypic.com/4lm78y.jpg

 

All of the throws and groundfighting, despite a certain aesthetic crudeness, speak to a choreographic sophistication decades ahead of its time. Added to which, Cagney’s ability to mix punches and kicks in with his takedowns and submissions is what enables him to ultimately overcome Oshima, who is unable to deal with Cagney’s combination of striking and grappling. Not only was Cagney a movie martial artist before Hollywood knew of such a thing, he was a mixed martial artist, at that. Still known as one of the great actors and icons of the classical Hollywood cinema, Cagney deserves far more credit than he has received for his pioneering efforts in the realm of movie martial arts.

 

Behind the Rising Sun

Behind the Rising Sun

 

Behind the Rising Sun

 

Shortly before the release of Blood on the Sun, famed filmmaker Edward Dmytryk (at the time an unknown B-movie director who would go on to achieve fame for his low-budget film noir classic Detour as well as more prestigious films such as The Caine Mutiny and Raintree County) released a film entitled Behind the Rising Sun. Compared to Blood on the Sun, Behind the Rising Sun is decidedly more ambitious with its politics; whereas the former was content to focus primarily on the crime and thriller elements of its plot, the latter by contrast focuses entirely on the political atmosphere in Japan immediately before and then during World War II. Like Blood on the Sun, though, my interest in this film is less to do with its politics and more to do with its inclusion of the martial arts. In fact, Behind the Rising Sun is one of the most remarkable films I’ve ever seen in terms of American representations of the martial arts in classical Hollywood, as it features a bona fide “style-versus-style” match-up between a Japanese representative of Judo and an American representative of boxing.

Of course, the style-versus-style conceit is familiar to anyone who knows the history of the UFC, but even before the first UFC in 1993, style-versus-style match-ups had been fought by the likes of Benny the Jet, Gene LeBell, Helio Gracie, and innumerable others. Indeed, martial artists have for ages pitted their styles against the styles of others. Behind the Rising Sun warrants attention due to the new visibility it gave this martial tradition, and although the context of this propagandistic narrative not surprisingly allows the American boxer to vanquish the Japanese Judoka, there is still an abundance of combative salience throughout the scene.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6R70m0JRAI

 

Upon entering the gym where the fight is to take place, the Americans are told of the proposed rules for the fight where it is suggested they either fight to one fall or best two out of three. To this, the boxer (played by film noir legend Robert Ryan) exclaims, “I’m no wrestler. I’ll fight any man hand-to-hand, but I’m no grunt-and-grapple guy.” Contrary to ‘G’ Men, where wrestling is used as a positive point of comparison with Jujitsu, in Behind the Rising Sun, both wrestling and Judo are equated with an inferior, less “manly” form of pseudo-fighting. The combative distortion in the name of patriotism was hardly unfamiliar at the time; however, as Joseph R. Svinth noted in an essay entitled “Judo Battles Wrestling”, such nationalized martial arts matches, while based on real events during the war between Americans and Japanese, actually led to the incorporation of Judo into U.S. Navy and Marine training as early as 1944.

A different narrative trajectory is seen in the fight in Behind the Rising Sun, however. After expressing his disdain for the “grunt-and-grapple guy,” the American boxer receives a rude awakening to the strength and skill of the Japanese Judoka. The actual choreography leaves much to be desired, and the Judoka’s strategy of engaging in a slug fest (or, more accurately, a chop fest) with the boxer rather than just moving in for clinches and easily taking him down (which he does on several occasions) raises a few eyebrows, but it’s easy to forgive these aspects of the fight considering how ahead-of-its-time the sequence is in other respects, in particular with the various grappling techniques. At one point, the Judoka hits a scissor leg takedown which Dmytryk visualizes with a skillful editing pattern in line with martial suture, while at another point, the Judoka attacks the boxer with a proper rear-naked choke (even going so far as to sneak the far hand behind the head to keep the opponent from pulling down on the hand and alleviating pressure on the choke).

In the end, the boxer emerges victorious, and unlike Blood on the Sun, it is entirely due to his boxing prowess as opposed to the fluidity of his attacks between striking and grappling (though it’s worth noting that, right before he delivers the knockout blow, he traps one of the Judoka’s arms to allow the administration of a flurry of punches, perhaps highlighting a certain in-fight adaptability). Even so, this fight is remarkably prescient vis-à-vis the boxer showing up to a mixed-style fight wearing his gloves (though it must be stated that the boxer in this film fared much better than Art Jimmerson did when he showed up to fight Royce Gracie at UFC 1) completely ignorant to his opponent’s style as well as the frequency with which the combatants hit the ground and are forced to scramble for positions rather than contesting a straight-up brawl.

While the late-20th/early-21st Century explosion of MMA into the popular consciousness would change the texture of movie fight scenes and see the incorporation of far more groundfighting, Behind the Rising Sun is yet another example from the era of classical Hollywood where styles like Judo had already started to change the way Americans conceptualized and experienced hand-to-hand combat.

 

Humphrey Bogart.  Tokyo Joe

Humphrey Bogart. Tokyo Joe

 

Tokyo Joe

 

Like other Hollywood stars such as Cagney, Cary Grant, and Spencer Tracy, Humphrey Bogart did not serve his country in World War II in military combat (it was reported at the time that he tried to enlist but was turned down because of his age, although he did still go to Africa with the USO) and instead served in cinematic combat by using his star power to fight celluloid bad guys in such films as Across the Pacific, Action in the North Atlantic, Sahara, and, of course, Casablanca. In my opinion, the most interesting film of Bogart’s that deals with World War II is the post-war occupation film Tokyo Joe. Set during the American occupation of Japan in the immediate post-war years, Tokyo Joe is an astonishingly blunt treatment of American involvement in the reconstruction of Japan.

Bogart’s character in the film is the former proprietor of “Tokyo Joe’s,” a famous nightclub (similar to the immortal “Rick’s” from Casablanca) that operated in the heart of Tokyo prior to the outbreak of World War II. Similar to Cagney’s character from Blood on the Sun, Bogart’s character was completely at home with the Japanese culture and customs, but returning after the war, he finds that American-Japanese relations have been transformed. Early in the film, he meets up with his old friend and business partner (played by Teru Shimada) in what used to be Tokyo Joe’s. They are thrilled to see each other after so many years, and in their interactions, there does not appear to be any cultural divide much less a cultural hierarchy. Yet, when Shimada realizes he is being observed with Bogart by other Japanese, he reverts to a stock deferential disposition. Bogart is confused by the change in attitude, and in an effort to break through the cultural barrier that seems to have been erected in his absence, he reminds his old friend about the bond forged over his teaching Shimada “the best Brooklyn English” while Shimada taught him Judo.

 

https://vimeo.com/135176758

 

The sparring session that follows is vastly inferior to Cagney’s efforts (indeed, Bogart’s health would not permit him to do much of the Judo, so much of the sequence features a horrendously obvious stunt man doing the lion’s share of the work) but its role within the narrative is salutary nonetheless. Pushing things even further than Cagney’s participation in the Judo class at the beginning of Blood on the Sun, Bogart’s horseplay with Shimada (during which they also have a conversation where they get caught up with what they have each been up to in the intervening years) transcends combat itself and becomes the means by which they reinstate their friendship.

By learning Judo, Bogart came to know another person; beyond the nationalistic pride to be felt by witnessing American representatives like Cagney and Ryan defeating Japanese Judoka in Blood on the Sun and Behind the Rising Sun, there are no propagandistic stakes in Bogart’s and Shimada’s encounter. The stakes are entirely interpersonal and the emotional tenor is friendly rather than competitive. Rather than a means by which to assert American supremacy over the Japanese, Judo is used in Tokyo Joe to counter precisely that kind of cultural logic. Similar to the bonds that would be forged in the student-teacher relationships depicted in, among innumerable other films, The Karate Kid, Kickboxer, and Only the Strong, the relationship between Bogart and Shimada points towards the possibility of mutual acknowledgment and friendship between America and Japan, a possibility that necessarily begins on the personal level in interactions with those who are different but not necessarily evil.

Pat and Mike

Pat and Mike

 

 

Pat and Mike

 

The final film I would like to discuss is one of the famed pairings of the real-life couple and super-acting duo Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. Made in 1952, Pat and Mike (the seventh of an eventual nine pairings between Tracy and Hepburn) is a romantic comedy set in the world of female athletics. In the film, Hepburn plays Pat Pemberton, an exceptionally skilled athlete who, at the start of the film, is working as a physical education instructor at Pacific Tech in California. Engaged to a man who serves as the embodiment of old-style patriarchal rule, Hepburn is struggling to find avenues to express herself athletically. In an effort to get out from under her fiancé’s thumb, she impulsively enters a women’s golf tournament. She nearly wins, and were it not for her fiancé being in attendance, she would have won. Even in losing, she has the good fortune to meet up with Tracy’s character, Mike Conovan, athletic manager and promoter extraordinaire and the man with the potential to foster Hepburn’s athletic expression.

Over the course of the film, Hepburn’s character shows off her talents in golf and tennis while also boasting expertise in skeet shooting, archery, basketball, baseball, and even boxing (strictly 16 oz. gloves, though, as she specifies to the astonished Tracy). In fact, during one scene where two of Tracy’s less scrupulous business partners are trying to “convince” him to fix a golf tournament by having Hepburn lose (the first of whom is played by George Mathews and the second of whom is played by a young Charles Bronson, here credited under his real name, Charles Buchinski), Hepburn even shows off her martial arts prowess.

 

https://vimeo.com/135174189

 

The two scenes in the above clip, first with the fight and then with the reenactment at the police station, offer a different take on the martial arts compared to most of the previous films I’ve discussed (in fact, Pat and Mike connects back to ‘G’ Men in an interesting way). Here, the martial arts have taken the form of athletic exercise and self-defense. Indeed, Pat and Mike actually anticipates the cultural status of the martial arts in America today where they’re predominantly culture-less. If, for example, someone in the U.S. wants to study Aikido, they can learn from anyone who has a gym, and instructors are not only frequently not from Japan, their “lineage” also frequently has nothing to do with any Japanese “roots.”

Furthermore, the connection between the martial arts and American athletics and self-defense anticipates the myriad cardio kickboxing and women’s self-defense classes that became such a huge industry in American martial arts, combat sport, and fitness circles. Indeed, it’s rather telling that, when asked where she learned to fight, Hepburn doesn’t respond with a story about how she visited the mysterious Orient and learned the secrets of the Shaolin monks or about how some old-school master taught her his deadly stuff in a Pai Mei scenario. Rather, she simply replies that she’d “been around physical ed. for years.” No Asian masters or cross-cultural literacy are required here. Just homebred American athletics.

As for the choreography, Hepburn eschews any flashy kicks or big throws. Instead, she is very direct and pragmatic with her attacks. She initially moves in behind Bronson, who is taken by surprise as Hepburn lifts him up by his pant legs and sends him crashing to the ground. She then strikes Mathews in the back of the neck with a backhanded Karate chop, grabs his collar and chokes him with a modified lapel choke, and then takes his glasses off and throws them away. Lastly, when the recovered Bronson comes in with a blackjack, Hepburn uses a forearm block to deflect the incoming strike – a defensive technique also favored by Seagal:

 

http://i.minus.com/ioLjtokUsYiQK.gif

 

After blocking Bronson’s incoming strike with her forearm, Hepburn proceeds to secure his wrist, disarm him, and then strike him with his own weapon. As it happens, Seagal is also fond of disarming people and then using their own weapons against them:

 

http://i1028.photobucket.com/albums/y344/MichaelAnthonyHunt/Bullitt/Marked-for-Death-Ba-st1_zps3dacf751.gif

 

http://i.imgur.com/T1lZc74.gif

 

The fighting in Pat and Mike may seem decidedly unspectacular even when compared to some of the other fight scenes I’ve discussed in this post (to say nothing of the more recognizable fight scenes of the Bruce Lee and Steven Seagal variety) but it’s precisely the quotidian nature of the combat as just another element of American sports and fitness that confers upon the scene its interest in light of subsequent developments in the American reception of the martial arts.

 

Conclusion

 

It goes without saying that my remarks over the course of this post by no means exhaust what can be said about these films and their depictions of the martial arts. Far more can be said about the aesthetics of ‘G’ Men and Blood on the Sun, about the cultural implications of the scenes in Behind the Rising Sun and Tokyo Joe, and about the gendered nature of the scenes from Pat and Mike. My efforts here have been solely to introduce these films to fans and scholars of martial arts cinema and to put them on the table to be opened up to further, more detailed discussion. In the interest of providing accurate historical assessments of the American reception and mediatization of the martial arts throughout history, I believe classical Hollywood cinema has much to offer historically-inclined fans/scholars interested in the history of American media representations of the martial arts, and the films that I’ve discussed here provide merely an introduction to previously uncharted territory in the vast and complex transnational history of martial arts cinema.



Can Donnie Yen Bring Kung Fu (Back) to the Star Wars Universe?

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A close up of Donnie Yen in a cast photo for Rogue One. Source: Starwars.com

A close up of Donnie Yen in a cast photo for Rogue One. Source: Starwars.com

 

1977 vs. 1978: A Banner Year for Martial Arts Films

 

Like all good blog posts dealing with popular culture and kung fu, this one starts by assuming the existence of time travel.

In a sense this is what the martial arts have always been about. It can be seen in your average kung fu school on any given Tuesday night as individuals turn to their practice in an attempt to feel what it would have been like to be a different kind of person in a very different place. This promise has always been part of the appeal of the traditional martial arts in the West. They are seen as an embodied avenue to a far off place.

But for now let us imagine that our newly gained powers over time and space are less metaphorical. And the subject of today’s research will be the effect of cinema on the modern appeal of the Asian martial arts in the West. Or put another way, what was the process by which we came to accept these images and stories as a normal part of western consumer culture?

The real dilemma arises when we try to decide on a year. My theory is that there are basically two sorts of martial arts studies scholars. Some would opt to visit the year 1978, and then there are those who would grab the control panel and launch us back to 1977 instead.

1978 would be an obvious choice for students interested in the history of the cultural appropriation of the martial arts in the West. Actually it would be a great year for anyone who just loves classic kung fu films. What will we find in the theaters? Perhaps the biggest titles of the year were The Five Deadly Venoms, The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, and the first installment of Jackie Chan’s iconic Drunken Master (my personal favorite). For those with more specific tastes there was also Heroes of the East and Warriors Two (a must for Wing Chun students). Even Bruce Lee makes his own time traveling appearance with the 1978 debut of Game of Death.

By comparison the pickings in 1977 appear to be slim. Executioners from Shaolin is certainly a “must see” film. But I suspect that most of us would skip Snake-Crane Secret or the 18 Weapons of Kung Fu.

Still, a number of Japanese titles debuted in 1977. This is somewhat ironic as the sword wielding monastic warriors, escaped from the wreckage of a burning temple, that the year is best remembered for are the now iconic Jedi Knights of the Star Wars franchise, not the samurai who inspired them. Indeed, it was George Lucas’ highly creative vision for a space opera combining elements of western serials and samurai theater that would ultimately introduce me, and most of my friends, to the outlines of the Shaolin mythos.

I have always found this to be a little surprising given the popularity of all of those kung fu films throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Still, nothing succeeds quite like success. And Star Wars proved to be an incredible vehicle for appropriating certain key elements of Japanese and Chinese martial arts culture (as well as the imagery of Western knighthood) and feeding it back to audiences in ways that were deemed to be inspirational rather than “highbrow” (e.g., a Kurosawa film) or sketchy and dangerous (let us remember for a moment the sorts of theaters that actually played kung fu films back in the day).

1978 was a year with some fantastic films, but I think that I would still choose to visit 1977. Star Wars hit exactly the right notes for its cultural moment, and in so doing it made critical aspects of the Asian martial arts (including cryptic masters, the nobility of the sword, Qi based mysticism and the promise of martial excellence through the quest for “lost lineages”) desirable to western consumers.

One might object that the original Star Wars films themselves did not feature “proper martial arts,” and instead focused only on fencing and mysticism rather than the kicks and acrobatics that were seen in other films. Of course China and Japan produced their own genres of “swordsmen” films.  And if one were to make an argument in the same vein as Krug (2001), it was Star Wars that did the heavy lifting of making these once esoteric aspects of the world of the Asian martial arts culturally and commercially available to suburban kids across the country.

From there it was an easy transition to the closest Tae Kwon Do, Karate or Kung Fu school. In that sense Star Wars functioned almost as a cultural enzyme driving forward a process of social transformation that was larger than anything that its creators envisioned.

And while “proper martial arts” may have been missing from the big screen, they would go on to play a prominent role in the “Expanded Universe” of comic books, video games and novels that were to follow. The Seven Lightsaber Forms of the Jedi Order, with their excruciatingly detailed in-universe history, would be only one of the many fictional and hyper-real martial arts systems to emerge from that far distant galaxy. Even the Wookies received their own, species specific, martial arts system.

Fans seem to be fully aware of the foundational role of the historic fighting systems in the creation of the mythic Jedi order. It is something that many embrace. In fact, more than one commentator has noted the irony that there are no leading Asian characters in a movie franchise which succeeded through its cultural appropriation of Eastern symbols and images. Of course Krug would remind us that this is exactly what successful instances of cultural appropriation usually look like.

 

 

Rouge one Cast

 

Rogue One: Donnie Yen

 

The many intersections between the development of the Star Wars mythos and the spread of the traditional Asian hand combat systems in the West is a fascinating topic and one that deserves a much more careful investigation. Unfortunately this is not the place for such an undertaking. The aim of the current post is more limited in scope.

In July of 2015 a number of Chinese tabloids began to publish rumors that Donnie Yen had been cast as a character to appear in two new Star Wars films. These were Episode VIII, in which it was reported that he might play a Chinese Jedi opposite Han Solo, and the standalone film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (originally titled Star Wars Anthology: Rogue One). These reports were briefly discussed at Kung Fu Tea here, and were widely republished by various media outlets around the web.

The significance of this move was not lost on commentators. Reporters immediately noted that this choice was designed to broaden the appeal of this film within China’s huge cinema market. In fact, the film’s producers seem to have been determined to feature top shelf Chinese talent and Donnie Yen is rumored to have beat out six other possible contenders (including the noted martial artist Jet Li) for the spot.

Certain fans happily noted that the franchise would be correcting what many saw as an increasingly serious oversight in the exclusion of Asian actors from the world of the quasi-oriental Jedi. Better yet, they were turning to a noted martial arts performer to do so. One can almost sense the moment at which speculation erupted as to what color his lightsaber would be.

Much of this reporting was speculative and premature. Disney has been remarkably tight lipped about these projects, even managing to prevent the leak of the concept art for Rogue One that they presented to their investors or a teaser trailer that was shown at conferences. There was no immediate confirmation of Yen’s casting or what role, if any, he would play in the Star Wars universe.

The only formal confirmation of Yen’s involvement with this franchise that I am currently aware of happened rather recently at D23 where he was included in a cast list and photo that was released to the public.

It might be interesting to pause for a moment to speculate on what this all means. [Fair warning, things are about to get very speculative]. Rogue One is set just prior to the opening of Episode III (A New Hope, 1977) and is said to follow a group intent on stealing the plans for the Death Star (thus setting the stage for Luke Skywalker’s first adventure). As the cast picture indicates, this movie is meant to have a different feel from other installments in the Star Wars franchise.

Rogue One has been described as a heist film set in the “gritty reality” of a protracted ground war against the Empire. Nor will the Force will play much of a role in this storyline. When describing his film director Gareth Edwards stated “It comes down to a group of individuals that don’t have magic powers, that have to bring hope to the galaxy.”

It is hard to say that “magical powers” will play no role in any film in which Darth Vader is rumored to make an appearance. Still, Edward’s point seems obvious enough. This is not a storyline that will feature a Jedi. Donnie Yen’s character is almost certainly neither a Force user nor a Jedi. This seems to make it pretty unlikely that he would be tapped to play one in Episode VIII.

The theory that Yen was hired to broaden the international appeal of the project does have some support when we look at the other casting choices that were made. It is a pretty geographically diverse group and it even includes a second draw for Chinese audiences in the form of Jiang Wen. I suppose what all of this means is that I can now shelve my fantasies of seeing a lightsaber wielding Ip Man.

 

 

Probably not going to happen anytime soon. Source: http://www.nothinguncut.com

Probably not going to happen anytime soon. Source: http://www.nothinguncut.com

 

 

Midi-chlorians vs. The Martial Arts

 

 

I must admit that I was pretty disappointed to realize that the first Chinese actor to play a major role in this series (and a noted martial artist at that) would not be cast as a Jedi. After all, that has always been the part of the Star Wars franchise that owed the greatest debt of gratitude to Wuxia novels and the myth of the burning of the Shaolin temple. It just seems like a circle that needs to be closed.

If Donnie Yen is not going to be a Jedi, what sort of hero will he be? All we have to go on at this point is a single picture. Still, it is very suggestive.

The first thing to notice about his character’s design are the white and opaque eyes. It seems unlikely that Disney would have released a publicity photo in which one of their more expensive stars was blinking. As such it is interesting to speculate whether Yen is supposed to blind or visually impaired.

While he has a rifle of some sort slung across his back, our eyes are immediately drawn to the composite wood and metal staff that he holds in his hands. Featuring both free flowing organic lines and technical augmentation we are forced to wonder about its function. Is it a simple aid, or something more? A weapon befitting a renowned martial artist perhaps?

Of course the image of a blind warrior conjures the memory of the iconic figure Zatoichi (who was featured in 26 films from the early 1960s to the late 1980s and had his own hit television show in Japan between 1974 and 1979). China too had its tales of disabled swordsmen, and similar figures continue to be a stock character in popular culture treatments of the martial arts today.

The Star Wars universe already has a rich history of staff wielding warriors, from the Force Pikes of the Imperial Guard to the pole fighting Jedi Master and librarian extraordinaire Vodo-Siosk Baas. While the overall look of Rogue One is intended to be a departure from the expected, Donnie Yen’s character seems to retain a number of important points of connection with both the martial arts and Star Wars mythos.

After thinking more about this photo and the director’s various statements I am starting to become more excited about Yen’s involvement in this storyline. It is no doubt true that his involvement with the film (as well as that of Jiang Wen) will increase box office returns across China. Yet I think that there are a fair number of Western fans who will be just as excited to see Donnie Yen in this role. I for one cannot wait to see what contributions his background in the visual representation of the Chinese martial arts will make to the Star Wars universe.

It is also interesting to consider the more positive aspect of Yen appearing on screen as a martial artist rather than as a Jedi. While elements of martial arts culture (such as the Japanese cult of the sword and Daoist Qi mysticism) have certainly contributed to the creation of the Jedi ethos, they remain distinct concepts.

In the Star Wars Universe certain individuals are born strong in the Force, and others are not. The effect has been to create a caste system. Indeed, certain lines of storytelling in various novels and comic books have explicitly built off of this. While the controversial introduction of Midi-chlorians into the storyline in Episode I made this situation explicit, it is always something that seems to have hovered in the background of the mythos.

In contrast the martial arts also promise their students an avenue from which to step out onto the stage of history. They grant their own abilities and have their own philosophies. And even in the Star Wars universe they are seen as skills that are available to people as a result of their effort and hard work rather than as a fluke of their birth. Yen’s character design promises to deliver an interesting hero, but one who is self-made rather than the product of wizardry.

I find this deeply appealing, and I suspect that many martial artists of various styles will agree with me. The driving engine behind the remarkable growth of the martial arts in the post-WWII period has been the promise that through dedication and hard work anyone, regardless of their nationality, gender or social background, can forge a “new self.” This is a profoundly democratic and empowering vision.

I will be the first to admit that it is one which we often fall short of. There are still many factors which skew who will get access to quality training and whether they will have the basic resources that they need to succeed. Still, what an incredible aspiration! What a vision of human potential. This is a project worth dedicating a life to.

The story of Luke Skywalker, a young farm boy from nowhere in particular, had a profound impact on audiences precisely because it touched on these themes. Unencumbered by a galactic bureaucracy, fate-warping Midi-chlorians and the crushing weight of a universe worth of back-story, his journey to adulthood seemed universal. Indeed, it was the promise of self-actualization that made Star Wars a natural ally in the spread of the martial arts. Luke Skywalker and the characters of Bruce Lee were clearly distinct and they appealed to different audiences (those who would choose 1978 vs. 1977). Yet there were also distinct parallels in the promises that they offered. Together they opened the separate doors necessary to make the martial arts appealing to so many diverse groups in such a short period of time.

Bruce Lee has never lost his cool. Yet the constant embroidery of the Star Wars story, while creating a richer universe, has also served to distance us form some of these key promises. The Jedi no longer appear as an ideal to be aspired to, but as a privileged caste to be looked upon with awe and a little bit of distrust.

In being given an opportunity to refocus the narrative on the less mystical aspects of the martial arts, and by once more demonstrating self-actualization without magic, Donnie Yen has been put in a fascinating position. Rather than simply being a token casting choice to attract Chinese viewers, he may have a chance to renew the essential promise of one of the central stories of modern popular culture. Who better to do so than a Chinese martial artist?

oOo

If you enjoyed this you might also want to read: Spreading the Gospel of Kung Fu: Print Media and the Popularization of Wing Chun (Part I)

 

oOo


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: August 31, 2015: Masculinity, a Tiger General and the Forgotten Kung Fu Village

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Residents of Ganxi Dong village demonstrating their martial arts skills. Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Residents of Ganxi Dong village demonstrating their martial arts skills. Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

 

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

An older resident of the same village demonstrating a form with dual iron whips. Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

An older resident of the same village demonstrating a form with dual iron whips. Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the News

 

A number of news outlets in the West took notice of a story that was making the rounds in ChinaIts basically a photo essay shot in an ethnic minority Dong village in Tianzhu.    The upshot of the article is that the martial arts are very popular in this somewhat isolated agricultural community and a large number of styles seem to be practiced.  Recently the village has developed a reputation for its cultivation of the martial arts, but no one seems to clearly remember how this situation first came about.  The various versions of the article that I saw all relied on the sorts of Orientalist tropes that one tends to see in stories like this while resisting asking any of the more obvious questions such as the names of the style in question, or how their practice survived during the Cultural Revolution in this particular place.  Or maybe the real research question is why these romantic narratives surrounding the martial arts are so persistent in not only the Western but also Chinese accounts of these communities?  Interested readers can also see the South China Morning Post version of this story here.

 

 

Zhang Huoding rehearsing in Beijing. Source: New York Times.

Zhang Huoding rehearsing in Beijing. Source: New York Times.

The Chinese martial arts have also been making news a little closer to home.  Recently the New York Times ran a longer piece on Zhang Huoding, a famous Peking Opera star whose performance of the “Legend of White Snake” will be opening in Lincoln Center later this week.  Its an important article that touches of multiple aspects of her career and the current state of Chinese Opera.  I think that readers of Kung Fu Tea will probably be most interested by the accounts of her early training in both performance and martial arts.  It also looks like Wong Kar-wai, who produced the Ip Man bio-pic The Grandmaster, is currently working on a documentary of her life.  I really regret that I am going to miss her live performances in Manhattan, but at least we can look forward to a new documentary on a fascinating figure in the world of Chinese opera.  I also found it interesting that this article did not hesitate to tie her US performances to China’s current “soft power” diplomatic strategy.

 

Shi Yongxin, current Abbot of the Shaolin Temple.

Shi Yongxin, current, and somewhat embattled, Abbot of the Shaolin Temple.

Our main story in the last installment of “Chinese Martial Arts in the News” focused on the brewing controversy surrounding Shi Yongxin, the Shaolin Temple’s so called “CEO Monk.”  As the Abbot of the venerable monastery he has raised eyebrows in the past with has adoption of modern business strategies and corporate practices to both build Shaolin’s brand and to extend its reach (most recently by building a daughter temple on Australia’s Gold Coast, a major tourist destination).  Question’s of Buddhist propriety and temple management strategies notwithstanding, Shi Yongxin has also been dogged by more serious accusations surrounding his personal life.  Recently a new row erupted when an anonymous source claimed to have evidence that the Abbot had both been living a double life (which included the fathering of children in violation of his monastic vows) and had been involved in large scale financial improprieties.  As a result the Shi Yongxin was forced to cancel an appearance in Thailand and was reported to have been brought in for questioning.

Over the last few weeks there have been fewer stories about the abbot, and those that have emerged seem to have split into two camps regarding his likely fate.  On the one hand the South China Morning Post reported that Chinese prosecutors had accepted complaints about the Abbot’s behavior for investigation.  Given the dual crackdown on corruption and religious institutions that are currently underway, this is probably not a favorable turn of events.  On the other hand, the Want China Times has reported that some of the accusations against the Abbot may not be as strong as were first reported and as a result he may be in a better position to survive this latest round of controversy.    It looks like it may be a little while longer before we will know how this story ends.

 

Students practice the traditional Chinese Martial Arts in Qufu, Shandong Province.

Students practice the traditional Chinese Martial Arts in Qufu, Shandong Province.

 

 

The Indian press has carried a number of stories on the Chinese martial arts over the last few weeks.  First off, the Hindustan Times has a short article on “Kung Fu Tourism” in Shandong Province.  Of course this area has long been a stronghold of martial arts practice in Northern China.  The main thrust of the piece seems to be the diversity of the international students flocking to the region.  Next, the Times of India has a brief report on a couple setting up Wushu training opportunities in Gujarat.  While both athletics and martial arts are popular in the region, they note that the development of Wushu has lagged behind.  Their program intends to do something about that.

 

A photograph of Liu Yongfu as an older gentleman. Source: The Manilia Times

A photograph of Liu Yongfu as an older gentleman. Source: The Manila Times

 

 

Perhaps the most interesting article in today’s review was published by The Manila Times.  While the article starts off with the report of a new highway being completed in China, the author quickly veers into more interesting territory with a discussion of the life and career of General Liu Yongfu, the “Tiger of Qinzhou.”  Of course he is best known to Chinese martial artists for hiring Wong Fei Hung, the famous Hung Gar master, as a medical officer and military trainer for his troops.  Definitely check this piece out.  I learned a couple of new facts and will need to read up on Liu in the future.

Is the Kunlun Fighting Championships going to be next big thing in the Chinese Combat Sports media market?  Will they be able to advance MMA in a marketplace where some other larger companies have previously stumbled?  And how will Sanda fare in all of this?  Check out this post to read more.
While not directly related to the martial arts, I also thought that some of you might also find this article to be interesting.  It is an examination of the rising popularity of Qigong in the US, and its reception in Houston’s medical community.

 

 

A close up of Donnie Yen in a cast photo for Rogue One. Source: Starwars.com

A close up of Donnie Yen in a cast photo for Rogue One. Source: Starwars.com

 

Both Kung Fu movie and Star Wars fans received some great news recently.  Confirming the rumors that had been circulating for about a month, an official cast list and photograph were distributed for the upcoming Star Wars Rogue One film which included Donnie Yen.  You can read my more detailed breakdown of the story here.

The press has largely interpreted this move as an attempt to appeal to the increasingly important Chinese film market, and I am sure that there is a large element of truth to that.  But as I argue in my own piece, Donnie Yen could bring a lot to this project that would be of great interest to the average Star Wars fan in the West as well.

One of the still unresolved questions is what sort of character he will be playing.  The Chinese press initially reported that Yen would be cast as a Jedi, but the directors of Rogue One have been adamant that their film will focus on the ground war against the Empire and the efforts of normal, non-force using, individuals to bring hope to the galaxy.

Still, Yen may have muddied the water with a recent Facebook post.  In it he posted a image of three prop Storm Trooper helmets (two of which were a pretty new design) with the following note: “I am the force and I fear nothing… Going to put this in my company’s display room.” So maybe his character will have some connection to the Force after all?  Or maybe he was just calling on the Force to protect him from the folks at Lucas Film who tend to take a rather dim view of unauthorized set pictures and spoilers.  After a flurry of phone calls Yen was later forced to take the picture down.

And for those of you looking for an update on Ip Man 3 (also starring Donnie Yen) be sure to check out this article as well.

 

 

Boy Boxing Gloves

 

 

Martial Arts Studies

 

The end of August is typically a pretty quiet time in the world of academics.  First everyone disappears on vacation.  And then when you return its to the crush of a new semester with everything which that entails.  But things have a not been so quiet on the publication front.

Rowman and Littlefield has another Martial Arts Studies book due out, this one to be released through their Lexington Books imprint.  Unleashing Manhood in the Cage: Masculinity and Mixed Martial Arts by Christian A. Vaccaro and Melissa L. Swauger is currently expected to ship on November 6th, 2015 (unfortunately there cover art has not yet been released).  The authors are both members of the sociology department at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. The publisher’s blurb is as follows:

Unleashing Manhood in the Cage: Masculinity and Mixed Martial Arts addresses the question “Why do mixed martial arts participants endure grueling workouts and suffer through injury, with little or no pay, just to compete?” The answer is because the participants enjoy a form of idolization from their supporters, each other, and culture more generally, which is linked to masculinity. In fact, MMA organizers, from the very beginning, purposefully created elements of the sport that are linked to dominant narratives about manhood. In this context, men don thin open-fingered gloves, lock themselves in a caged enclosure, and slug it out in a fight with few rules to see who comes out on top. This all occurs while “ring girls” in high-heels and skin-tight shirts and shorts stride around outside the cage holding signs and peddling t-shirts. The sum of these elements is the creation of a type of a publicly accessible and consumable form of masculinity. The sport of mixed martial arts is a rich and intriguing space where the construction of gender can be explored through a sociological and ethnographic lens.

Readers interested in this project may also want to check out my recent review of Gottschall’s book, the Professor in the Cage.  Likewise, Alex Channon and Christopher R. Matthews’ edited volume, Global Perspectives on Women in Combat Sport, also promises to make important contributions to the discussion of gender in the martial arts.

Anthropologist and ethnographers interested in the martial arts will want to take note of a new edited volume by Kalpana Ram, Christopher Houston and Michael Jackson.  Titled Phenomenology in Anthropology: A Sense of Perspective, this edited volume is due out on October 19, 2015 from Indiana University Press.

This volume explores what phenomenology adds to the enterprise of anthropology, drawing on and contributing to a burgeoning field of social science research inspired by the phenomenological tradition in philosophy. Essays by leading scholars ground their discussions of theory and method in richly detailed ethnographic case studies. The contributors broaden the application of phenomenology in anthropology beyond the areas in which it has been most influential―studies of sensory perception, emotion, bodiliness, and intersubjectivity―into new areas of inquiry such as martial arts, sports, dance, music, and political discourse.

Of particular interest is the chapter by Greg Downey (a well known scholar to students of Martial Arts Studies) titled “Beneath the Horizon: The Organic Body’s Role in Athletic Experience.”  This will certainly be something to look forward to.

 

Striking Beauty by

Striking Beauty by

Those more interested in philosophy will also want to remember that Barry Allen’s latest book, Striking Beauty: A Philosophical Look at the Asian Martial Arts (Columbia University Press) is now shipping with a truly impressive list of endorsements on the back and a very reasonable price tag (always a pleasant surprise when dealing with academic books).

The first book to focus on the intersection of Western philosophy and the Asian martial arts, Striking Beauty comparatively studies the historical and philosophical traditions of martial arts practice and their ethical value in the modern world. Expanding Western philosophy’s global outlook, the book forces a theoretical reckoning with the concerns of Chinese philosophy and the aesthetic and technical dimensions of martial arts practice.

Striking Beauty explains the relationship between Asian martial arts and the Chinese philosophical traditions of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Daoism, in addition to Sunzi’s Art of War. It connects martial arts practice to the Western concepts of mind-body dualism and materialism, sports aesthetics, and the ethics of violence. The work ameliorates Western philosophy’s hostility toward the body, emphasizing the pleasure of watching and engaging in martial arts, along with their beauty and the ethical problem of their violence.

Paul Bowman has announced some detailes about his forthcoming volume titled Mythologies of Martial Arts.  It will be of importance to those who follow Critical Theory as well as global popular culture.

Explicitly inspired by Roland Barthes’ enormously influential Mythologies (1957), Mythologies of Martial Arts carries the spirit of Barthes’ incisive and engaging cultural and ideological criticism into the blossoming field of Martial Arts Studies.

Writing at the cutting edge of the emergence of both semiotics and deconstruction, in 1957 Mythologies pioneered an innovative and dynamic cultural criticism for the emerging post-war consumer culture. Six decades later, Mythologies of Martial Arts writes in its wake, long after semiotics and deconstruction have become ingrained in academic and intellectual discourses of all kinds, yet long before their questions and problems have become any less current. For, the questions and issues that Mythologies raised for a very diverse readership remain compelling today: what does this mean; how does this work on us; why do we desire this but not that; what effects do these images and practices have on us, and on others; where do these ideas, discourses and values come from, where do they take us, and where are they going?

Mythologies of Martial Arts focuses the key dimensions of the internationally circulating signs, signifiers and practices of martial arts in global popular culture. Informed by the author’s longstanding practical and professional experience in both martial arts (in which he has wide ranging experience) and academia (where he teaches, researches and publishes in cultural studies, film studies, media studies, postcolonial studies and martial arts studies), Mythologies of Martial Arts deploys the full range of resources that this personal and professional experience has afforded. It takes the form of short, engaging, accessible, yet fully referenced and academically informed essays on an extremely wide variety of subjects related to martial arts and the media cultures in which martial arts have always been steeped.

 

Cheng Man-ching.echoes.cover

Cheng Man-ch’ing and T’ai Chi: Echoes in the Hall of Happiness. Via Media. Source: Amazon.com

Lastly, students of Taijiquan will be happy to see that Via Media is releasing a collected edition titled Cheng Man-ch’ing and T’ai Chi: Echoes in the Hall of HappinessThis volume contains a number of articles first published in the Journal of Martial Arts Studies which approach the life, practices and legacy of Cheng Man-ch’ing from a variety of perspectives.  Authors include Barbara Davis, Benjamin Lo, Russ Mason, Robert W. Smith, Nigel Sutton, Yizhong Xi and others.  Obviously Cheng Man-ch’ing was also of more general interest as a critical figure in the spread of the Chinese martial arts in North America.

 

 

 


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: September 21, 2015: Culture Festivals, Kung Fu Abroad and Reading Along with the Little Dragon

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Bruce Lee sketching on the set for Game of Death. Photograph: Bruce Lee Estate. Source: The Guardian.

Bruce Lee sketching on the set for Game of Death. Photograph: Bruce Lee Estate. Source: The Guardian.

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

Annotated pages from a martial arts manual once owned by Bruce Lee and recently sold at auction.

Annotated pages from a martial arts manual once owned by Bruce Lee and recently sold at auction.  Source: bloomsburyauctions.com.

 

 

News and Events from all Over

 

Our leading story today will be of special interest to Bruce Lee fans and collectors.  In fact, its really remarkable how many news items he managed to show up in over the last few weeks.  We are quickly approaching his 75th birthday and the cultural relevance of the Little Dragon shows no sign of diminishing any time soon.

The Daily Mail recently reported that an important book from Lee’s private collection was auctioned earlier this month by Bloomsbury in London.  The text appears to be a 1950s-1960s era Kung Fu manual that Lee studied and made extensive notations in, outlining the evolution of some of his various theories and ideas.  He then gave the book to his close friend and student Taky Kimura.  The book recently sold at auction for an eye watering 52,000 British Pounds (roughly 80,800 USD) including fees.  The Daily Mail erroneously identifies the text as a Wing Chun book that he learned his art from.  But the few pictures provided indicate that Wing Chun was not the subject of this manual.  (Nor have I come across any Chinese language manuals on Wing Chun from the late 1950s or early 1960s.  If any readers know of one please let me know).

This points to what I find to be the most remarkable aspect of this story.  In all of the reporting there doesn’t seem to be much interest in the actual title, author or content of the manual itself, let alone how it may have substantively influenced Lee’s thinking.  The original entry in the auction catalog is slightly more helpful.  It dates the book to the early 1960s and identifies it as a “Mantis Kung Fu” manual, but it also provides no information on its actual title or author.  And somewhat inexplicably the catalog even managed to flip the cover of the book upside down?  So while the results of this auction and the subsequent reporting indicated a continued interest in Lee as a cultural phenomenon, they also point to a shallow appreciation of his role as a martial artist.  Could we even imagine a similar case in which a large auction house sold a heavily annotated volume from Einstein’s library and subsequent reports totally neglected to mention what the title of the book was, or why its owner might have found the volume to be so interesting?  Still, this might be a fantastic resource for those interested in the evolution of JKD.

 

Three Qilin heads, at a 2006 Monkey God festival in Hong Kong. Dr. APhoto credit: Sam Judkins.

Three Qilin heads, at a 2006 Monkey God festival in Hong Kong. Dr. APhoto credit: Sam Judkins.

 

Anyone who is going to be in Hong Kong between now and the middle of October will want to be sure to take some time to visit the first Hong Kong Culture Festival.  This is especially true for individuals who are interested in the Hakka fighting styles or Qilin dancing.  The event is being supported by Hing Chao’s International Guoshu Association (you can find periodic updates on their Facebook group) among others and a wide variety of venues will be hosting events across the city.  Some of the most interesting items on the itinerary include a public Kung Fu performance to be held at Victoria and Qingyin Park on September 26-27, a meeting of the Kung Fu and creative/fashion industries at the Full Moon Party on the 25th (at HK Polytechnic University), and a Hakka Unicorn Dance and Kung Fu Carnival at the HK Cultural Center on October 18th.

If you have a chance to attend any of these events I would love to hear how they went!

 

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

 

There were a couple of interesting stories touching on the topic of Kung Fu diplomacy making the rounds over the last few weeks.  As regular readers will already know, various Chinese media outlets tend to produce quite a few of these stories both as reflections of China’s growing cultural influence abroad and as part of its public diplomacy strategy.  Usually these stories are short and unremarkable, which is what makes today’s entries so valuable.  They are much more detailed and tend to be explicit about the cultural values that these programs are hoping to promote.  They also tend to be a little more transparent about the actual actors promoting these efforts.

The first of these stories looks at the growth of a successful Chinese martial arts program at a high-school in Kenya.  These particular classes are run by the local Confucius Institute (which is coordinating an ever greater number of martial arts classes around the globe).  Its also interesting as it speaks to some of the anxieties that both Kenyan and Chinese parents might share when deciding to allow their children to enroll in Wushu classes.  This one is definitely worth the read for anyone interested in how China is using the martial arts to promote its public image abroad.

If anything the second Kung Fu Diplomacy story is even more interesting.  This reports focuses on a one day conference held in Helsinki between various Finnish officials and individuals from the tourism industry and a team from Zhenzhou (a city about 50 miles away from the Shaolin Temple in Henan).  The actual article itself is little more than a note, but it includes a link to a five minute video discussion of the conference which is well worth watching.  In addition to a peak at the sleek promotional materials that Zhenzhou has put together (unsurprisingly they are interested in promoting themselves as a gateway to northern China’s various martial arts destinations), we are treated to the rare spectacle of actual diplomats holding forth on the success and broader importance of Kung Fu diplomacy.

One of the issues that this report does not bring up, but may nevertheless be important to contemplate, is the long term effect of individual cities or regions conducting their own public diplomacy campaigns.  Will this diversity of approaches ultimately strengthen the appeal of Kung Fu diplomacy?  Or will it further erode the central government’s  ability to promote a single, carefully crafted, image of the martial arts?  These will be critical issues to watch in the coming years.

Not everyone is equally happy with this ever tightening association between Kung Fu and Chinese culture.  This particular blogger from Montreal would like to remind you that the vast majority of Chinese people don’t study the martial arts, and that formal Kung Fu training is totally unnecessary to smack you upside the head the next time you ask them about it.  One suspects that not everyone will find these sorts of  self-Orientalizing exercises to be equally charming.

 

A new student being accepted as a disciple in Chengdu. Source: http://www.ecns.cn

A new student being accepted as a disciple in Chengdu. Source: http://www.ecns.cn

 

Another tried and true genera of martial arts reporting is the photo essay.  In a sense this is very understandable given the visually spectacular (or sometimes odd) nature of the many of the traditional martial arts.  This week’s update has one entry for both of these categories.  The first of these essays focuses on elegant images of a Shaolin performance team rehearsing on a beach in Bognor Regis one week ahead of their appearance on stage in the UK.  These are the sorts of pictures that everyone has seen before….and they are spectacular.

The other photo essay was shot in Chengdu.  It focuses on a local school with an interesting tradition.  Kung Fu lore is rife with tales of students being forced to endure countless hours in the horse stance, or some other sadistic ritual, before being accepted as full students in their school of choice.  Not to be outdone this local teacher requires his students to hang from trees for an hour, to prove their dedication, before being accepted.  So I guess we can file these photos under “odd things that martial artists do.”

 

John Tsang. Source: SCMP

John Tsang. Source: SCMP

 

Which is not say that Kung Fu is all hanging from trees and having fun.  In a recent blog post reported in the South China Morning Post John Tsang (HK’s Finance Secretary), who apparently studied Kung Fu as a youth, warned that the martial arts were on the verge of being reduced to just another fashionable hobby.  He lamented the fact that in the past individuals studied Kung Fu as a way of making a living, where as now the arts risked becoming shallow and distorted in the hands of fair weather students.

Tsang, who studied kung fu at a young age, said historically martial arts were about making a living or even survival, but today they had become a hobby and viewed as fashionable.

“Master Li Tin-loi said, ‘in the past, people only asked you which school of kung fu you practised. But today, people ask you how many forms you can perform. It seems the more you know, the better’,” Tsang wrote.

The actual transition that he seems to be referring to was already complete by the 1920s, well before his time.  Statements like these may be an important reminder of how Kung Fu is idealized and understood in the public imagination.  This then leads to the odd phenomenon that Kung Fu has been “dying” since literally the day that these more modern approaches to the art came into being.  This fear of the disappearance of “tradition” appears to be baked into the very DNA of Kung Fu.  More immediately his remarks seem to have been in support of the upcoming Hong Kong Culture Festival discussed above.  So what better way to support a festival aimed at the preservation of “traditional culture” than to publicly question its ultimate viability?

It seems that even fans of the iconoclastic Bruce Lee are being forced to worry about historical preservation.  The Business Insider recently ran an update on the saga to determine the fate of the actor’s Hong Kong residence.  Fans want the site to be preserved and possibly turned into a museum, while real estate developers are much more interested in the land that the building sits on.  You can read more about the current state of the debate here.

Meg from Rocket News. Source: http://en.rocketnews24.com

Meg from Rocket News. Source: http://en.rocketnews24.com

 

Lastly, what sort of smart phones do Shaolin Monks really want?  One intrepid Japanese writer decided to find out.  (Hint: iPhones, but not for the reason you would suspect.)  Click to learn more!

 

The Assassin. Source: Toronto Film Festival

The Assassin. Source: Toronto Film Festival

 

 

The Martial Arts on Screen

 

The Vancouver Sun recently ran a short note reporting that the Birth of the Dragon (the much anticipated Bruce Lee biopic) is set to start shooting in their fair city next month.  Hopefully we will be seeing from pictures from the set soon.

Are you wondering what martial arts film to see next?  If so Slate would like to make a suggestion.  They recently ran a piece calling Assassins “a new martial arts masterpiece.” That certainly got my attention.  This film, set in the 9th century Tang Dynasty, is supposed to be beautifully shot.  It is about to make its North American debut at the New York Film Festival.  Hopefully it will start making the rounds of art house theaters after that.

 

 

Into the Badlands by AMC.

Into the Badlands by AMC.

 

If you prefer a more “classic” approach to your Kung Fu Films, AMC has some news that may inspire you to program your DVR.  To prepare the way for their new series “Into the Badlands” the networking is starting a “Kung Fu Fridays” in which some of your favorite films will be replayed on late night TV.  Click here to check out their schedule.

Kung Fu fans will also be happy to note that we have a new set of production photos for Ip Man 3.  These shots feature both Donnie Yen and Mike Tyson, but the promised CGI generated Bruce Lee is notably absent from the lineup.  This production has led to a legal dispute with the Lee estate which is contesting their rights to use the dead actors image.  However, the studio says they are going ahead with the project.  We will know how all of this turns out soon enough as the film is set to open on December 25th 2015.

 

Taiji Quan being practiced at Wudang. Source: Wikimedia.

Taiji Quan being practiced at Wudang. Source: Wikimedia.

 

Martial Arts Studies

Following the theory that the best new books are free ones, I am happy to announce that the Brennan Translation Blog has just released two new English language translations of classic Chinese martial arts training manuals.  This is exciting as these texts as they are literally the primary source documents of our field.  Even if a given manual does not speak directly to a style that you happen to be practicing (or researching) at the moment, thy often contain other information that makes them a critical resource for understanding the evolution of Chinese martial culture.

The first of these texts is DESCENDED FROM WUDANG – THE TAIJI BOXING ART by Li Shoujian (1944).  The second is titled SINGLE DEFENSE-SABER by Jin Yiming (1932).  As always, both of these books look fascinating.  Be sure to check them out.

Paul Bowman also released an important essay on his blog Martial Arts Studies.  In it he asks whether you know your lineage?  Take a look to figure out what is really at stake in this seemingly simple question.  While you are there you might also want to checkout the advance copy of his recent interview with Gene Ching of Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine on the development of Martial Arts Studies.

Luke White has also stepped up to offer us another free read.  He just posted a copy of his recent article article “A ‘narrow world, strewn with prohibitions’: Chang Cheh’s The Assassin and the 1967 Hong Kong riots” to Academia.edu making it available to the public.  Obviously film studies students will be interested in this paper.  But his discussion of the background of the 1967 riots might be helpful to a much broader readership.  We often forget that this was a critical moment in Hong Kong’s modern history and it certainly had an impact on the development of the city’s various martial arts schools.

 

Globalizing Boxing by Kath Woodward. 2015 edition, Bloomsbury Academic.

Globalizing Boxing by Kath Woodward. 2015 edition, Bloomsbury Academic.

 

It looks like Kath Woodward’s book Globalizing Boxing (first released in 2014) is about to get another printing that should help to make it accessible to a wider audience.  The publisher’s blurb sounds fascinating:

Boxing is a traditional sport in many ways, characterized by continuities in the form of practices and regulations and heavy with legends and heroes reflecting its traditional/historical values. Associations with class, hegemonic masculinity and racialized inclusions/exclusions, however, sit alongside developments such as women’s boxing and involvement in Mixed Martial Arts.

This book will be the first to use boxing as a vehicle for exploring social, cultural and political change in a global context. It will consider to what degree and in what ways boxing reflects social transformations, and whether and how it contributes to those transformations. In exploring the relationship it will provide new ways of thinking critically about the everyday.

Kath Woodward is Professor of Sociology at the Open University.  This new edition began shipping a couple of weeks ago.

Finally, readers should also be on the look out for Lauren Miller Griffith’s upcoming volume Legitimacy: How Outsiders Become Part of the Afro-brazilian Capoeira TraditionThis volume is due out some time in January, but it sounds like it might be a little expensive….so start saving now.  Still, it tackles a set of questions are central to many ongoing research programs within martial arts:

Every year, countless young adults from affluent, Western nations travel to Brazil to train in capoeira, the dance/martial art form that is one of the most visible strands of the Afro-Brazilian cultural tradition. In Search of Legitimacy explores why “first world” men and women leave behind their jobs, families, and friends to pursue a strenuous training regimen in a historically disparaged and marginalized practice. Using the concept of apprenticeship pilgrimage-studying with a local master at a historical point of origin-the author examines how non-Brazilian capoeiristas learn their art and claim legitimacy while navigating the complexities of wealth disparity, racial discrimination, and cultural appropriation.

Personally I cannot wait to see how she treats the concept of pilgrimage in relation to martial arts tourism.  Unfortunately the cover art for this book is not yet available, but you can view her table of contents here.

 

 

A rare shot of Ip Man enjoying a cup of Kung Fu Tea. Few individuals in the west know that the venerable master was a big fan of cafe culture and often spent hours with his students in local restaurants after class.

A rare shot of Ip Man enjoying a cup of Kung Fu Tea. Few individuals in the west know that the venerable master was a big fan of cafe culture and often spent hours with his students in local restaurants after class.

 

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We looked at an antique Dao from the personal collection of a reader, discussed some vintage footage of a Chinese martial arts demonstrations and and asked what Martial Arts Studies owes the Kung Fu Community?   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.

 

 

 


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: October 12, 2015: Columbus Day Edition!

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Shaolin Masterclass. Photo by Jack Latham. Source: FT.com

Shaolin Masterclass. Photo by Jack Latham. Source: FT.com

 

 

Introduction

For readers in the United States, happy Columbus Day!  And what better way to enjoy your three day weekend than getting caught up on the latest martial arts news.  “Chinese Martial Arts in the News” is a regular series of posts here at Kung Fu Tea in which we take a look at both what is being said about the TCMA by the media and how they discuss it.  Of course there is always a lot going on, so if I have missed a major story feel free drop a link to it in the comments below.

Before delving into our main discussion there are a couple of quick items to consider.  On a personal note I would like to thank Mark Stoddard and Kathy Joe Connors of the North East Wing Chun Student Association for inviting me to visit their weekend training workshop with Kenneth Chung held recently in Rochester, NY.  Anyone interested in the spread of Wing Chun in North America will already be familiar with the important role that Chung played in promoting the art.  It was certainly an honor to have the opportunity to meet and briefly talk with him.

On a less happy note, Stanford Chiou recently brought it to my attention that Alexander Lim Co, an important teacher of the Chinese martial arts in the Philippines, is in need of heart bypass surgery.  Readers may recall that we discussed one of his books here.  A “go fund me” campaign has been set up to help with his expenses, but it is very much in need to your support.  Please consider donating to this cause.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

Hing Chao.SCMP

Chao and Lam Chun-fai at the launch of their book about kung fu, Hung Kuen Fundamentals: Fok Fu Kuen , in 2013. Source: SCMP.com

 

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the News

 

Our first set of stories hail from the always interesting pages of the South China Morning Post.  The paper recently ran a profile of the shipping scion and martial arts preservationist Hing Chao.  Anyone who follows the Hong Kong Kung Fu scene will probably be familiar with at least one of his various projects.  In 2013, Chao co-authored Hung Kuen Fundamentals: Fok Fu Kuen with Lam Chun-fai.  He also promoted the short lived (but very high quality) Journal of Chinese Martial Studies.  Most recently he has been in the news for his work with this the Hong Kong Culture Festival.

The piece in the SCMP is basically biographical in nature.  Chao discusses the origins of his interests in Chinese culture, his background in the martial arts, and a few of the projects that he has worked on.  Its a short piece but a nice introduction to one of the high profile personalities in the fight to promote and preserve southern Kung Fu.

For those of you interested in heading a little further south, the SCMP also ran an article on the growth of interest in Lethwei by Myanmese women.  Again, its a short piece but I found it to be an accessible introduction to a style that I did not know much about.  And the article also manages to touch on some of the issues of identity, gender and nationalism that will be of interest to students of martial arts studies.  Click here to read more.

 

Sarah Chang, five time US National Wushu team member and actress. Source: nbcnews.com

Sarah Chang, five time US National Wushu team member and actress. Source: nbcnews.com

NBC News recently ran a profile of Sarah Chang, a five time US National Wushu Team member and actress who currently trains and works in Beijing.  The article discusses Sarah’s introduction to Wushu as a child growing up in McLean Virginia, some questions regarding gender in Wushu training and her plans for the future.  Overall it is a nice discussion of one woman’s journey into the realm of the martial arts.

 

Eric Lee on the cover of Inside Kung Fu in 1980.

Eric Lee on the cover of Inside Kung Fu in 1980.

On October 10th the Martial Arts History Museum (in Burbank California) had a night of events dedicated to Eric Lee.  Lee was one of the first practitioners of the Chinese martial arts to compete in the Karate tournament circuit and later moved into film.  The museum offered the first screening of its new biographical film dedicated to Lee’s career, held a reception in his honor and finished up with a Q&A session with Eric Lee himself.  Its news releases like this that sometimes make me wish that I lived close to Burbank.

As one might expect, Eric was not the “Lee” to make the news in the last month.  As is typical there were a number of Bruce Lee stories.  Perhaps the most substantive was the reminder that the Wing Luke Museum has just mounted the new items for the second season of their three year “Bruce Lee Experience” exhibition.  In keeping with the mission of this museum the exhibit seeks to contextualize Lee’s career and examine some of his contributions to the evolution of the Chinese American identity and community in the US.  If you are in the area this sounds like something that you may want to visit.

Shaolin Masterclass, stick training. Photo by Jack Latham. Source: FT.com

Shaolin Masterclass, stick training. Photo by Jack Latham. Source: FT.com

 

As we reported last month, one of the Shaolin Temple’s performance teams is currently in the UK gearing up for a series of theatrical performances.  A reporter from the Financial Times decided to drop by their training space and join a class, with predictable results.  Still, the article is more detailed than most of these sorts of pieces and I particularly enjoyed the candid discussion of the young monks as to how much of their public performance reflected “real” martial arts training versus a more theatrical approach to movement and acting.  As always these kids make for a great photo essay.

There were also a number of Shaolin stories of a more contentious nature.  On October 4th the South China Morning Post reported that the embattled Abbot Shi Yongxin (dogged by accusations of both sexual and financial improprieties as well as rumors of an official investigation) reappeared at the Shaolin Monastery in Henan.  He is reported to have addressed a group of 30 pilgrims who were visiting the temple and instructed them “to focus more on spiritual development and less on physical indulgence because ‘human bodies are temporary but the spirit is immortal.'”  Not to be outdone the Want China Times reported on the 10th that a group of the Abbot’s main accusers, who had taken their case to Beijing but had since been forced into hiding, had also resurfaced to give interviews.  It was reported that they were still cooperating with authorities and that the graft probe against the Abbot was still ongoing.

Sascha Matuszak recently updated the Fightland Blog on a couple of highly anticipated matches pitting Chinese Mixed Martial Artists versus their Japanese counterparts.  Apparently things did not go well.  His title stated simply that “Chinese MMA Faceplants.” I assumed that this was a metaphorical exaggeration…until I watched the clips that were included with his report.  It turns that his choice of words was actually a straight forward description of how one of the fights ended.

 

The Assassin, directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien. Source: nytimes.com

The Assassin, directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien. Source: nytimes.com

 

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the Entertainment Industry

Without a doubt the martial arts film that is currently getting the most good press is Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s Tang dynasty drama The Assassin.  The New York Times dedicated a fair amount of space to a discussion of the visual style and impact of this film.  It sounds stunning.  It even looks like the director did some interesting things with his fight choreography to reach his particular vision of “realism.”  This film is definitely going onto my “list,” though there is no word yet on when it will be reaching an art house theater near you.

Ip-Man-3-Poster

If Kung Fu films are more your thing, or you are fan of the recent Ip Man franchise (and who isn’t), you will be happy to learn that the teaser trailer for Ip Man 3 has just been released.  It features both Donnie Yen, reprising his role as Ip Man and Mike Tyson.  But before you sit down for this film, Ip Man has a few helpful suggestions for a more enjoyable viewing experience.

Kim Bum, recently cast to play Bruce Lee in an upcoming Chinese drama. Source: http://www.kpopstarz.com

Kim Bum, recently cast to play Bruce Lee in an upcoming Chinese drama. Source: http://www.kpopstarz.com

A new dramatic series is about to begin filming in China titled “Yip Man and Bruce Lee.”  I haven’t heard a lot about this project yet.  But there was just an announcement that Kim Bum has been cast to play Bruce Lee.  Click here to read a little more about the project.

 

Exotic medical ingredients at a market stall for herbalists in Xian.

Exotic medical ingredients at a market stall for herbalists in Xian.

News From All Over

A lot of people were surprised when the 2015 Nobel Prize in medicine went to Tu Youyou, a researcher at the Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Beijing who has spent her entire career researching traditional Chinese medicine.  She was honored for her research into non-traditional (and very successful) treatments for malaria.  But given that traditional medicine has never before been on the radar of the Nobel Prize Committee, does this recogonition signal a serious shift in the way that TCM is perceived around the globe?  Marta Hanson, an Associate Professor of the history of medicine at John Hopkins University tries to answer that question is an extended piece which ran in Fortune.

Karate.olympic.wsj

In preparation for the 2020 Olympic Games Japan (the host nation) is recommending a number of sports for inclusion.  Two of these are Japanese national pastimes, baseball and karate.  But what sort of Karate sparring system is best suited to international competition?  The Wall Street Journal tackled that question in a recent article.  It will be fascinating to see whether the IOC allows a third Asian martial art (along with Judo and Taekwondo) to enter the competition.  For a little background on the selection process (as well as the likely fate of Wushu’s bid) see this article in the New York Times.

 

Stephen Chan delivering the conferences opening keynote.  Source: http://martialartsstudies.blogspot.com/2015/06/conference-2015-and-2016.html

Stephen Chan delivering the conferences opening keynote. Source: http://martialartsstudies.blogspot.com/2015/06/conference-2015-and-2016.html

 

Martial Arts Studies

 

Advanced registration for the Second Annual Martial Arts Studies Conference to be held at the University of Cardiff (July of 2016) are now open.  Better yet, the organizer has just released the initial list of confirmed speakers including Phillip Zarrilli,  Ben Spatz, Adam Frank, Paul Bowman and myself among others.  Given the success of last year’s conference this is definitely one event that you will want to get on your calendar.  Don’t forget that this year you can also win free registration by entering the short film competition.  And if you are interested in the interdisciplinary study of the martial arts, be sure to join our new and improved email list!  Just click here to register.

Now With Kung Fu Grip! How Bodybuilders, Soldiers and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial Arts for America.  By Jared Miracle.  McFarland & Company (March 31, 2016)

Now With Kung Fu Grip! How Bodybuilders, Soldiers and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial Arts for America. By Jared Miracle. McFarland & Company (March 31, 2016)

 

Some of you may remember Dr. Jared Miracle from his guest posts here at Kung Fu Tea.  I was very pleased to discover that his new book Now With Kung Fu Grip! How Bodybuilders, Soldiers and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial Arts for America (published McFarland & Company) is now available for pre-order on Amazon.com with a release date of March 2016.  This promises to be a vital work for anyone interested in the social history of the Asian martial arts in the West.  Here is the blurb from the publisher:

Why do so many Americans practice martial arts? How did kung fu get its own movie genre? What makes mixed martial arts so popular? This book answers these questions for the first time with historical research. At the turn of the 20th century, the United States enjoyed a time of prosperity but feared that men were becoming soft. At the same time, the Japanese government sponsored research to develop the best fighting techniques for its new empire. Before World War II, American men boxed and Japanese men practiced judo and karate. Postwar Americans began adopting Chinese, Brazilian, Filipino and other fighting styles, in the process establishing a masculine subculture based on physical and social power. The rise of Asian martial arts in America is a fascinating untold story of modern history, from the origin of karate uniforms to the first martial arts themed birthday party. The cast of characters includes circus strongmen, professional cage fighters, an award winning comic book artist, the inventors of judo, aikido and Cornflakes, and Count Juan Raphael Dante, a Chicago hairdresser and used car salesman with the “Deadliest Hands in the World.” Readers will never look at taekwondo class the same way again.

For me this is a long awaited book and I am really looking forward to seeing Jared’s discussion of a critically important subject for students of martial arts studies and the history of popular culture.

 

Bruce Lee Graffiti.  Source: Wikimedia.

Bruce Lee Graffiti. Source: Wikimedia.

 

Catherine S. Chan recently posted a paper to academia.edu that will also be relevant to anyone interested in Bruce Lee or the globalization of the Chinese martial arts.  It is titled “Smudging Economy and Culture: The Commodification of Bruce Lee.” The abstract is as follows:

Four decades after Bruce Lee’s untimely death, the image of the martial artist continues to strive in the realms of popular culture and international society. As an acknowledged martial artist, film star and sometime philosopher and writer, Bruce Lee is commonly credited for transforming the conventional Fu Manchu portrait of Chinese people in the eyes of Westerners to that of a respectable Kung Fu master.

Stripping Lee clean of the yellow tracksuit and nunchucks, one point remains unbeatable: the image of Bruce Lee sells. This paper seeks to explain and comprehend the influence and success of Bruce Lee through the concept of celebrity commodification, breaking down the barrier that separates economy and culture by identifying the components that serve to intertwine. From the existence of a myth to the norms of pseudo-individualization, Lee’s status as a celebrity-icon shall be analyzed to reveal how capitalist marketing rides on the coat-tail of socio-cultural developments in order to effectively produce a cultural ‘kudzu’ that in turn, aims to persist and cash in for as long as possible.

 

 

Alex Channon and Christopher R. Matthews have been kind enough to post the introductory chapter of their recent edited volume Global Perspectives on Women in Combat Sports: Women Warriors Around the World (Palgrave 2015), on-line for your perusal.  It is titled “Approaching the gendered phenomenon of Women Warriors” and you can read it here.

Bogu_do_-_kendo
Did you know that there is a “Budo-lab” at Chapman University (in California) hoping to advance the study of both Hoplology and Martial Arts Studies by becoming “the very first center in the United States to specifically focus on examining the role of both combative behavior and martial arts in modern societies”?  The center currently counts Andrea Molle (Political Science and IRES), Michael S. Wood (World Culture and Languages, Japanese) and Alexander Bay (History and Asian Studies) as permanent members.  Head on over to their homepage to read more of their mission statement and to check out their current research projects.

Not Affraid.bolelli

Lastly, I am sure that many readers of Kung Fu Tea are already familiar with Daniele Bolelli’s always thought provoking writings on a variety of topics related to the martial arts.  He has a new book coming out (just in time for Christmas) titled Not Afraid: On Fear, Heartbreak, Raising a Baby Girl and Cage Fighting  (Disinformation Books, December 1, 2015).  Here is the blurb:

This book is a meditation on facing fear, heartbreak, and mortality. In his own irreverent and inimitable style, Daniele Bolelli tells the story of his courtship and marriage, which would have been a sweet story had not all hell broken loose. Or as he puts it, “Hell was a ninja who entered my house without being seen. It all began in such an unremarkable way that it barely registered as anything meaningful. Little did I know that the experiences of the next five months would rip me apart and kill me. They would re-forge me into a different man. On that day, I became an unwilling traveler on a journey through the heart of fear. Every step along the way has forced me to face my fears time and time again.”

It is the story of a man who in rapid succession has his wife die in his arms, loses his house and his job, and is left to care for his 19-month old daughter. Oddly enough, the best tools for coping with all of this were those he learned in more than two decades of martial arts practice. Not Afraid tackles this extremely heavy subject matter in a light-hearted style and with an attitude that acknowledges pain and suffering but denies them dominion over one’s life.

 

An assortment of Chinese teas.  Source: Wikimedia.

An assortment of Chinese teas. Source: Wikimedia.

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We remembered the life of GM Chen Qingzhou, saw a great discussions of Ming era weapons and read a new translation of Jin Yiming’s 1932 manual on the single dao.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: November 2, 2015: Sanda, Taijiquan and the Chinese Origins of Karate

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Taijiquan practitioners attempting to set a new record. Source: dailymail.co.uk

Taijiquan practitioners attempting to set a new record. Source: dailymail.co.uk

 

Introduction

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

 

Japanese and Chinese martial arts students meeting in Fujian. Source: SCMP

Japanese and Chinese martial arts students meeting in Fujian. Source: SCMP

 

News from All Over

Our first story comes from the (digital) pages of the South China Morning Post.  It recently carried a short article looking at Karate’s Chinese origins.  This discussion comes on the heels of Karate’s inclusion in the upcoming Tokyo Olympic games, while Wushu once again finds itself on the outside looking in.  However this particular piece focuses instead on the academic research of a Chinese scholar named  Lu Jiangwei (from Fujian) who recently completed a doctoral dissertation looking at the origins of “Karate culture” at the Okinawan Prefectural University of Arts.  This is an interesting project as it is clearly encouraging a fair bit of international cooperation among researchers.  At some point I will need to see if I can learn more about Lu’s research methods and findings.

A statue located in the Wong Fei Hung Temple in Foshan.

A statue located in the Wong Fei Hung Temple in Foshan.

 

Perhaps the most famous master of the traditional Chinese martial arts to make the news this week was the noted Hung Gar practitioner Wong Fei Hung.  While he ended his life as a recluse, Wong is perhaps the best known Kung Fu personality of his generation because of the many newspaper stories, novels, radio programs and movies that have embroidered his legacy.  A short note in The Star reports that Wong’s real life disciples and students were unsuccessful in their recent attempts to locate his historic grave.  Apparently the cemetery that he was laid to rest in was demolished to make room for a new high rise development.  While only a short note, this story reinforces the inherent challenges involved in preserving and understanding the physical and architectural history of the Chinese martial arts in a constantly shifting landscape.

Speaking of change, ECNS ran a story on the efforts of mixed martial artists (and the promoters behind the ONE Championship) to establish a foothold in China’s lucrative media and entertainment markets. This is a story that we have covered here before, but what I found most interesting about this article was the language that it used.  It situated MMA as an outgrowth of the traditional Chinese martial arts, and thus their “return” home was something “natural” rather than foreign.  Still, it ended the following note: “As the ancestry of modern mixed martial arts, Chinese kung fu enjoys popularity around the world and now it’s time for the time-honored martial art form to evolve by communicating with the world.”

 

Photo by Hotli Simanjuntak/EPA. Source: fightland.vice.com

Photo by Hotli Simanjuntak/EPA. Source: fightland.vice.com

This is not the first time that an MMA promoter has tried to break open the Chinese market and it probably won’t be the last.  One of the challenges inherent in getting a foothold is all of the other combat sports that are already popular with Chinese audiences, athletes, media outlets and bureaucrats.  By far the most important (and economically lucrative) of these is Sanda.  Sascha Matuszak recently wrote a quick introduction to the topic over at Vice’s Fightland blog.  It lays out the facts on the ground quite nicely.  And while you are there check out his other post on the place of the wooden dummy in modern (post-Ip Man) Chinese martial arts training.

The recent attempt to set a record for the largest martial arts demonstration, Photo: China News Service / CFP

The recent attempt to set a record for the largest taijiquan demonstration, Photo: China News Service / CFP

 

Where is the calmest place on Earth?  According to this photo-essay in the Daily Mail it would have to be in the middle of a massive recently staged (October 18th) Taijiquan demonstration held in Jiaozuo City of Henan province.  Some of the photos generated by this event are as breathtaking as one might suppose.  But another article in the GB Times does a better job of explaining the purpose of the event.  In addition to attempting to set a world record for the largest simultaneous taijiquan practice session, the event organizers were hoping to raise awareness for their bid to have the Chinese martial arts declared an element of “intangible cultural heritage” by UNESCO.

According to a recent study conducted by Yi-Wen Chen, from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, there may be a number of other reasons for these individuals to continue with their Tajiquan practice.  After conducting a review of 33 separate studies (containing about 1,500 research subjects in total) her team found that the regular practice of Taiji can be beneficial for people suffering from a wide range of chronic illnesses ranging from arthritis to cancer.   Reuters ran a story (which was distributed by a large number of other outlets) detailing their specific research findings.

 

Female student studying Wushu in a scene from Inigo Westmeier's Dragon Girls.

Female student studying Wushu in a scene from Inigo Westmeier’s Dragon Girls.

 

 

National Geographic introduced readers of its blog to approximately “36,000 kids you don’t want to mess with.”  The children in question are students of the Shaolin Tagou Kung Fu academy, one of the largest residential wushu schools in China.  The occasion for the discussion was an interview with filmmaker Inigo Westmeier who directed the documentary “Dragon Girls.”  Recently she collaborated with DB Ben Surkin to turn some of that footage into a music video for Gener8ion featuring M.I.A.  The video is great, so if you have not seen it yet be sure to click on the link at the top of the post.  The rest of the article is dedicated to a discussion with Westmeier about the production of the documentary, its reception in China and her other projects.

Bruce Lee with his favorite onscreen weapon.

Bruce Lee with his favorite onscreen weapon.

While best known by practicing martial artists as a weapon associated with traditional Karate, the nunchuck exploded into popular consciousness in the west after the 1973 release of Enter the Dragon.  More recently a number of law enforcement personal are taking a second look at this simple weapon.  This is not the first time that police officers have trained with nunchucks.  It seems that their versatility (they can be used to restrain as well as to strike), and their shorter length are winning converts.

While on the subject of nunchucks, the Seattle Times recently ran a piece on the opening of the second installment of the new Bruce Lee exhibit at the Wing Luke museum.  The piece includes discussion of Lee’s life in the city as well as some more personal photographs included in the collection.  Head on over and check it out.

 

Into the Badlands by AMC.

Into the Badlands by AMC.

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the Entertainment Industry

 

AMC’s new series “Into the Badlands” (set to debut on Nov. 15) is continuing to pick up a lot of good press.  In keeping with what we have already seen much of this focuses on the series’ martial arts content.  Evidently the studio believes that this will separate the project both from their other products and competing programs on TV.  The New York Daily News ran a longer than expected piece on the upcoming series which you can take a look at here.  I thought that it was interesting to note that in the post-apocalyptic future imagined by the show there are no longer any firearms.  Obviously that decision gives the directors more freedom to showcase their martial arts assets, and its a common story telling trope in classic Chinese martial arts films (many of which are set in an imaginary past).  Still, its not a storytelling device I am very fond of as it ignores the fundamental fact that the Chinese martial arts, as they exist today, are very much the product of a world in which firearms were present.

Qi Shu plays the title role, a young girl who is kidnapped by a nun and trained to become a killer. Source: New York Times.

Qi Shu plays the title role, a young girl who is kidnapped by a nun and trained to become a killer. Source: New York Times.

When it comes to news stories about the Chinese martial arts, director Hou Hsiao-hsien’s recent film The Assassin is breaking the internet.  Up to one third of all of the stories that I ran across in the last week were about this film.  Readers may recall that the early discussions of this period drama, set in the Tang dynasty, were very positive.  Reviewers loved Hou’s visual aesthetic and he won an award at Cannes for his work.  Now that the film has actually hit theaters a muck larger batch of reviews are commenting, and unfortunately the results appear to be mixed.  While a few reviewers love the film, others are claiming that its falls flat.  Most seem to be somewhere in the middle, capable of appreciating the film’s beauty while claiming that it has some notable shortcoming.  This review at the Globe and Mail seems to be typical of the current discussion.  Everyone seems to agree that what Hou created pushes the boundaries of what you can do with a “normal” martial arts film, but there is less consensus as to whether that was ultimately a good thing.

Of course there is always a lot of classic Kung Fu cinema out there just waiting to be rediscovered by audiences.  Consider for instance the 1978 Shaw Brothers film “Heroes of the East” starring  Gordon Liu, Yuka Mizuno, Kurata Yasuaki and directed by Liu Chia Liang.  It would be an understatement to say that the film as has interesting political subtext, and given current events, it once again seems timely.  Check out this post over at Vice Sports which discusses the film as well as its historic and current geopolitical context.

 

 

 

Martial Arts Studies

 

There have been a number if important developments in the area of Martial Arts Studies.  First off, the publisher Rowman & Littlefield (who helped to sponsor our recent conference at the University of Cardiff) have announced the creation of a new book series dedicated to producing titles within the field of Martial Arts Studies.  Paul Bowman will be the series editor. In the interest of full disclosure I should state that I am also a member of the project’s editorial board.  Obviously this is an important step in developing Martial Arts Studies as it ensures a dedicated outlet for new monographs and will help to build visibility among readers.  To find out more about the book series click here.

Paul recently presented a paper titled “Making Martial Arts Studies: A Tale of Two Books.”  Follow the link to read a copy of the paper or to watch video of his presentation.  Also, researchers interested in publishing in the interdisciplinary journal Martial Arts Studies should check our recent Call for Papers regarding an upcoming special issue titled “The Invention of Martial Arts.”

Vintage French Postcard

Vintage French Postcard

 

Wendy Rouse, who teaches in the Department of Sociology and Interdisciplinary Studies at San Jose State University, recently uploaded a paper to Academia.edu titled “Jiu-Jitsuing Uncle Sam: The Unmanly Art of Jiu-Jitsu and the Yellow Peril Threat in the Progressive Era United States” (Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 84 No. 4.)  This looks like it will be an important article for anyone interested in the early history of the Asian martial arts in the West or those working on questions of masculinity, national identity and racial politics.  The abstract is as follows:

The emergence of Japan as a major world power in the early twentieth century generated anxiety over America’s place in the world. Fears of race suicide combined with a fear of the  feminizing effects of over-civilization further exacerbated these tensions. Japanese jiu-jitsu came to symbolize these debates. As a physical example of the yellow peril, Japanese martial arts posed a threat to western martial arts of boxing and wrestling. The efficiency and effectiveness of Japanese jiu-jitsu, as introduced to Americans in the early twentieth century, challenged preconceived notions of the superiority of western martial arts and therefore American constructions of race and masculinity. As Theodore Roosevelt and the U.S. nation wrestled with the Japanese and jiu-jitsu, they responded in various ways to this new menace. The jiu-jitsu threat was ultimately subjugated by simultaneously exo- ticizing, feminizing, and appropriating aspects of it in order to reassert the dominance of  western martial arts, the white race and American masculinity.

 

The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and its Music (Brill 2015) by Uwe U. Paetzold and Paul H. Mason

The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and its Music (Brill 2015) by Uwe U. Paetzold and Paul H. Mason

 

Brill has recently released a new volume titled The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and its Music: From Southeast Asian Village to Global Movement edited by Uwe U. Paetzold of the Robert Schumann University of Music, Düsseldorf and Paul H. Mason from the University of Sydney.  Silat has generated a fairly good sized collection of academic studies in the past and that number seems to have accelerated in recent years.  This study appears to be unique in the degree to which it has been shaped by ethnomusicology in addition to other more typical fields including sociology and anthropology.  The publisher’s note is as follows:

Fighting arts have their own beauty, internal philosophy, and are connected to cultural worlds in meaningful and important ways. Combining approaches from ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, performance theory and anthropology, the distinguishing feature of this book is that it highlights the centrality of the pluripotent art form of pencak silat among Southeast Asian arts and its importance to a network of traditional and modern performing arts in Southeast Asia and beyond.

By doing so, important layers of local concepts on performing arts, ethics, society, spirituality, and personal life conduct are de-mystified. With a distinct change in the way we view Southeast Asia, this book provides a wealth of information about a complex of performing arts related to
the so-called ‘world of silat‘.

Unfortunately you will probably need to head to your local university library to find a copy of this book.  At $175 a copy I doubt that it will end up on my shelf in the near future.  Fortunately Gisa Jähnichen has uploaded a copy of her chapter titled “Gendang Silat: Observations from Stong (Kelantan) and Kuala Penyu (Sabah).”  This will be especially interesting for students with a background in music or an interest in performance.

 

Redemption: A Street Fighter's Path to Peace by Michael Clarke

Redemption: A Street Fighter’s Path to Peace by Michael Clarke

 

Michael Clarke, a long time karate practitioner and Kyoshi eighth dan, will be releasing an autobiographical work titled Redemption: A Street Fighter’s Path to Peace (Ymaa Publication).  While not a scholarly work students of Martial Arts Studies may find this interesting more as a “primary text” due to its extensive discussion of the modern history of Karate and social observations on violence and martial arts.  It is due out in March of 2016.

Lastly, be sure to check out the first part of my recent interview at Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine where Jon Nielson and I sit down with Gene Ching to discuss our book on the social history of the southern martial arts, Wing Chun and the importance of recent development in martial arts studies.  Expect the second half of this detailed interview to posted sometime next week.

 

Chinese tea set. Source: Wikimedia.

Chinese tea set. Source: Wikimedia.

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group and this last month has been no exception.  We discussed modern Daoist meditation practices, the life of Ma Liang (both a warlord and martial arts reformer) and watched some new interviews with Adam Hsu.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.

 

 


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: November 23, 2015: Trouble in the Badlands, Bruce Lee’s 75th Birthday and the Dawn of Martial Arts in America

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Still shot of Bruce Lee in the opening scene of "Enter the Dragon."

Still shot of Bruce Lee in the opening scene of “Enter the Dragon.”

 

Introduction

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

A scene from the 13th World Wushu Championship in Jakarta. Source: AFP.

A scene from the 13th World Wushu Championship in Jakarta. Source: AFP.

News Stories

Wushu was once again a prominent story in the news cycle over the last few weeks.  A number of articles focused on the recent 13th annual World Wushu Championships held in Jakarta.  Teams from a large number of countries (including the United States) took part and the event received quite a bit of coverage in South East Asia.  The following article attempted to put Wushu in a historic perspective (I particularly like the note about a young Jet Li performing for Richard Nixon at the White House) while looking ahead to future expansion in the global sporting community.  As one would expect, this included a new round of speculation as to whether the Chinese fighting arts might finally find a home in the 2024 Olympic games.

The mixed martial arts have also continued to make news in China.  The country’s immense media market has proved to be a valuable prize for MMA fight promotion companies in a number of states, and not just the UFC.  This article looks at the South Korean based ROAD Fighting Championship and their plans to hold their first ever Chinese event in the Shanghai Oriental Sports Center.

 

Sunday morning Taiji practice at the Temple of Heaven in Beijing.

Sunday morning Taiji practice at the Temple of Heaven in Beijing.

 

A number of news outlets were reporting the results of a recent string of studies on the benefits of regular Taijiquan practice for individuals suffering from a wide range of chronic illnesses from congestive heart failure to cancer.  One of the most visible of these articles was published in the New York Times blog and looked at the potential of Taiji to treat sleep disorders.  Harvard Health Publications also ran a short article summarizing the findings of a recent study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine that had compiled data from 33 smaller studies encompassing nearly 16000 adult patients.  It showed statistically significant quality of life improvements for patients suffering from a broad range of serious chronic conditions after they began Taiji practice, even in comparison to other forms of exercise.

Of course not all martial arts practices are equally good for one’s health.  This fact was recently demonstrated by a martial arts enthusiast in Suzhou who, after one too many drinks, scaled a street light pole, balanced himself above a busy road, and decided to practice his forms (click for video).  Luckily he managed to climb down on his own, but one suspects that the Harvard Medical School would probably not endorse this particular style of practice.

 

A photo of female martial artists from the Jingwu Anniversary Book. The woman on the left is Chen Shichao, one of the most vocal campaigners for the equality of female martial artists within Jingwu. She toured China and south east Asia promoting female involvement in the martial arts.

A photo of female martial artists from the Jingwu Anniversary Book. The woman on the left is Chen Shichao, one of the most vocal campaigners for the equality of female martial artists within Jingwu. She toured China and south east Asia promoting female involvement in the martial arts.

The Stoneybrook Press blog recently ran an article titled “Anatomy and Gender in Martial Arts.” It is an introductory effort and I doubt that it will contain any revelations to those who follow the topic.  Still, I thought that it was interesting as a sign of the sorts of questions regarding the martial arts that popular readers are currently interested in.  At this moment gender seems to be high on that list.

 

Bruce Lee and James Lee

Bruce Lee is always a topic of interest for the media, but the last few weeks have seen a pronounced surge in the number of stories about this iconic film maker and martial arts reformer.  I strongly suspect that even more pieces will be making an appearance in the next week or so.  Friday the 27th is the 75th anniversary of his birth and a number of media outlets are expected to note the occasion.

A somewhat preparatory article recently appeared in the pages of the South China Morning Post.  Its title (“Bruce Lee, a global hero who epitomised Hong Kong’s strengths – it’s just a pity the city could not preserve his former home“) pretty much sums up the piece.  The article mixes an acknowledgement of Lee’s importance to his home city’s global image with open criticism of government officials who failed to preserve his former estate as some sort of museum to his legacy.  Interestingly this article was authored by none other than Lam Woon-kwong, the convenor of Hong Kong’s Executive Council.  The comments on this piece also reveal something of the current popular sentiments on the issue.

Bruce_Lee_cover_News Week

 

I am not sure that I could count the number of times that Bruce Lee has made the cover of Black Belt Magazine, but earlier this month I was surprised to find him gracing the front of the a special issue of Newsweek.  The commemorative magazine celebrates his 75th birthday with a number of articles on various aspects of his life and career.  These include a discussion of his “Flawless Technique,” an exploration of the Hong Kong cityscape that shaped his childhood and adolescence, and an overview of “Bruce Lee’s School of Hard Knocks.”  I noticed that the Newsweek webpage also had an extensive excerpt of an article titled “The Kato Show: Bruce Lee as the Green Hornet’s Sidekick.” Given the discussion that has broken out in the last week as to what is (and is not) “revolutionary” about the AMC series Into the Badlands portrayal of Chinese masculinity on western television, this discussion may be worth reviewing.

Southern Shaolin show

The traditional art of Fujian province have also been in the news this month.  Yibada.com ran a piece on the area’s White Crane tradition, how it planted roots abroad, and what needs to happen for the system to gain increased international attention.  The article also contains a brief discussion of some of the ways in which local governments have sought to promote White Crane.

Ecns.com also ran a piece looking at events in the same region.  It published a short (and uninspired) photo essay of the fifth Southern Shaolin Martial Arts and Culture Festival held in Putain city (Fijian) on November 8th.  In its words “The festival has brought together various schools and aims to promote Chinese Buddhist culture. Located in the east of the Qingyuan Mountain of Quanzhou, the Quanzhou Shaolin Temple, also called the South Shaolin Temple, is the birthplace of the South Shaolin martial art, which has spread to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao and even Southeast Asia.”  Unfortunately with the exception of this single contested historical assertion, the article did not offer much in the way of a substantive description of what could have been an interesting event.

 

A still from the trailer for AMC's Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 Comicon.

A still from AMC’s Into the Badlands.

Chinese Martial Arts in Popular Entertainment

The last month has seen quite a bit of entertainment news.  Perhaps the biggest event was the release of the first episode of AMC’s much anticipated (and heavily promoted) new series Into the Badlands, staring Daniel Wu and inspired by the classic Chinese fable “Journey to the West.”  The initial reviews of the series have been decidedly mixed, but they make for very interesting reading, particularly for anyone concerned with the place of the Asian martial arts in current popular culture.  Wired magazine kicked things off with a generally positive discussion that delved into some of the shows technical details.  One of the interesting points to emerge from this piece was the author’s observation that the current martial arts action available on the small screen has tended to favor close range in-fighting (Daredevil, Green Arrow) but Badlands quite consciously breaks with this pattern of fight choreography.  It will be interesting to see how subsequent action sequences in this series evolve (as well as if other choreographers begin to pick up on its more extensive style), but this observation plays into a previous conversation that I had with Paul Bowman here and here.

Other reviews were less kind.  Some noted problems in the coherence of the basic ideas behind the fantasy world that the drama is set in as well its visual design aesthetic.  A number of reviewers found the first episode to be too stiff and gory enough that it might have trouble moving beyond a dedicated martial arts fanbase.  The English language broadcast of CCTV (basically Chinese public television) had a different take on the series.  It instead viewed the project as a groundbreaking exercise in the way that Asian American were being portrayed on American television.  While listening to this I could not help but be struck with dejevu as so much of this conversation is identical to the sorts of assertions that are often made about Bruce Lee (see for instance the Newsweek special issue above).  In fact, by the end of the discussion I was starting to wonder if the promotional material for Badlands was engaging in some sort of subconscious erasure of the past.

USA Today published an interview with Daniel Wu that helped to address some of these points.  In it he discussed Bruce Lee, Jet Li and Jackie Chan as his favorite film stars and he began to explore some of the ways in which the portrayal of the martial arts in film and TV have traditionally differed.  Yet he remained largely silent on other martial arts based TV series (such as the Green Hornet, Kung Fu, Walker Texas Ranger, Daredevil etc…).

The New York Times engaged more directly with some of these points in its own, largely unfavorable, review of the series.  After characterizing the show as at best “perfectly average” (and probably the weakest of AMC’s various projects) it tackled the stylistic and aesthetic parallels between Badlands, set in a post-apocalyptic “old west,” and the original Kung Fu series, starring David Carradine, which introduced many of these same themes to American TV audiences in the 1970s.  In a revealing exchange Miles Millar (one of the creators of Badlands) directly attacked the earlier series and called the casting of Carradine (who was white) as a mixed-race monk “a travesty.”  He then pointed to Wu’s starring role in the current production as part of an effort to “redress that old injustice.”    Yet the Times critic goes on to note that the original Kung Fu series succeeded in large part because Carradine, whatever his race, was a better actor than Wu who has a limited emotional range and only really only shines in fight sequences.  While a fascinating exchange it should also be noted that much of this exchange seems to rest on unexamined assumptions (held by both sides) regarding Chinese vs. Western styles of acting and even what constitutes a proper, skillful or “realistic” martial arts story.  Still, if this final review by the Toronto Sun is any indication, it remains an open question as to whether the dramatic elements of this program will succeed in attracting and maintaining the diverse audience that AMC needs.

The Assassin. Source: Toronto Film Festival

The Assassin. Source: Toronto Film Festival

Taiwanese Director Hou Hsiao-hsien’s much lauded film The Assassin (discussed in our last news update) was the big winner at this years Golden Horse Awards presentation.  Huo’s film earned a total of 11 nominations and by the end of the evening it had walked away with five winning statues.  These included the Golden Horse for Best Director and (in a turn that surprised no one) Best Cinematography.

Ip-Man-3-New-Image

 

Fans of the “Ip Man” franchise have greeted the increasing flow of images, interviews and information about the upcoming film (Ip Man 3) with enthusiasm.  A new trailer was even released in which you can see Donnie Yen and Mike Tyson trading blows.  I personally am even more interested to see how they handle the long poles and butterfly swords in this one.  Click here to see more.

Lastly, for anyone dreading the prospects of a Kung Fu free Thanksgiving, El Rey has your back.  It will be celebrating the great American tradition of feuding families this Thanksgiving with a 72 hour Kung Fu movie marathon.  I ran through the list of titles and it seems that all of the classics are there.   Shannon Lee and Dario Cueto will host this buffet of classic martial arts cinema.

 

Martial Arts Studies.cover.issue 1


Martial Arts Studies

There have been some very exciting developments in the academic field of Martial Arts Studies over the last month.  First, the new peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal Martial Arts Studies released its Fall issue.  It is free to read or share on-line and offers a number of original articles, book and literature reviews.  Anyone who has been following this field (or Kung Fu Tea) will be sure to recognize a number of the names of contributing authors.  Head on over to check out the journal’s crisp new homepage, or go straight to the articles.  And while you are there be sure to check out the following book review by Douglas Wile!

Paul Bowman has recently traveled to South Korea to participate in an academic conference held at the Seoul National University on Martial Arts Studies.  There he presented a paper titled “Everything you know about Taekwondo.”  We have been promised a full report on the event after his return.

striking distance.russo

I am very excited about the next announcement.  My friend Charles Russo has spent the last few years working on a book on the early history of the Chinese martial arts on the West Coast for the University of Nebraska Press titled Striking Distance: Bruce Lee and the Dawn of Martial Arts in America.  It looks like his hard work has paid off and the volume is now available for pre-order on Amazon (for the very reasonable price of $25).  Unfortunately we will still need to wait until June of 2016 for this volume to ship, but its never too early to mark your calendar.  I expect that this book will make a big splash when it finally lands.  In the mean time here is the publishers blurb:

In the spring of 1959, eighteen-year-old Bruce Lee returned to San Francisco, the city of his birth, and quickly inserted himself into the West Coast’s fledgling martial arts culture. Even though Asian fighting styles were widely unknown to mainstream America, Bruce encountered a robust fight culture in a San Francisco Bay area that was populated with talented and trailblazing practitioners such as Lau Bun, Chinatown’s aging kung fu patriarch; Wally Jay, the innovative Hawaiian jujitsu master; and James Lee, the no-nonsense Oakland street fighter. Regarded by some as a brash loudmouth and by others as a dynamic visionary, Bruce spent his first few years back in America advocating for a more modern approach to the martial arts and showing little regard for the damaged egos left in his wake.

On the Chinese calendar, 1964 was the Year of the Green Dragon. It would be a challenging and eventful year for Bruce. He would broadcast his dissenting view before the first great international martial arts gathering and then defend it by facing down Chinatown’s young ace kung fu practitioner in a legendary behind-closed-doors high noon showdown. The Year of the Green Dragon saw the dawn of martial arts in America and the rise of an icon.

Drawing on more than one hundred original interviews and an eclectic array of sources, Striking Distance is an engrossing narrative that chronicles San Francisco Bay’s pioneering martial arts scene that thrived in the early 1960s and offers an in-depth look at a widely unknown chapter of Bruce Lee’s iconic life.

 

If you are looking for something to read over the holiday weekend you might want to consider the following chapter from the 2012 Routledge Handbook of Heritage in Asia (eds. by Daily and Winter) titled “Fighting modernity: traditional Chinese martial arts and the transmission of intangible cultural heritage.” Patrick Daily, the author, recently posted a PDF of this piece to his Academia.edu webpage, which is a great resource as I am constantly scouring the academic journal literature on the Chinese martial arts and had never run across this paper before.  I suspect that I am not the only person who missed it, but it is now available to a much broader audience. Daily is a faculty member of Nanyang Technological University, Earth Observatory of Singapore.

The Creation of Wing Chun by Judkins and Nielson.

The Creation of Wing Chun by Judkins and Nielson.

If you are in the mood for something a little lighter, Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine has now released the second half of my interview discussing both my recent book on the history of Wing Chun and the Southern Chinese martial arts (with Jon Nielson) and the future of martial arts studies as an academic field.  You can read it here.

 

Its facebook time!

Its facebook time!

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group.  We discussed Daoism in Western Taijiquan manuals, the connection between the English Suffragettes and Jujitsu and some of the ways in which China’s “One Child Policy” impacted the traditional martial arts.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.


Bruce Lee: Memory, Philosophy and the Tao of Gung Fu

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Bruce Lee with his favorite onscreen weapon.

Bruce Lee with his favorite onscreen weapon.

 


Introduction: Bruce Lee at 75

Yesterday I celebrated Thanksgiving with my family. As is customary on this day of remembrance I took a few moments to think about the last year and review the many things that I had to be grateful for. The year has been an eventful one.

In the professional realm I had a book published on the social history of the southern Chinese martial arts. I also delivered a keynote address at the first annual martial arts studies conference in the UK and, just recently, saw the publication of the first issue of our new journal on that same topic. I have had opportunities to meet and share my interests with all sorts of fascinating people from all over the world, and have started a number of other projects that should be bearing fruit months and years down the road. As the old Chinese saying goes, a wise man thinks of the source of the water that he drinks, and as I did so it occurred to me that I owe a profound debt of gratitude to Bruce Lee.

Today is the 75th anniversary of Lee’s birth in San Francisco. Born in California and raised in Hong Kong before returning to the West Coast at the end of the 1950s, Lee had a profound effect on the worlds of film, popular culture and the martial arts. While many claims about his career are exaggerated (one should treat with a certain degree of suspicion any assertion that someone was the “first” to do anything) there can be no doubt as to his ultimate impact on the public perception of the martial arts in America, as well as their rapid spread and popularization in the post-1970 era.

For anyone wondering what the point of Kung Fu was, Lee had a very specific answer. It combined a laser like focus on the problems of practical self-defense with a need to find personal and philosophical meaning in practice.

Like others who came before him, Lee argued that the martial arts were ultimately a means of self-creation. Yet drawing on the counter-cultural currents of the time he freed this discourse from the ideological chains that had linked such quests with ethno-nationalist projects for much of the 20th century. He instead placed the individual student at the center of the process. For Lee the martial arts went beyond the normal paradigms of personal security and self improvement and became a means of self actualization.

His own image on the silver screen promised that through these disciplines and their philosophies one could craft a “new self,” one that was fully fit for the challenges of an age of global competition and strife. It was promised that this “new self” would grow out of the process of self expression which the martial arts facilitated. Of course one had to first understand the true nature of these systems to free oneself from their stultifying structures. Individuals might agree or disagree (sometimes violently) with Lee’s assertions, but its hard to underestimate the impact that he had on the ways in which the martial arts are discussed in the West today.

Does this mean that in the absence of Bruce Lee I would not have written my book, or that we would not currently be reading a blog about martial arts studies? Ultimately those sorts of counterfactuals are impossible to answer, and they may cause more confusion than light. Japanese teachers had been promoting their arts in the West since the dawn of the 20th century. Sophia Delza knew nothing of Bruce Lee when she introduced Wu style Taijiquan to New York City. And the Korean government’s heavy support and promotion of Taekwondo had more to do with their own post-colonial struggles with the memory of the Japanese occupation than anything that came out of China.

I suspect that even in a world in which Lee had never existed the martial arts would still have found a respectable foothold in the West. A demand for these systems existed as part of larger cultural trends following WWII, Korea and the Vietnam War. Lee’s genius lay in his ability to understand and speak powerfully to the historical moment that existed.

Following his own advice he bent with the flow of history rather than fighting against it. Certainly some things would remain the same. That seems to follow from the structural nature of 20th century modernization and globalization. Ultimately our theories about the history of the martial arts are very much stories about these two forces (among others).

Yet would I be a student of Wing Chun, a somewhat obscure fighting system from the Pearl River delta region, without Bruce Lee’s rise to fame? Would I have had an opportunity to convince a university press to publish a book whose central historical case was built around a detailed, multi-chapter, biography of Ip Man, Bruce Lee’s teacher? And what of those individuals who study the martial arts? Would this body be as diverse (and sometimes radical) in the absence of Lee’s striking ability to speak to African and Latin-American martial artists (as well as many women and Asians) in the volatile 1970s?

Anthropological studies of the martial arts and social marginality remind us that people who are the most attracted to messages of resistance and individual empowerment are precisely those who have also been disempowered by the dominant social systems of the day. While the globalization of the East Asian martial arts would have come in one guise or another, its clear that I do have a lot to be grateful for when thinking about Lee’s contributions as a film maker, teacher and popularizer of the Chinese martial arts.

Birthdays are also important times for looking to the future. There can be no doubt that Lee’s image has retained a remarkable grip on the public imagination. Decades after his death he still frequently appears on magazine covers and in video games. Books bearing his name (either as an author or in their title) are found in every bookstore with a martial arts section. And Lee’s impact on the realm of martial art films can still be detected with ease. Countless allusions to his more iconic fight sequences can be seen on both the big and small screen. Ninjas may come and go, but even in the age of MMA it seems that Bruce will always have a home on the cover of Black Belt magazine.

Still, one wonders if we are not starting to see changes in some aspects of how Lee is remembered and discussed. AMC recently aired a new series titled “Into the Badlands.” I have been following the advertising efforts around this project with great interest. The show’s creators have prided themselves in their extensive use of the martial arts. In fact, much of their advertising copy focuses on the fact that they are bringing “real” martial arts to the American small screen for the first time. Of course to make this claim with a straight face it is first necessary to seriously downplay, explain away or “forget” quite a bit of equally revolutionary TV that has come before, from Bruce Lee in the Green Hornet to Chuck Norris in Walker Texas Ranger.

A lot of discussion has also focused on Daniel Wu, the lead actor of this project. The show’s promoters have discussed the supposedly revolutionary nature of his role and the many ways in which he is changing the portrayal of Asian males in the entertainment industry. Yet if one drills down into this rhetoric very far what quickly becomes apparent is that Wu is seen as revolutionary in many of the exact same ways that Lee was seen as exceptional in his own era. The one real difference that stands out is that Wu’s character has the potential to develop a truly romantic story-line, where as this was something that was usually not seen with Lee’s films.

While the blame for this is often put on Hollywood (and there is no doubt that much of that is justified) one must also remember that Lee’s heroes came out of a genera of Cantonese storytelling and filmmaking in which romantic and martial leads tended to be somewhat segregated for important cultural reasons (see Avron Bortez for an extensive discussion of the construction of masculinity in the world of Kung Fu). While I applaud Wu for being able to pursue the sorts of roles that he finds interesting, I worry that his revolution is simultaneously erasing some of the traditional conventions of Chinese film and literature rather than challenging Western audiences with something unfamiliar. This is essentially the same discussion of hybrid borrowing vs. hegemony that seems to emerge in so many discussions of the globalization of popular culture. But whatever the ultimate resolution to this debate, it seems that there is an effort on the part of certain advertisers to retool and downplay Bruce Lee’s achievements in an effort to create a new moment of “revolution” in the current era.

Readers interested in looking at this specific discussion can see a number of the links that were included both in the most recent news update and on the Facebook group (in particular the Slate article titled “Daniel Wu is the Asian Action Hero that Bruce Lee Should have Been.”) Actually resolving the specific questions raised by all of this might take some time and far exceeds the space available in this post. Yet reviewing it led me to ask whether Bruce Lee is still the revolutionary figure that he once was. In our current moment do we still need Bruce Lee and his message of radical self-creation through the martial arts? Can he still act as a force for the popularization and spread of these fighting systems? Or is he becoming too culturally remote from modern students, readers and audiences? Is it likely that the public will remember his 100th birthday with the same enthusiasm that is greeting his 75th?

Ip Man and his best known student, Bruce Lee.

Ip Man and his best known student, Bruce Lee.

 

Bruce Lee and the Tao of Gung Fu

As I thought about these questions over the last couple of days I found myself turning to Lee’s unpublished “manuscript” The Tao of Gung Fu. In some respects this may seem like an odd choice. This book was never published in Lee’s lifetime, and as such most of this material had a rather limited impact on the way that people discussed either him or the martial arts in the 1970s and 1980s.

Nor is it always clear to me the degree to which this collection of chapters can be considered a true “book.” From the editor’s (John Little) description it appears that Lee abandoned the project before a complete manuscript was pulled together. A number of the early chapters were in place (they even make internal references to each other) but after that there may only have been an outline. This has been flushed out with notes, drawings and other pieces that Lee wrote over the years. Some pieces are in a more finished state than others, but none of it was ever intended to be made public during Lee’s life. In fact, it must be remembered that he made the rather conscious decision to walk away from the project. As such we can only speculate as to what would have made it into the final version had Bruce decided to actually pursue publication.

One of the things that bothers me about this particular book, as it was posthumously published by Tuttle and the Lee estate, is that it attempts to seamlessly weave this mass of material together into a coherent whole rather than letting the individual pieces, written over a range of years, stand on their own. Nor does it attempt to label what the original documentary sources of the various “chapters” actually were and how they fit into the larger body of Lee’s papers.

Obviously this is an annoyance for other historians working on Lee. And it is especially problematic when one realizes that a number of these essays were originally composed as papers for Lee’s classes at the University of Washington. While clearly bright and interested in philosophy (as well as its application to the martial arts) Lee is the sort of student who likely gave his teachers heart burn. As multiple other scholars (including John Little and James Bishop) have pointed out, Lee was guilty of plagiarizing a number of passages and key ideas throughout these essays.

In a few cases he simply borrowed text while dropping the quotes and footnotes, while in others he followed his sources much too closely (a problem known as “patchwriting”). In a number of other cases he appropriates ideas or insights without proper citation, or plays fast and loose with his sources. For a student of philosophy a surprising number of very detailed arguments are simply attributed to “Taoism” with no further support.

Worst of all, some of Lee’s best known personal stories, such as his exchange with his teacher Ip Man about the problem of relaxation, turn out to have been lifted from other sources (in that particular case the important popularizer of Zen, Allen Watts who had a striking similar exchange with his Judo teacher). James Bishop seems to be the best source currently available on the extent of Lee’s plagiarism and the sources that he was actually drawing on. Of course Lee never intended that these essays be published, let alone to be printed on t-shirts.

Given this list of problems and cautions, one might wonder why I would even discuss such a book. Simply put, the Tao of Gung Fu is a critical work not because the material in it is in any way original, but because it does a great job of clarifying the issues that were being discussed among a certain type of Chinese martial artist at a specific moment in time, and the sorts of sources that they had available to them (both in terms of technical manuals, but also cultural and philosophical resources) to make sense of all of it. While fans might be crushed by some of the instances of Lee’s patchwriting and plagiarism (which varied from unintentional to egregious) the transparent nature of these problems is actually a great blessing to cultural historians and students of martial arts studies.

Lee often starts by outlining questions that a wide variety of readers in his era would have found interesting, and with only a few minutes of googling you can figure out exactly what resources a young, somewhat educated martial artist would have had access to in both the Chinese and English language literatures. In short, for anyone interested in the specific steps by which the Chinese martial arts were culturally appropriated by the West, this book is a remarkable resource.

If you want to better acquaint yourself with the sources of Lee’s philosophy on the martial arts, this is the book that I would recommend. And for Wing Chun students it has the additional bonus of providing critical insight into how (at least some) individuals were discussing that system during the late 1950s and 1960s.

What then is the ultimate root of Lee’s philosophy of the martial arts? What ideas did he turn to in order to both make sense of these fighting traditions and to provide them with increased social meaning (and status) against the backdrop of Chinese culture and thought?

The Tao of Gung Fu provides an embarrassment of riches on these sorts of questions. Students of Wing Chun will likely find Lee’s discussions of Chi Sao (some of which is quite philosophical) to be the most interesting. And readers of history will no doubt want to pay close attention to Lee’s understanding of the subject as discussed in the book’s closing chapters.

Yet perhaps one of the most important themes in Lee’s thinking is set down in the very first chapter before being expanded upon throughout the rest of the manuscript. Here we see Lee outlining a three step process (one that he attributes to Daoism) in which something progresses from 1) the “primitive” stage 2) the stage of “art” 3) the stage of “artlessness.”

Most often this progression is applied to the martial arts themselves. Lee sees in this pattern the meta-history of the Chinese martial arts as a whole. They progressed from a simple, but natural, system to a more sophisticated but stultifying understanding. Finally, after years of hard work Chinese martial artists practiced, experimented and realized what non-essential material could be stripped away, leaving a set of systems what was both sophisticated but once again natural in its execution.

In other places Lee appears to apply this same process to the life history of individual styles. It can also be viewed as the stages that any given martial artist must progress through. In fact, Lee’s iconic “Liberate Yourself from Classical Karate” article is premised on this idea, as well as Lee’s contention that most Western martial artists at the time were stuck in stage two.

Yet Lee’s use of this basic framework extended far beyond the martial arts. At times he seems to have seen it as a more general lens by which we could examine the struggle of humans with both the natural and social worlds. Note for instance that Lee attempts to explain this teleology to his readers by using it as an explanation of the evolution of Chinese grammar between the classical and modern periods. And grasping its logic seems to be a precondition for the introduction of his later discussion of the nature of Yin and Yang in both the martial arts and Asian philosophy.

Given the centrality of this idea to Lee’s thought, it might be useful to ask where it originates. Lee himself claims that the idea is indigenous to Daoism and, at other points, Zen. This later claim may be bolstered by the observation of some Japanese stylists that their own systems suggest a similar progressive understanding of katas (or forms) in three progressive stages.

At the same time it must be remembered that Lee was a philosophy student when much of this material was written, and the resonances with some of the western thinkers he would have been introduced to is noteworthy. The system Lee is proposing seems to be somewhat in debt to Hegel and his progression from “thesis,” to “anti-thesis” and ultimately “synthesis.” We have already seen that Lee was very familiar with the works of Allen Watts, and its possible that this idea may have found its genesis in his writings. Indeed, this might be why Lee sometimes claims that he was outlining a “Zen” theory of progress.

While I suspect that this element of Lee’s thought reflects his study of Western writers and sources, once established it is the sort of thing that you can begin to see everywhere. We know, for instance, that Lee was influenced by the ideas of the mystic and writer Krishnamurti. While I have yet to find an exact statement of this idea in his writings, once it has been established in your mind it’s the sort of thing that will find easy parallels and support in some of Krishnamurti’s statements. Much the same goes for the Dao De Jing. I suspect that this theory of “becoming” struck Lee with such force, and became a cornerstone of his thought in this period, precisely because it seemed to find support in so many sources. The ease with which both Eastern and Western (and possibly even Marxist) sources could be used to illustrate aspects of this theory must have made it seem both universal and self-evident.

I suspect that this idea was also critical to Lee because while it facilitated a rejection of stultifying forms, it also argued that these things could only be overcome through study, experimentation and exhaustive practice. When we look at Lee’s workouts in this period (also provided by John Little) we see that Lee was drilling himself in basic techniques at the same time that he was advocating empirical verification and freedom from pointless tradition. There has always appeared to be a fundamental tension here, between what is necessary to learn a technique, and the desire to transcend it in the search of something more natural or personal. This three step teleology spoke directly to that dilemma, and claimed that the way forward was not a return to a primitive state that rejected scientific advances, but rather through a long and arduous process of additional practice, refinement and (most importantly) experimentation.

Bruce Lee sketching on the set for Game of Death. Photograph: Bruce Lee Estate. Source: The Guardian.

Bruce Lee sketching on the set for Game of Death. Photograph: Bruce Lee Estate. Source: The Guardian.

 

Conclusion: Walking On

While interesting on a technical level, its also important to think about the social implications of all of this. The claim that the only true knowledge which is possible is self-knowledge, gained through extensive practice and experimentation, is most likely to be attractive to individuals who feel themselves to be alienated from other sources of social power or meaning. Indeed, the basic ideas about self-actualization that Lee draws on have their origins in China’s martial arts sub-cultures which often acted as an alternate means of self-creation for marginal individuals within Chinese society.

As I have argued at length elsewhere, this would have been the context in which Lee first saw the martial arts being taught in Ip Man’s school to a generation of often angry, surprisingly alienated, young men in the Hong Kong of the 1950s. Lee’s contribution was to take this basic pattern and to combine it with the philosophical and counterculture currents of his own day in such a way that westerners could access this same technology of self-creation.

The 1970s, when the Chinese martial arts first exploded into popular consciousness, was a volatile decade. Globalization in trade markets was causing economic pain and increased income inequality at home at the same time that some western nations faced both security challenges and open conflict abroad. Nor did the gains of the civil rights movement in the US ensure the spread of racial harmony. Everywhere one looked traditional social institutions seemed to be under attack and society was struggling to produce new ways of understanding and coping with these challenges. Given these structural factors, it is not surprising that Lee’s onscreen presence and martial arts philosophy (to the extent that it was known at the time) had a profound effect on a generation of seekers looking for a new set of tools in their quest for self-production.

In many respects we seem to be entering a similar era. Clearly the situation today is not identical. The Cold War is gone, and an information and service based economy has replaced the manufacturing one (at least in the West). Yet many of the more fundamental concerns remain the same. Economic insecurity, militarism abroad and social conflict at home are once again challenging basic notions of what our nations stand for. Levels of public trust in a wide range of institutions has reached an all time low, and social organizations that once supported vibrant communities in past eras are struggling to survive.

Indeed, many of these factors are directly challenging the economic health and social relevance of the traditional martial arts today. Yet where large schools might falter one wonder’s if we are not seeing a renewed opportunity for the expansion of Lee’s ethos of individual struggle, experimentation and practice. If nothing else the recent discussion of Daniel Wu by the advertisers at AMC could be seen as evidence that there is a hunger for the renewal (and expansion) of the sort of revolution that Lee originally introduced to the West in the 1970s.

As the needs of students and audiences change I fully expect that the ways in which we see Bruce Lee will continue to evolve. That is the sign of a healthy discourse, and it suggests that Lee might be just as important for understanding the current situation within the martial arts community as its mid-twentieth century history. Given the cultural moment that we now find ourselves in, Lee’s promise of self-creation and his basic philosophy seem more important than ever. And as long as his achievements continue to be the yardstick by which each new “revolution” in the martial arts is measured, it seems likely that the memory of the Little Dragon will indeed live to see its 100th Birthday.

oOo

If you enjoyed this post you might also want to read: Two Encounters with Bruce Lee: Finding Reality in the Life of the Little Dragon

oOo



Chinese Martial Arts in the News: December 28th 2015: Wing Chun, Taiji and Sanda goes Pro

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Robert Downey Jr.gloves

 

 

Introduction

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

 

Robert Downey Jr. and Eric Orem working on the wooden dummy.

Robert Downey Jr. and Eric Oram working on the wooden dummy.

 


Chinese Martial Arts in the News

As you can tell from this blog’s subtitle, I write about Wing Chun in addition to the history of the Chinese martial arts as a whole.  As such I am always on the lookout for a good Wing Chun story when putting these news updates together.  But needless to say, very few of the leading stories have much to do with my personal style.  The closest we usually get is something about Bruce Lee.  This month, it seems, is the exception to the rule.  Wing Chun was in the news a lot.

Perhaps the mostly widely read story discussing these Chinese martial arts this month actually came out on Christmas Day.  Shortly after Robert Downey Jr. received a pardon for some prior offenses related to his personal struggles with substance abuse a slew of stories emerged about the role of Wing Chun in helping to motivate him to both seek and find sobriety.  As is often the case most of them seem to have been based on the same source material.  I personally liked TMZ’s piece, which included interview material with his Sifu Eric Oram as well as a link to a nice video.

As a side note I should mention that people always ask me about the impact of the recent Ip Man films on popular interest in Wing Chun.  It is true that those projects have given the art some great exposure.  But after Sherlock Holmes came out I was seeing just as many people coming into my Sifu’s school because of Downey as Ip Man.  I think it would be unwise to underestimate the publicity that he, and his story of overcoming serious challenges in his life, has brought the art.  And for at least a few days this was probably the most widely read story dealing with the TCMA in the mainstream press.

 

Nima King.Wing Chun School

Wing chun is the essence of correct and efficient movement, says Nima King at his school in the Central District of HK. Photo: Bruce Yan, SCMP.  Also note the very expensive looking dummy in the background.

This was not the only Wing Chun related story to find its way into the news over the last few weeks.  The South China Morning Post recently ran a feature on Sifu Nima King’s Central District school titled “The Ip Man in all of us: classes teach kung fu for Hong Kong office workers.”  This is a more detailed profile than what you normally get and we even hear a little bit about Nima’s teacher, the late (and highly respected) Chu Shong Tin.  As with any martial art there are different types of emphasis that can be brought to the fore when teaching or discussing Wing Chun.  In this case what might be thought of as lifestyles issues (rather than fitness or self defense) dominate the discussion.  But in that sense this fits nicely with the somewhat similar emphasis that arises out of the Robert Downey Jr. narrative that also seems to have gained traction over the last few years.

 

Taijiquan practitioners in a park. Source: http://english.cntv.cn

Taijiquan practitioners in a park. Source: http://english.cntv.cn

Wing Chun is not the only traditional art to be in the news.  As usual there were a number of stories about the health benefits of Taijiquan.  One of the more interesting of these was run on the English language webpage of CCTV and was titled “Tai Chi Groups Taking Over the Parks.”  This will not come as much of a surprise to anyone who has spent time in a major city in China where martial artists have long staked out their claim to a great deal of real estate in that countries public spaces.  But, as the article notes, we are starting to see the same thing in other areas as well.  The article hints at the “Americanization” of Taijiquan as it moves abroad, but aside from some vague hints at the “Orientalization” of the art in the Western imagination, this aspect of the article is not as extensively developed as one might like.

 

 

Representatives of Chinese Sanda fighters participate Wednesday's news conference. [Photo provided for chinadaiy.com.cn]

Representatives of Chinese Sanda fighters participate Wednesday’s news conference. Source: chinadaiy.com.cn

I am not sure that I would personally classify modern competitive Sanda as a “traditional martial art” (honestly, on some days I doubt whether Wing Chun as taught by Ip Man would really qualify) but the good folks over at the China Daily seem to have a degree of clarity on that issue.  They recently ran an announcement that the national Wushu administrative bodies have given the go ahead to create the first competitive professional Sanda league next year.  Named the Wushu Sanda Pro League, this organization will sponsor various types of competitive fights between a relatively small, hand picked, group of high profile fighters.  It seems that the hope is to use some of the institutional mechanics that are driving the various MMA organizations competing for a share of China’s media market to raise the profile of Sanda among China’s viewers.  In fact, I rather suspect that defining Sanda as a “traditional” art in this context is simply to claim it as Chinese and thus create some dynamic tension with the more international MMA movement.  You can read more about this project here.

Yang Jian Bing. Source: SCMP.com

RIP Yang Jian Bing. Source: SCMP.com

Earlier this month Yang Jian Bing, only 21, died the day of his scheduled ONE Championship 35 fight in Manila.  It was later determined that Yang died of complications of severe dehydration as he attempted to cut weight for the upcoming fight.  This story received a lot of coverage and sparked renewed debate about the dangers of weight cutting in combat sports.  The ONE Championship has since announced a series of changes to their weigh in procedures in an attempt to prevent the use of dangerous practices to achieve drastic short term weight loss in the future.

While on the subject of death in combat sports, be sure to check out this short article in the New Yorker.  It follows the fate of an early research collection on deaths in boxing.  This may not be considered of much interest for many readers, except that these files ended up in the hands of first R. W. Smith, an important writer on the Chinese martial arts in the post-WWII period, and then Joseph Svinth, one of the more frequently cited authors on Martial Arts Studies in our current era.  It even includes some nice interview material with Svinth in which he discusses his research and writing.  Of course Smith, while initially trained as a boxer, turned against the sport as he became aware of its problem with repetitive brain injury.  This then factored into his promotion of the TCMA.  All in all its a fascinating read that includes some of the more important names in the development of Martial Arts Studies.

Bruce Lee inforgraphic. Source: SCMP.

Bruce Lee inforgraphic. Source: SCMP.

 

Over the last few months there has been much discussion of Jack Ma’s purchase of the South China Morning Post.  Various media critics (who were already concerned with what they saw as the paper’s softening editorial independence) have worried about what this means for the long term independence of the paper.  While I can’t speak to larger trends in editorial policy, the last month seems to indicate that the paper’s long standing interest in the martial arts of southern China remains fully intact.  The SCMP actually put out more features mentioning the martial arts than I can list here.  As such I have chosen the two that I personally found to be the most interesting.  The first is an “infographic” on the life and career of Bruce Lee.

I do not count myself as an expert on the life of the Little Dragon, though I am called upon to write about him from time to time.  As such I am going to be saving a copy of this timeline as a handy reference to keep on my desktop.

 

The home of Wing Chun as we like to imagine it. The Cantonese Opera stage on the grounds of Foshan's Ancestral Temple.

The home of Wing Chun as we like to imagine it. The Cantonese Opera stage on the grounds of Foshan’s Ancestral Temple.  Photo: Author’s Personal Collection.

 

The other piece that I really enjoyed was a feature titled “How to Spend 48 Hours in Foshan, City of Ceramics and Kung Fu Legends Bruce Lee and Ip Man.”  As the article correctly points out, the sights in Foshan are an easy daytrip for anyone who is going to be in Guangzhou, and this much smaller city has a lot going on, if you know where to look.  Foshan is also the home of some great martial arts history.  But if you decide to go, don’t limit yourself to just Wing Chun.  The city also saw important innovations in Choy Li Fut, Hung Gar, White Eyebrow and even Jingwu!  And if you want to know where to eat or what other cultural sites to hit while you are there, this article will help you out.

A still from the trailer for AMC's Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 Comicon.

A still from the trailer for AMC’s Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 Comicon.

 

Chinese Martial Arts in the Entertainment Industry

I have been discussing the press coverage surrounding AMC’s new martial arts series Into the Badlands for a few months now.  Just when I thought that there would be nothing new to say, I ran across this Wall Street Journal blog article.  Its interesting precisely because it focuses on what goes into filming the massive “50 vs. 1” fight scenes that are a staple of so many movies, and this series in particular.  It turns out that this sort of choreography presents directors with its own challenges, not least of which is where to find 50 extras who already know Chinese martial arts?  Check it out.

Probably not going to happen anytime soon. Source: http://www.nothinguncut.com

Probably not going to happen anytime soon. Source: http://www.nothinguncut.com

 

Donnie Yen has been back in the news.  Martial Arts fans are excited to see Ip Man 3, while Star Wars fans want to know more about his upcoming role in that iconic franchise.  You can see Yen discussing these topics, and others, in this interview that he did with the South China Morning Post.  Or if you want to cut right to the can read an early review of Ip Man 3.  It appears that the directors have deliberately moved away from sweeping nationalist themes and “fights to the death” in this last film and have instead decided to provide a much more nuanced exploration of Ip Man as a martial artist and family man.  As someone who just wrote a detailed biography of Ip Man I can vouch for the general lack of “fights to the death” in his martial arts career.  I for one am very interested to see how Yen’s portrayal of Ip Man will evolve in this film.

 

Michelle Yeoh. Source: http://english.cntv.cn

Michelle Yeoh. Source: http://english.cntv.cn

 

The Ip Man franchise is not the only one getting an new edition.  There has also been a fair amount of press coverage of the sequel to “Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.”  You can find one such discussion here.  All of the advance footage of the film that I have seen has been just as beautiful as one might hope.

Alex staff form.cranes

One image from Ameena Rojee’s project “Hard Work.” http://www.ameenarojee.co.uk/hardwork

News From All Over

Our next item come from a somewhat unusual (if beautifully illustrated) source.  It seems that the British Journal of Photography maintains a blog.  One of their recent features profiled Ameena Rojee’s project “Hard Work.”  This collection of photographs documented life at the School of Shaolin Kung Fu in Qufu, China.  The entire shoot lasted one month and Ameena captured some striking images.  But rather than the lush, highly polished images that we are used to seeing on the tourist material, her work often emphasized the bleak nature of the landscape, the ugliness of the local pollution and construction, and the “smallness” of her subjects against the immense backdrop of the local environment  Its a different take on a subject that a lot of us feel that we are already familiar with, and its worth checking out.

 

The "internal" martial arts and other Qigong practices tend to be especially popular among senior citizens and others who are seeking relief from chronic conditions.

While we often discuss Chinese martial artists, less thought is typically devoted to the physical structures and spaces that organize their activities.  This is an problem as the nature of the space that one works within has a profound impact on the types of training that can occur.  We are all familiar with the images of Chinese martial artists training in public parks, but what are these spaces like, and what is their place in the local community?  The Economist recently decided to tackle this conversation in an article titled “Park life: A day in the life of one of the capital’s few green spaces.”  It mentions martial artists, but the entire article is well worth reading so that we can think a little more deeply about the spaces that these martial artists inhabit.

Martial Arts Studies by Paul Bowman (2015)

Martial Arts Studies by Paul Bowman (2015)

 

Martial Arts Studies

There have been some interesting developments in the interdisciplinary realm of Martial Arts Studies over the last month.  Gene Ching, the Editor of Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine, ran a detailed two part interview with Paul Bowman on Martial Arts Studies on the journal’s webpage.  Its well worth reading and a great example of substantive engagement between the scholarly and practicing community.  Click here for Part 1 and Part 2.  While exploring this intersection between popular and scholarly discussion, be sure to also check out this short essay that Paul wrote on the theoretical implications of how we discuss and think about the now legendary fight between Wong Jack Man and Bruce Lee.

 

Illustration from Meyer's Longsword. Source: Bloody Elbow, MMA History Blog.

Illustration from Meyer’s Longsword. Source: Bloody Elbow, MMA History Blog.

Daniel Jaquet (a Post Doc Visiting Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Art and Knowledge) has posted an article on Academia.edu (free to download and read) titled “Historical European Martial Art: A crossroad between academic research, martial heritage re-creation and martial sport practices.”  This is coming out of the German Martial Arts Studies literature that we have touched on a few times here at Kung Fu Tea.  While his article addresses issues in the relationship between historians and practitioners of the traditional European Martial Arts, it seems to me that many of these same issues could also be discussed with regards to Asian traditions.  As such his paper might make an interesting launching point for a comparative discussion.

The abstract is as follows:

Historical European martial arts (HEMA) have to be considered an important part of our common European cultural heritage. Studies within this field of research have the potential to enlighten the puzzle posed by past societies, for example in the field of history, history of science and technology, or fields related to material culture. The military aspects of history are still to be considered among the most popular themes of modern times, generating huge public interest. In the last few decades, serious HEMA study groups have started appearing all over the world – focusing on re-creating a lost martial art. The terminology “Historical European Martial Arts” therefore also refers to modern-day practices of ancient martial arts. Many of these groups focus on a “hands-on” approach, thus bringing practical experience and observation to enlighten their interpretation of the source material. However, most of the time, they do not establish inquiries based on scientific research, nor do they follow methodologies that allow for a critical analysis of the findings or observations. This paper will therefore propose and discuss, ideas on how to bridge the gap between enthusiasts and scholars; since their embodied knowledge, acquired by practice, is of tremendous value for scientific inquiries and scientific experimentation. It will also address HEMA practices in the context of modern day acceptance of experimental (or experiential) processes and their value for research purposes and restoration of an historical praxis. The goal is therefore to sketch relevant methodological and theoretical elements, suitable for a multidisciplinary approach, to HEMA, where the “H” for “historical” matters.

Warrior Women.Lisa Funnell.suny

It is the season for book awards, and I noticed that at least one of the titles that I discussed here earlier this year has done rather well for itself.  Lisa Funnell’s volume Warrior Women: Gender, Race, and the Transnational Chinese Action Star (SUNY Press) considers “the significance of Chinese female action stars in national and transnational contexts.”  It was recently named a Bronze Medalist in the 2015 Independent Publisher Book Awards in the Women’s Issues category; it grabbed the 2015 Emily Toth Award, and it was a finalist for the 2014 ForeWord IndieFab Book of the Year in Women’s Studies.  This is great news as the more recognition that titles like this earn, the more scholars will be exposed to the importance of Martial Arts Studies.

Lisa Funnell is an Assistant Professor in the Women’s and Gender Studies Program at the University of Oklahoma, where she is also an affiliated faculty member of the Film and Media Studies Program and the Center for Social Justice.

Tel Aviv University.Religion violence and the Asian Martial Arts.nov 2015

On November 23rd the Department of East Asian Studies at Tel Aviv University held a one day conference titled “Religion, Violence and the Asian Martial Arts.”  It featured a number of well known researchers as well as papers by some up and coming graduate students.  See here for a full report on this event.  This may be particularly important for anyone who is curious about the debate surrounding the possible existence of the Southern Shaolin temple in the Chinese language academic literature.

We also have some upcoming events to look forward to.  The Martial Arts Studies Research Network will be hosting a conference looking at questions of gender in the martial arts in February.  And the Second Annual Martial Arts Studies conference will be held this July at the Cardiff University.  That event has already locked in a number of confirmed speakers (including Adam Frank, Daniel Mroz, Benjamin Spatz,  Phillip Zarrilli, Paul Bowman and myself)  but if you are interested in going there is still time to submit a proposal to the organizers.  Check out this link for more information on both of these events.

 

Hing Kee shop in Wan Chai Road, Hong Kong.   Source: Wikimedia.

Hing Kee shop in Wan Chai Road, Hong Kong. Source: Wikimedia.

 

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group.  We discussed spirit possession in the traditional Chinese martial arts, Star Wars, female friendly training spaces and why academics need to take blogging more seriously.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.

 


A Year in the Chinese Martial Arts: The Stories and Events that Shaped 2015

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Seattle_New_Years_Eve_Fireworks_2011

 

Happy New Year!

New Years is a good time to sit back and reflect on recent accomplishments and events.  2015 has been a huge year for the field of martial arts studies.  Things had been picking up for a while, but in the last year we saw a veritable explosion of new books, articles, conferences and even a journal launch.  Likewise we have seen quite a bit of reporting on the Chinese martial arts in the popular press, including the emergence of some important trends.

Below is my personal countdown of the top 10 news stories that had the greatest impact in the world of the Chinese martial arts in 2015.  While some of these stories made a big splash during the year, others were less well reported.  A few are general patterns that appeared over the course of many months and one or two are just for fun.  Collectively they remind us of where we have been and point to a few places that we might be headed towards in the coming year.

 

Japanese and Chinese martial arts students meeting in Fujian. Source: SCMP

Japanese and Chinese martial arts students meeting in Fujian. Source: SCMP

 

10. Increased Exposure for the Southern (and other Regional) Folk Martial Arts

As part of my ongoing research I spend a fair amount of time looking at how the mainstream and more specialized media discusses the Chinese martial arts.  Some trends are more subtle than others, but there are a few things that you can always count on.  In terms of subject matter there are some clear winners.  When a new story comes out there is a decent chance that it will focus on one of a handful of topics.  Bruce Lee and Taijiquan are both very popular, as is coverage of the latest martial arts movies.  More rarely you might get a feature on some aspect of Wushu, or the promotion and practice of the Mixed Martial Arts in China.  A lot of the coverage of the traditional folk arts tends to focus on the better known “internal” styles of the North.

One of the more interesting developments of 2015 was a pronounced undercurrent of stories that bucked this general trend.  The Southern arts of Fujian and Guangdong prefectures in particular received more recognition this year than in the past.  There does not seem to have been a single driver behind this trend.  Rather what we saw in 2015 was an interesting confluence of forces.  On the one hand there was an increased awareness of global exchange and influence in the history of the development of various fighting systems, such as this series of stories on Kung Fu’s influence on Karate.  Given Southern China’s importance in Asia’s historic trade networks, it was only natural that its martial arts should be featured in some of these discussions.

Other trends also directed the media’s attention to these styles.  The interest in global exchange seems to have been accompanied by an increase of discussion in the role of certain martial arts in maintaining regional identities, or the promotion of these more local identities abroad.  At times some of these discussions even took on a political tone as local governments debated whether their resources should be used to preserve or promote various aspects of martial heritage.  A number of these strains came together in the reporting on Hing Chao’s efforts both to preserve the historic architecture of Hong Kong’s martial past, as well as his current efforts to promote the various Hakka fighting systems as a critical element of the region’s intangible cultural heritage.  Thus while Bruce Lee and the health benefits of Taiji continued to dominate headlines in 2015, the more subtle emergence of discussions of China’s many regional martial arts styles seems to point to important future trends, including a loosening of the links between the “traditional” martial arts and entho-nationalist paradigms that so dominated the 20th century.

 

International Students Fall in Love With Wushu. Source: ECNS.CN

International Students Fall in Love With Wushu. Source: ECNS.CN

 

9. Wushu

While 2015 has been a good year for the regional folk arts (at least in terms of increased media exposure), the situation for Wushu has been more mixed.  After a flurry of discussion (some of which involved direct comparisons to a newly energized movement promoting competitive Karate) it was decided that Wushu would once again be locked out of Olympic competition in the 2020 Tokyo games.  At the same time a number of stories noted that Wushu has succeeded in building a broader base of popular support among martial artists outside of China. And some of the press coverage that the sport received was quite positive.

Perhaps the most interesting development that I encountered in the Wushu story over the last year was not something that was reported in the press.  While I did not talk with anyone important in China’s sports bureaucracy, in my discussions with the various Chinese scholars and martial arts observers there seemed to be a shift in how the Wushu problem was being understood.  Increasingly these individuals were willing to step back and ask some deeper questions about whether Olympic competition would actually be good for the development of their sport (which is already very popular at the regional level).  And if not the Olympics, where should Wushu go next?  I have no idea what, if anything, will come from these sorts of more fundamental questions, but its something that I will be following in the coming year.

 

A still from the trailer for AMC's Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 Comicon.

A still from the trailer for AMC’s Into the Badlands presented at the 2015 Comicon.

 

8.  Into the Badlands – With heavy promotion

AMC, the home of such hits as The Walking Dead and Breaking Bad, recently aired their new martial arts themed series Into the Badlands.  Ostensibly inspired by the Chinese classic “Into the West,” the show has billed itself as the long awaited return of authentic martial arts to the small screen.  In fact, some of the show’s promotional material has gone so far as to suggest that it is bringing “authentic” Chinese martial arts to American television for the first time (which then leads to really interesting questions about what Bruce Lee was doing back in the 1960s).

In some ways the story here is not the series itself, which has been judged rather harshly by the critics.  While everyone agrees that the fight scenes are well done, even fans of the genera have been left to wonder whether there just might not be too many of them, and to ask more serious questions about the quality of the writing, acting and world creation that have gone into the project.

The far more interesting thing from the perspective of martial arts studies is the way in which this series has been promoted.  To begin with, this is clearly the most heavily advertised and hyped martial arts project to ever grace the western TV screen.  As I reviewed the various news updates for the year in preparation for this post I was surprised to encounter extensive promotion of this series almost a full year before the project was ever available to audiences.  So whatever the show may lack in its production values, it has more than compensated in the advertising and social media departments.  Secondly, the ways in which the series is being promoted as groundbreaking in the portrayal of Asian leading characters is fascinating.  While it is true that the story has romantic elements that would never have made it into a Bruce Lee project, its also critical to note that much of the discussion of its “revolutionary” nature sounds like it was lifted directly out of a Bruce Lee biography.  We are left with the paradox of something that claims to be “new,” but the type of “revolution” that it represents is one that will already feel very familiar to audiences.  You can read more about these questions here.

A close up of Donnie Yen in a cast photo for Rogue One. Source: Starwars.com

A close up of Donnie Yen in a cast photo for Rogue One. Source: Starwars.com

 

 

7. A Good Year for Donnie Yen

Into the Badlands is not the only entertainment story to make our top 10 list.  At times it felt like 2015 was the year of Donnie Yen.  Ip Man 3, just released, continued what can only be called one of the most successful martial arts film franchises of recent memory.  Controversies surrounding the possible role of Bruce Lee and and the Boxing Champion Mike Tyson helped to whip up even more interest in the project than might otherwise be expected.

Nor was this the only blockbuster that Yen found himself associated with.  After beating out a number of competitors (including reportedly Jet Li) it was announced that Yen had been cast in the upcoming Star Wars film, Rouge One.  While Yen has developed a substantial following among western fans of martial arts films, this new role is sure to boost his name recognition among a much wider audience.  It is also the most brilliant plan to avoid being typecast as Ip Man that I could possibly imagine.  And by accepting this role Yen has automatically endeared himself to both fans of the series who were critical of its lack of Asian characters (despite borrowing heavily from Asian martial arts lore and swordsmanship) as well as those who wanted to see established martial artists in what is been billed as a “gritty” and “more realistic” Star Wars film.

These two projects also given Donnie Yen a windfall of earned media exposure, much of which came in the way “will he, won’t he” interviews pontificating on his future within the martial arts genera, the Star Wars universe and the state of both Hollywood and Hong Kong film.  It was a good year for Donnie Yen, and one that set him up for even greater media exposure in 2016 and beyond.  And did I mention that he still found time to record the best PSA ever?

 

A "Kung Fu" nun demonstrates a pole form at a Tibetan Temple in Nepal. Nuns from this order recently traveled to CERN Switzerland where they displayed their skills and discussed "energy" with a set of confused particle physicists.

A “Kung Fu” nun demonstrates a pole form at a Tibetan Temple in Nepal. Nuns from this order recently traveled to CERN Switzerland where they displayed their skills and discussed “energy” with a set of confused particle physicists.

 

6. Gender Takes Center Stage in the Discussion of the (Chinese) Martial Arts

Scholars have been interested in the intersection of gender and the martial arts/combat sports for some time.  The area is a rich one for anyone who writes on identity formation or a number of other topics.  But 2016 was a year in which some of these discussions seemed to capture the interest of a more general readership.

Readers may recall that a devastating earthquake hit Nepal earlier in the spring.  A number of “human interest” stories on the aftermath of tragedy focused on a local order of Buddhist nuns who practice the Chinese martial arts.  In the wake of the earth quake they put both their labor and more specialized skills at the disposal of their neighbors, and a number of western media outlets detected a gendered aspect to the story.  And throughout the year media outlets such as the South China Morning Post ran features looking at the practice of the martial arts among women around the world.  Often these stories also intersected with the previously noted trend of an increased interest in regional fighting practices.  And the Assassin, perhaps the most discussed martial arts film of 2015, put forth a compelling and complex vision of a martial heroine.

Within the realm of martial arts studies we saw a number of publications on gender within the martial arts and combat sport.  The most important of these was the edited volume titled Global Perspectives on Women in Combat Sports: Women Warriors Around the World by Alex Channon and Christopher Matthews.  Other works dealing with gender in context of Martial Arts Studies gained important recognition from their peers, such as this award winning title from SUNY Press.

Other works, including this project by two sociologists at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, focused instead on the construction of masculinity in the Mixed Martial Arts and combat sports.  While not without its faults, Jonathan Gottschall’s highly engaging work, the Professor in the Cage, asked many of these same questions, while also bringing the academic study of the martial arts to a truly mass readership.

 

Taiji Boxer. Source: Burkhardt, 1953.

Taiji Boxer. Source: Burkhardt, 1953.

5. Quantifying the Health Benefits of Taijiquan

A host of factors, including greater sociological acceptance, rising health care costs, an aging population and increased skepticism of opiate based strategies for chronic pain management, have motivated the western medical community to take a more systematic look at “alternative” Asian medical practices including herbalism, qigong mediation, acupuncture and Taijiquan practice.  Indeed, the medical benefits of practices like Taijiquan have been discussed from time to time in the West for more than a century.  Yet only recently have medical professionals dedicated the attention and resources necessary to systematically test and describe the benefits of Taiji for a wide number of (most chronic) conditions.

A recent review article in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, which examined, correlated and interrogated the results of a large number of smaller studies conducted in recent years, attempted to do just that.  The results were surprisingly positive for people suffering from a very wide range of chronic conditions (including insomnia, diabetes and arthritis among others).  These findings were widely reported in a number of outlets and ended up working their way down in the mainstream media.  Hopefully this will clear the way for more individuals to discover the benefits of the traditional Chinese martial arts for themselves in the upcoming year.

 

Shi Yongxin (L), current abbot of the Shaolin Temple, presents a sculpture of Bodhidharma to Professor Charles Mattera of United Studios of Self Defense (USSD) from the United States.

Shi Yongxin (L), current abbot of the Shaolin Temple, presents a sculpture of Bodhidharma to Professor Charles Mattera of United Studios of Self Defense (USSD) from the United States.

 

4.  Abbot Shi Yongxin shows off his defensive skills

Back in 2014 there was a story about the Shaolin Temple in Henan Province advertising job openings for public relations and media specialists.  Indeed, the Temple has a knack for keeping its name in the news, and given its vital importance to Henan’s tourist industry, that is probably a good thing.  Much of its success in this area in recent years has been attributed to (or, depending on who you ask, blamed on) its current Abbot, Shi Yongxin.  Sometimes called the “CEO Monk,” the Abbot has brought modern business and promotional methods to the Temple.  He has been especially aggressive in his attempts to build his institution’s market share in both China and abroad.

Still, there complexities to Shi Yongxin’s reputation.  On the one hand he has proved to be a lightening rod for controversy (ranging from past claims that he has commercialized Chan Buddhism to consorted with prostitutes), yet he has also shown himself to be exceptionally adroit in the realm of survival.  Few of the charges thrown at him seem to stick for long.  2015, however, put even his prodigious defensive skills to the test.

Earlier this year readers of Chinese social media seem to have discovered the plans, long in the works, for the Shaolin monastery to build a combined daughter temple/kung fu complex/luxury hotel/golf course in the tourist mecca that is Australia’s Gold Coast.  This led to renewed questions as to whether the construction of costly tourist attractions and luxury hotels in foreign countries is really the sort of business that Buddhist monks are supposed to be heading up.  Luckily environmental impact concerns halted construction of the golf course and luxury condo development, blunting at least some of the more controversial optics associated with the project.

The wider Shaolin brand may also have taken another hit with the trial of Juan Carlos Aguilar, the self-styled “Shaolin Monk” responsible for torturing and killing two women in Spain.  Aguilar studied at one of the many local Kung Fu schools surrounding the Temple, but did not have any relationship with the actual Shaolin organization.  While they quickly moved to distance themselves from Aguilar, its not the sort of press that any organization wants.

Still, the worst was yet to come.  After Shi Yongxin missed a public appearance in Thailand it was suggested that the Abbot had been prohibited from leaving the country due to an investigation of a new set of charges by an anonymous insider accusing the Abbot of, among other things, having both a secret family outside of the walls of the temple and financial improprieties.  The timing of these accusations were especially dire as they coincided both with a highly publicized (and feared) crack down on corruption among public figures on the one hand, and a renewed set of investigations into wrongdoings by various religious groups on the other.  Thus Shaolin, always a favorite topic on Chinese social media, found itself at the confluence of a number of dangerous currents.

As the summer firestorm subsided Shi Yongxin reemerged in public and began to once more lead events at the temple.  His supporters have claimed that the charges against him are trumped up, and that he has laid the claims to rest (or at least proved the excellence of his bureaucratic kung fu).  However, as late as this fall his attackers were reiterating the charges and pointed to other ongoing investigations.  At the moment Shaolin appears to be taking a well deserved break from the headlines, but while reviewing the events of this summer I was once again struck by how widespread coverage of controversies at the temple have become.  While the debate may have been fueled in its early stages by micro-bloggers on Chinese social media platforms, by the summer its seems that most of the major western media platforms were talking about the story.  Hopefully the Temple will find a return to tranquility in 2016.

Martial Arts Studies.cover.issue 1

For the complete issue (including a number of review articles not listed here) go to martialartsstudies.org

 

3.  The Year that Martial Arts Studies Took Flight

Over the last few years a number of us have been tentatively discussing the creation (or renewal) of “martial arts studies” as an interdisciplinary research area dedicated to the academic investigation of the history, practice, meaning and theoretical significance of the traditional fighting systems and combat sports.  The last decade had seen a fair amount of movement in that direction, and the pace of developments had been accelerating in recent years.  Yet it is now clear that the way in which we discuss this project must change in the post-2015 environment.  Martial Arts Studies is no longer an aspiration.  2015 was the year that many long planned projects burst into full flower.  Martial Arts Studies has arrived.

The number of accomplishments over the last year is almost too great to list.  Respected university presses and academic publishers put forth a number of important titles that will help to shape both the empirical and theoretical discussion for years to come.  A sample of these include Martial Arts and the Body Politic in Indonesia by Lee Wilson (Brill, 2015), Global Perspectives on Women in Combat Sports edited by Alex Channon and Christopher Matthews (Palgrave, 2015), Kendo: Culture of the Sword by Alexander C. Bennett (University of California Press, 2015),  Taekwondo: From Martial Art to Martial Sport by Udo Moenig (Routledge, 2015), Martial Arts Studies: Disrupting Disciplinary Boundaries by Paul Bowman (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015), and my own book The Creation of Wing Chun: A Social History of the Southern Chinese Martial Arts (State University of New York Press, 2015).

While such publications are critical to the growth and acceptance of any field they are far from 2015’s only accomplishment.  A number of interdisciplinary conferences have been held over the last year seeking to engage a diverse body of scholars from around the world.  Discussions of the progress made in these meetings can be seen in the reports on the following events in Israel, Korea and at the First Annual Martial Arts Studies held in the UK.  Obviously a number of other events and conferences (some more theoretically specialized) are also scheduled, and we hope to hear more on them later.

At least two research institutes have been founded in the last year to advance the promoting of Martial Arts Studies.  The first of these in the Martial Arts Studies Research Network (headed by Paul Bowman) in the UK, and the other is the BUDO-Lab at Chapman University (under the guidance of Andrea Molle).  Rowman & Littlefield Press has also announced the creation of a new book series of Martial Arts Studies (edited by Paul Bowman) which will also be vital to supporting the ongoing growth of the research area.

Nor could we neglect to mention the release of the first issue of the new journal Martial Arts Studies (co-edited by Paul Bowman and myself).  While recent years have seen the publication of a number book length studies of the martial arts, there was no single journal dedicated to establishing and interdisciplinary conversation on this topic.  In fact, after conducting an extensive literature review for my own book on the history of Wing Chun, I decided that this was the probably the single greatest obstacle facing the development of the academic literature on the martial arts.  Now, in partnership with Cardiff University Press, there is a freely available, open source journal devoted to promoting this previously neglected area of the literature.

Nor should we neglect to mention the headway that martial arts studies has made in the classroom, especially at the undergraduate level.  This is a topic that we will be hearing more about in the coming year in a special series to be hosted here at Kung Fu Tea.  While 2015 has been a banner year for Martial Arts Studies perhaps its most impressive accomplishment has been the establishment of a firmer foundation for promoting future research.

 

Bruce_Lee_cover_News Week

2.  Bruce Lee at 75

As I mentioned at the top of this post, Lee is always a popular subject.  This last year saw an additional surge of interest in the the life of the Little Dragon, and its ongoing cultural relevance, as he reached what would have been his 75th birthday.  Signs of these festivities were hard to miss.  While it is no surprise to see Lee gracing the cover of Black Belt magazine, it was slightly more interesting to see him on the cover of his own special issue of Time.  South China Morning Post was not to be outdone.  They also ran a number of features on Hong Kong’s favorite son.  You can see a summary of much of this discussion (as well as links to specific pieces) here.

Of course birthdays are also a good time for introspection, meditation and long-form blog posts.  For instance, with all of the discussion of the “revolutionary” nature of Into the Badlands, does Western popular culture still need Bruce Lee?  And if so, why?  Will we still be talking about him at his 100th birthday?  You can find my own reflections on these questions here:  Bruce Lee: Memory, Philosophy and the Tao of Gung Fu.

 

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

 

The Top News Story of 2015: Kung Fu Diplomacy

This brings us to my pick for the top news story of 2015.  It is the ever growing importance in China’s public diplomacy (or possibly “national branding”) strategy within press and media discussions of the martial arts.

As one looks back over the history of the traditional Chinese martial arts you quickly get the sense that there are really two separate, yet interconnected, stories at play.  On the one hand there is the question of what actual martial artists do at any given point in time.  This is what a lot of academic and lineage history focuses on.  Then there is the question of what people (usually non-martial artists) are saying about these hand combat systems at that same moment in time.

How does this popular discourse impact the cultural meaning of martial arts practice within society?  Are these messages absorbed, resisted or co-opted by actual practitioners?  And who “controls the messaging?”

Is it martial arts teachers and reformers with their voluntary associations?  Novelist, reporters, TV actors and film producers who promote the martial arts for their cultural and economic value?  Or local and state governments that see in them either a source of tourist dollars or a means of strengthening nationalism and state penetration of society?  In actual fact all three of these actors tend to be active at the same time, and their vision of what the martial arts are, or should be, can harmonize or clash in fascinating and complicated ways.  Much of my writing here at Kung Fu Tea has been dedicated to teasing out these competing influences.

At various points in its modern history the enthusiasm of China’s government for the martial arts has waxed and waned.  The KMT sought to use the Central Guoshu Institute to strengthen its statist aims and better resist Japanese aggression in the 1930s.   After 1949 the Communist government saw Wushu as a way of implementing a vision of China’s martial and athletic culture firmly based in Maoist collectivist and non-competitive values.

A survey of press coverage over the last year indicates that the Chinese government is once again taking a renewed interest in the martial arts.  Yet this time their focus is different.  Rather than simply influencing their own society, they have realized that the positive association that foreign peoples already have with the Chinese martial arts make them a powerful tool of public diplomacy.  By promoting both the practice and discussion of the martial arts abroad, Chinese diplomats hope to educate the global community about their culture, values and to create a greater sense of “good will” and trust towards China.  This is all the more important in an era when China is actively beginning to flex its muscles as it tries to discover its proper place on a global stage.  A healthy store of political trust could be the key to weathering the sorts of mishaps, misunderstandings and conflicts that are sure to happen along the way.

Of course Kung Fu is not the only (or even the most important) tool in China’s public diplomacy arsenal.  Currently the Chinese state is expanding its network of Confucius Institutes at Universities around the globe where language training and other university level course work is provided.  Nor can we neglect the role of TV and radio stations owned by the Chinese government in crafting a certain image.  And Chinese cooking is even more popular globally than the martial arts.

Still, it is interesting to note how often efforts to promote the martial arts intersect with these other tools and strategies.  CCTV regularly runs stories on the growing popularity of Wushu, while Confucians Institutes have often taken the lead in providing Taijiquan classes for local communities.  The government has gone to some lengths to promote the teaching of the martial arts in areas like Africa and Nepal where Chinese financial interests are becoming ever more pronounced.  Often the source of these stories is fairly transparent, such as when they are directed by a government agency or CCTV.  In other cases it is less clear when a press office simply puts out a news release that is picked up by one of the many tabloid news services or webpages.

A lot of positive good will and social capital was created around the Chinese martial arts in the West between the 1970s and the 1990s.  During these decades it was overwhelmingly private actors, both martial artists and media figures, who controlled the narrative that determined how the public would view the martial arts.  Yet in almost every news update that I reviewed over the course of the last year there was at least one story that focused on “Kung Fu diplomacy.

Public diplomacy is not necessarily a bad thing.  Indeed, America, and pretty much every other country in the world, has its own public diplomacy strategy.  The world is always a better place when states can peacefully discuss their values and competing visions of the future.  That is the very essence of diplomacy.

As a political scientist with a background in International Relations, public diplomacy is one of the topics that I have a professional interest in.  The important development in the current case is that we are seeing number of governmental and NGO (but politically active) actors stepping up their discussion of, and engagement with, the martial arts precisely because they think that it might help with these “national branding” efforts.  While interesting on a number of counts, one must also wonder how it will change the existing narrative around these traditional fighting systems.

On one level none of this is new.  Actors in the Nationalist Chinese government sent a martial arts demonstration team to the 1936 Olympics for a reason. And who could forget a young Jet Li performing a Wushu routine for President Nixon on the White House lawn in the middle of the Cold War?  Yet the sheer volume of Kung Fu diplomacy stories that we have seen reported in 2015 indicate that there may be some trends here that deserve further considerations in 2016.

 

 

 

 


Our Fist is Black: Martial Arts, Black Arts, and Black Power in the 1960s and 1970s

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Karate Illustrated.Steve Sanders.cover

***It is my very great pleasure to present the following guest post by Maryam Aziz.  A doctoral student at the University of Michigan, I first had the opportunity to meet her at the 2015 Martial Arts Studies conference at the University of Cardiff where she was presenting some of her research.  Her topic is an important one that speaks to multiple conversations in history, cultural studies, sociology and anthropology.  As I have stated in other places, the martial arts studies literature needs more focused studies tracing developments within single communities, arts or even geographic locations. These provide us with both the data necessary to assess our theories as well as the empirical puzzles that will drive the development and newer and better one.  I look forward to hearing much more from her in the future.***

 


Our Fist is Black: Martial Arts, Black Arts, and Black Power in the 1960s and 1970s Urban North and West

Introduction

During the five years that I have been researching the history of African American martial atrial arts, I have noticed a curious academic pattern that appears in the scant scholarship on the topic. Generally present in Afro-Asian studies texts produced between 2001 and 2008, megastar Bruce Lee’s popularity is repeatedly used as the focal point for exploring the rise of martial arts practice in black communities, resulting in claims that African Americans’ fascination with martial arts began with the 1970s kung fu film craze (Cha-Jua 199). I argue such claims are ahistorical because the rise of the practice of East Asian martial arts in black communities can actually be traced to the post-WWII and Black Power Eras. Focusing on the latter in this paper, I use martial arts instructors in the urban West and North cities of Los Angeles and Newark to contend that martial arts schools served as critical sites for Black artistic production, resistance, and empowerment. By institutionalizing martial art spaces in Black urban geographies, instructors like Shaha Mfundishi Maasi provided Black Arts teachings that directly transformed community members’ lives. The oral histories and primary documents utilized here indicate that these instructors taught students self-defense skills as well as Black cultural knowledge. Thus, rather than continuing to focus on Lee, I propose we view Black participation in the martial arts through the lens of the Black Arts and Black Power Movements, thereby productively rethinking what counts as cultural production and how said production functions in social movements. Because the movements were distinct yet inseparable reflections of one another, Black martial arts instructors moved fluidly between both, and as their radical consciousnesses grew, they matched their philosophies and teachings to Black Power and Black Arts’ goals and ideologies.

 

Historical Framings

By the time Bruce Lee’s series Green Hornet hit television screens in 1966, martial arts were already being taught in black communities. In fact, if you drove a half-hour from the 20th Century Fox studios were the series was filmed in Los Angeles, you would have found yourself at a park near Manchester Avenue. There you would have spotted Grandmaster Steve Muhammad (then Steve Sanders), demonstrating a front kick for the youth who participated in his free karate classes. Also in the same year across the country in Newark, New Jersey, Shaha Mfundishi Maasi (born William Nichols), could be found teaching in his school the Hakeem Martial Arts Association. Both instructors cite that the period, a moment of “rising or broadening of consciousness,” strongly influenced their desires to teach and their pedagogies (Hinton 102). In the same year that Grandmaster Muhammad received his black belt and began his free classes, James Meredith was shot during his March on Fear from Memphis to Jackson. Kwame Touré and others continued the March on his behalf and at one of the rallies, Mukasa Dada, aka Willie Ricks, and Touré spoke vehemently of Black Power. Malcolm X’s death had already influenced many activists to shift their tactics. Many activists like Amiri Baraka were invested in both the arts and politics, unwilling to separate them as discrete forms of nationalism. A newly theorized Black Art emerged and burned as the coal that sparked the Black Arts Movement (BAM). In the poem “Black Art,” Baraka calls for art with power, art that produces change, and artists who are willing to write and affect that change it. Arguing that art arms people with the defenses necessary to combat an unjust system, Baraka believed that a true Black artist equipped his people to deal with individuals who were symbolic of a violent system. By figuratively bringing “fire…to whities ass” (Baraka 27-28), art could convince its audience that they could literally do so, being the offspring of warriors (Aziz 110). When Baraka speaks of warriorhood, he is making a tie between art and conflict and how a poet is both a groundworker and a warrior for Black Power, claiming that all activist-artists are inheritors of an Afro-centric warrior legacy. And though he never explicitly mentions martial arts, Baraka’s repeated usage of the term “warrior” suggests the intertwining of aesthetics, self-determination, and self-defense that martial arts practice creates. Martial artists are literally warrior-artists, aesthetically trained in combat arts meant to be defensive acts of defiance.

By 1969, a year after the publication of the crucial Black Fire anthology, Grandmaster Steve Muhammad had created a black martial arts community in Los Angeles along with seven other martial artists. They met to work out on Saturday mornings in South Central Los Angeles’ Van Ness Park and soon named themselves the Black Karate Federation (BKF). Muhammad and his cohort were influenced by older masters like William Short, who had begun training Los Angeles youth in the 1950s. Short owned the Kobayashi School of Karate on So. Western Ave in South Central. His own teachings paralleled those of his friend, Dr. Maulana Karenga, and in addition to martial arts, Short taught his students African American history (Muhammad 50).

Black Karate Federation.patch


Conscious Raising in Black Martial Artistry

 

The Black Karate Federation’s usage of martial arts allowed them to carve, with their closed fists and cocked limbs, both an unabashedly black identity and a black artistic consciousness. The Black Karate Federation derived many of their speedy kicks and hand strikes from Muhammad’s American Kenpo training, but they showed their identity through the logo that the founders conceived using cultural nationalist symbolism. The B.K.F logo blazed from the patch of students’ uniforms: a clenched, golden fist, its fingers facing away from the eye, covered by a red, black, and green banner, upon which a cobra calmly but dangerously hissed, all falling downward toward a scroll with the letters B.K.F written upon it (Muhammad 80-81). The patch went through other iterations, including one that wrote “Power to the People” over the cobra and another that was shaped like a globe with a black fist at the center. In all its usages, the fist’s meaning served two purposes. One, it represented the word “kenpo”‘s meaning, which is “Fist Law” according to Muhammad. Two, it stood as a symbol of “power and righteousness” (Muhammad 81). Inspired by the 1968 Olympic Games podium gesture by sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, the BKF used the fist to demonstrate their desire “to fight injustice” and “to overcome racism” (Muhammad 82). The fist’s golden color signified its wealth and power (Muhammad 82). Its red, black, and green banner mirrored the Pan-African flag created by Marcus Garvey, serving as a “bold and powerful vision” for “all peoples of Africa, regardless of land and birth” (Muhammad 83). The cobra represented the swift movements of Muhammad and the BKF’s fighters but also carried a Pan-Africanist meaning for venomous snakes, i.e. cobras, are considered indigenous to many regions on the continent of Africa. The fist and Pan-African flag colors enjoyed increased usage among black radicals during the period that the BKF was started, placing their choices within a larger shift and conversation happening toward the middle and end of the 1960s. These symbols allowed the BKF to enter conversations about black cultural identity and empowerment through their artistic, stylistic choices. Hundreds of girls and boys would wear the insignia during the ensuing decade (Muhammad 64).

In addition to theorizing school representation and uniform, black martial arts instructors also explicitly tied their pedagogy to agendas being using by other contemporary activists. Shaha, or learned elder, Mfundishi Maasi was a cultural and martial theorist who would also teach hundreds of students during the 1960s and 1970s (Maasi 2013). Maasi taught them that life lies with the individual and stressed that “the art[s] can be utilized as an instrument for enlightenment” (Hinton 88). He imparted to his students the most valuable knowledge he gained through his own martial arts training, which was the knowledge of self (Hinton 87). It was clear to him early on that martial arts could take practitioners further than the “ability to beat somebody” (Hinton 91).

The particular style Maasi co-developed tied the search of the personal self to the search for the cultural self. Due to collaboration with Nganga Tolo-Naa, a Chicago martial artist who founded the All African Peoples Art and Cultural Center, the style became known as “kupigani ngumi,” a Kiswahili term signifying “the way of fighting with the fist” (Maasi 2013). The motive behind teaching kupigani ngumi was to provide an art that, though partly based in East Asian movements, integrated cultural reflections youth could identify with. Kupigani ngumi attempted to present art in a way that “our people who were in the midst of cultural struggle [at the time] could relate to” (Maasi 2013). He and Tolo-Naa chose Kiswahili principles, such as “kuzviata,” because they deeply engaged the young men and women in their classes (Maasi 2013). Kuzviata loosely translates to “reach out and touch yourself” and Maasi used it to teach students self-discipline (Maasi 2013). Using it in conjunction with kurimedza, which means “to enthrone with dignity,” Maasi created an educational atmosphere where students could see the cultural relevance of building both their fortitudes and characters (Maasi 2013). He found “these methods helped to bind the [students] in principle in a way that they would relate to each other not as…competitors but as [siblings] on the field of cultural battle” (Maasi 2013). Equipping the young artists with the tools to succeed on the front of cultural battle did not actually entail leading them into confrontation or physical conflict. It meant building up strong self and cultural images. Maasi’s students were his own guide toward self and cultural survival every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. They were his “young lions” or “Simba Wachanga” (Maasi 2013). They were his to lead past the contagious, quote “self-limiting thoughts, the sense of inferiority, and hopelessness, and the loss of heritage, dignity, and self-respect” (Maasi 2013).

Maasi’s teaching was a part of his role with Newark’s Black Community Defense and Development (BCD), a part of the coalition Committee for a Unified NewArk (CFUN) (Woodard 109-110). Maasi worked directly with Amiri Baraka, whose own transformation and shifting educational values influenced Maasi, as evident in his Pan-Africanist martial arts pedagogy.  As Baraka motivated ground workers through his call-to-action poetry, Maasi’s self-defense lessons allowed them to fight off racist attackers who sought to prevent them from advertising for meetings.

 

Conclusion

Both the personal and philosophical links between the Black Arts and Black Power movements and Black martial arts instructors forces us to expand our understanding of both movements to include martial artistry. Besides CFUN, there is evidence that other organizations such as the US, the East, the Republic of New Africa, and the Black Panther Party practiced martial arts for similar yet varying purposes. To talk about these arts as cultural formations will challenge us to look in new places for the evidence of the Black Arts Movements’ impacts. Furthermore, it will push Black art scholars to reconceptualization what they view as artistic production. In taking this challenge seriously, we can critically assess the ways in which scholars have reified traditional views of what qualifies as art through their chosen objects of analysis. Lastly, we can push the theoretical boundaries of who was a Black artist and who created Black art.

BKF.Kelly.Enter the Dragon

To conclude, I want to turn briefly to the moment when Bruce Lee’s legend was solidified if only to do the work of looking past him. What would happen if we paused the Blu-ray of Enter the Dragon at 24:58? We would find that Lee is no longer the object of the frame. Instead, the figures of Grandmaster Steve Muhammad and film star Jim Kelly replace him. Muhammad and an early version of the BKF patch are prominently displayed on screen as Kelly and Muhammad speak in the BKF’s “103rd Street School” (Muhammad 54). What would happen then if we relocate this moment in history and resituate Steve Muhammad and the BKF in the history of growing Black fervor for martial arts? What if we talked about Jim Kelly as a form of anti-colonial, anti-racist masculinity as he flips and defeats two racist cops? Would we stop using Bruce Lee as a mirror to imagine the masculinities of Black men who were present in their own struggle? Could we go a step further and interrogate why the scene is devoid of Black women’s presence, an illusion that incorrectly typecasts the BKF as male-only? All of these questions lead to the ultimate question: What does it mean to center narratives of Black martial arts pioneers when reliving and reviewing moments in American martial arts and cinematic history?

 

About the Author

Maryam Aziz is a doctoral student in the Department of American Culture at the University of Michigan. Her work constructs a social and cultural history of martial arts practice during 20th century social movements, specifically the Black Power Movement. She holds a 2nd degree Black Belt in Goju Ryu Karate from the New Jersey State Black Belt Association and conducts self-defense workshops for populations targeted for hate crimes.  Readers interested in finding out more about her research may contact her at: maryamka “at” umich.edu.

Works Cited

Aziz, Maryam. “Finding the Warrior.” The Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Journal (2013): 109-12. Print.

Baraka, Amiri. “Black Art.” Black Fire: An Anthology of AfroAmerican Writing. Ed. Amiri Baraka and Larry Neal. Baltimore: Black Classic, 2007. 302-303. Print.

Cha-Jua, Sundiata. “Black Audiences, Blaxploitation and Kung Fu Films, and Challenges to White Celluloid Masculinity.” China Forever: The Shaw Brothers and Diasporic Cinema. Ed. Poshek Fu. Urbana: U of Illinois, 2008. 199-223. Print.

Enter the Dragon. Dir. Robert Clouse. Perf. Bruce Lee and Jim Kelly. Warner Bros, 1973. DVD

Hinton, William, and D’Arcy Rahming. Men of Steel Discipline: The Official Oral History of Black Pioneers in the Martial Arts. Chicago, IL: Modern Bu-jutsu, 1994. Print.

Maasi, Mfundishi. “Oral Historical Interview with Mfundishi Maasi.” Telephone interview. 28 Mar. 2013.

Muhammad, Steve, and Donnie Williams. BKF Kenpo: History and Advanced Strategic Principles. Burbank, CA: Unique Publications, 2002. Print.

Woodard, Komozi. A Nation within a Nation: Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and Black Power Politics. Chapel Hill, NC: U of North Carolina, 1999. Print.


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: January 24th, 2016: Ip Man 3, An Exhibit of Antique Swords and Costco Moves into the Wooden Dummy Market

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Wooden Dummies for sale at a Costco store in Japan. Source:

A Pallet of Wooden Dummies for sale at a Costco store in Japan. Source: goodall factory on Instagram.

 

 

Introduction

 

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while (almost a month) since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

 

Ming era armor currently on display in Shanghai. Source: Shanghai Daily Post.

Ming era armor currently on display in Shanghai. Source: Shanghai Daily Post.

News from all Over

 

This week’s report starts with three items from the Shanghai Daily.  The first article details the opening of a new exhibit of ancient and traditional Chinese weapons at the Han Tianheng Art Museum in Shanghai.  Much of the article focuses on an interview with the individual who collected these artifacts and loaned them to the exhibit.  It certainly sounds as though there will be some important early pieces there and if anyone is in the area it would be great to see a report.  The exhibit is currently expected to run through February.

That article was followed up by another titled “The Finest Swords Becomes Legends.”  It focuses on the mythology surrounding some of the amazing bronze swords produced in ancient China.  Dedicated students of the history of China’s weapons will already be familiar with these accounts, but its always fascinating to see them working their way into the more general press.

Jiang Hanlong.wing chun instructor.shanghai daily

Jiang Hanlong, Wing Chun Instructor. Shanghai Daily.

 

Next we turn to something a little more current.  As part of its Hangzhou Special series the Shanghai Daily also ran a profile of Jiang Hanlong, a cartoonist who, after being introduced to Wing Chun, went on to become an professional martial arts instructor and to open his own school.  A student of Lun Jia (who in turn studied with Ip Man), Jiang went on to open a school with a friend and Taijiquan practitioner hoping to help students find peace within the routines of a hectic modern life.  In addition to Wing Chun and Taijiquan they also offer courses in Chinese archery, meditation and traditional music.

A pallet of Wing Chun dummies at a Costco store in Japan. Source: Apple Daily.

A Pallet of Wing Chun dummies at a Costco store in Japan. Source: Apple Daily.

This next story is by far my favorite in the current news roundup.

How do  you know that Wing Chun is officially “big in Japan”?  There are reports (such as this one at inverse.com) that some Costco locations have begun to sell wooden dummies (mook yan jongs).  Photos on Instagram appear to back this up.  I have attempted to contact Costco’s corporate media people in Japan to find out more about this product but have yet to receive a reply.  All of the photos seem to show stand-alone (rather than wall mounted) units and feature the “Jeet Kune Do” style head.  One assumes  that the release of these dummies just prior to Ip Man 3 may not have been a coincidence.  Still, the packaging doesn’t make any direct reference to either Ip Man or Bruce Lee.  I don’t really need a new dummy at the moment, but I would still love to see these show up at my local Costco!  You can read the original Apple Daily story here.

Shi Yongxin (L), current abbot of the Shaolin Temple, presents a sculpture of Bodhidharma to Professor Charles Mattera of United Studios of Self Defense (USSD) from the United States.

Shi Yongxin (L), current abbot of the Shaolin Temple, presents a sculpture of Bodhidharma to Professor Charles Mattera of United Studios of Self Defense (USSD) from the United States.

One of the surprises to arise out of the last news cycle was this detailed article published by Bloomberg Business reviewing the current controversies and financial history of the Shaolin Temple.  Titled the “Rise and Fall of Shaolin’s CEO Monk” this is probably the best discussion of the current state of the Shaolin Temple that I have seen produced by anyone in the mainstream press.  Over the last few years Shaolin has appeared in more and more articles, but very few of them take the time to review the modern history of Shaolin in quite as much detail as you will find here.  Definitely a recommended read.

Yang Style Taiji Students In Shanghai, 2005.

Yang Style Taiji Students In Shanghai, 2005.

The Chinese Martial Arts also made a recent appearance in the New York Times “Wellness” blog.  The topic of the conversation was Taijiquan and whether it had therapeutic value with regards to heart disease.  Spoiler alert….the answer is yes, for a couple of reasons.  You can read the full discussion here.  (No word on how practicing Taiji against Shanghai’s smoggy skyline might impact your health).

Jack Wong.web comic

The character Jack Wong (based on Wong Jack Man) and co-star (along with Bruce Lee) of “A Challenge,” a webcomic by Jeremy Arambulo.  Source: NPR

As always Bruce Lee’s legacy continued to be discussed.  Anyone interested in either Lee’s fight with Wong Jack Man, or the portrayal of the martial arts in comic books more generally, will want to check out this interview on NPR (national public radio).  In it Jeremy Arambulo talks about growing up as an Asian-American, Bruce Lee and his current webcomic, “A Challenge.”  This work is loosely based on Lee’s well known confrontation with Wong Jack man and also provides some extended meditations on subjects that may be of interest to readers of Kung Fu Tea.  Or click here to go directly to the comic.

If you are in the Northwest you might instead want to check out a new walking tour of Bruce Lee’s Seattle which ties into the current exhibit on his life at the Wing Luke Museum.  It appears that they are trying to get some good social history into their program.

Pui Chan.New York.1969

A few other pioneers of Kung Fu in North America have been in the news. I particularly liked this discussion of Grandmaster Pui Chan as it had some good biographical material about his life in southern China and his early teaching career in the USA.  The discussion is well worth checking out if you are interested in the more modern history of the Chinese martial arts.

Also fascinating is the recent feature titled “The Legend of the 52 Blocks” published by the Vice Sports blog.  Written by Benjamin Nadler this article provides a fairly comprehensive introduction to the history, legend and mystery of this predominantly African-American vernacular martial arts style.  Students of Martial Arts Studies may have been introduced to this unique style through the writings of the anthropologist Thomas Green.  I have it on good authority that Prof. Green is getting ready to publish more of his ethnographic research on the topic.  As such Nadler’s blog post may be a good way to get yourself up to speed for prior to its release.

 

A still from Ip Man 3. Source: The Hollywood Reporter.

A still from Ip Man 3. Source: The Hollywood Reporter.

 

Chinese Martial Arts Films

Ip Man 3 has now officially made its way into theaters and the reviews are starting to roll in.  I have yet to see  it, but the initial signals seem to be encouraging.  First off, the Hollywood Reporter has a quick list of five things to expect if you are planning on seeing the film.  The San Francisco Chronicle gave the film an overall decent review and thought that it was a fitting end to Ip Man’s martial arts saga.  And while a number of reviewers lampooned Mike Tyson’s appearance in the film, the Vancouver Weekly had some surprisingly positive things to say about his performance, starting with the fact that he basically stole every scene that he was in.  And what could we do to make the Ip Man franchise even bigger?  How about a little cross-promotion with Star Wars?  That was another trend that has been evident in a lot of the discussions of Donnie Yen’s recent work.

 

Kung Fu Panda 3. Grab destiny by the dumplings.

Kung Fu Panda 3. Grab destiny by the dumplings.

 

Possibly the only thing bigger than Donnie Yen right now is a Panda named Po.  All of the early discussion of this film has been great.  But what has really been turning heads among Hollywood insiders is the business mechanics behind this project.  As a joint production between an American studio and a set of our Chinese companies, this film is able to skirt a number of the regulations that are normally imposed on foreign films in China (limiting the amount of time that they can run and the total numbers of screens that they can show on, as well as the distribution of ticket sales).  Given the popularity of the franchise in China, its clear that this film is going to be very profitable.  Forbes dives into the number here, and The Street offers its own commentary on the Panda’s success.

 

stormtrooper-riot-gear

Lastly, a Star Wars story has emerged for fans of the Chinese martial arts.  As I have discussed elsewhere, the internet has been clamoring for an Asian Jedi for some time now.  This is not an unreasonable request given the importance of Kung Fu mythology and Samurai films to the genesis of Star Wars.  Simply put, no katanaa, no lighsabers.  Well, it appears that Disney heard these prayers and responded by giving the fans a Storm Trooper.  And not just any white bucket wearing thug.  Nope, Kung Fu brought you the internet’s favorite Storm Trooper.  You can read more about him here.

 

Students at a Japanese Archery Club. Source: http://faculty.washington.edu/kendo/budo.html

Students at a Japanese Archery Club. Source: http://faculty.washington.edu/kendo/budo.html

 

Martial Arts Studies

There are a number of forthcoming books on martial arts studies that readers should be aware of.  Yet before we launch into these, Paul Bowman recently posted an article on Academia.edu asking the prior question of how we go about making martial arts history matter.  It is an interesting paper on an important subject.  Be sure to check it out.  And while you do, get your registrations in for the 2016 Martial Arts Studies conference to be held in July at the University of Cardiff.  Last years event was a great success, and the list of speakers and guests for this year’s event is even stronger.  Click here to find out who is coming and how to register.

 

In Search of Legitimacy by

In Search of Legitimacy by Lauren Miller Griffith (Berghahn Books, January 2016)

Lauren Miller Griffith’s volume In Search of Legitimacy: How Outsiders Become Part of the Afro-brazilian Capoeira Tradition (Berghahn Books (January 31, 2016) is about to be released.  I have been looking forward to reading this book for a while and am currently in the process of ordering a review copy for the journal Martial Arts Studies.  It certainly tackles a topic of central importance to students of many martial art traditions.  The publisher’s synopsis is as follows:

Every year, countless young adults from affluent, Western nations travel to Brazil to train in capoeira, the dance/martial art form that is one of the most visible strands of the Afro-Brazilian cultural tradition. In Search of Legitimacy explores why “first world” men and women leave behind their jobs, families, and friends to pursue a strenuous training regimen in a historically disparaged and marginalized practice. Using the concept of apprenticeship pilgrimage-studying with a local master at a historical point of origin-the author examines how non-Brazilian capoeiristas learn their art and claim legitimacy while navigating the complexities of wealth disparity, racial discrimination, and cultural appropriation.

Lauren Miller Griffith is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Hanover College who studies performance, tourism, and education in Latin America.

Later in the spring readers can expect another volume focusing on Capoeria.  Sara Delamont (Cardiff University), Neil Stephens (Cardiff University), Claudio Campos will be releasing Dreaming Brazil, Embodying Brazil: An Ethnography of Diaspora Capoeira through Routledge (May 15, 2016).

Capoeira, the Brazilian dance-fight-game, has spread across the world since the 1970s. It has become a popular leisure activity for many people, and a career for many Brazilians in countries as diverse as China and Spain, and as geographically distant from Brazil as New Zealand and Finland. This ethnographic research conducted on capoeira in the UK is not only an in-depth investigation of one martial art, but also provides rich data on masculinity, performativity, embodiment, globalization, rites of passage and tournaments of value, as well as an enhanced discussion of methods and methodology.

 

This April Lionel Loh Loong will be releasing The Body and Senses in Martial Culture by Lionel Loh Han Loong through Palgrave.  While still a few months out, this work will focus on the booming martial arts tourism industry in Thailand.

This ethnographic study of a mixed martial arts gym in Thailand describes the everyday practices and lived experiences of martial art practitioners. Through the lived realities and everyday experiences of these fighters, this book seeks to examine why foreigners invest their time and money to train in martial arts in Thailand; the linkages between the embodiment of martial arts and masculinity; how foreign bodies consume martial arts and what they get out of it; the sensory reconfiguration required of a fighter; and the impact of transnational flows on bodily dispositions and knowledge. The author argues that being a successful fighter entails not only sensitized awareness and knowledge of one’s body, but also a reconfiguration of the senses.

Manga

Lastly, students of cultural and film studies may want to take a look at Manga and Anime Go to Hollywood by Northrop Davis (A professor of Media Arts at the University of South Carolina).  Various types of comics have had an important impact on film in recent years, and they are also important vectors by which media discourses on the martial arts are spread throughout society (consider the impact of a single title like Scott Pilgrim in promoting a specific image of the martial arts).  The publisher’s blurb is as follows:

The media industries in the United States and Japan are similar in much the same way different animal species are: while a horse and a kangaroo share maybe 95% of their DNA, they’re nonetheless very different animals-and so it is with manga and anime in Japanese and Hollywood animation, movies, and television. Though they share some key common elements, they developed mostly separately while still influencing each other significantly along the way. That confluence is now accelerating into new forms of hybridization that will drive much of future storytelling entertainment. Packed with original interviews with top creators in these fields and illuminating case studies, Manga and Anime Go to Hollywood helps to parse out these these shared and diverging genetic codes, revealing the cross-influences and independent traits of Japanese and American animation.

Dandaofa Xuan
Readers looking for study material of a more “practical” nature may want to check out Scott Rodell’s latest project.  Dandaofa Xuan – Chinese Long Saber Techniques Anthology is a translation of a 400 year old manual describing techniques for a the long two handed saber called the dandao.  Apparently this was also the first Chinese martial arts manual to be published with accompanying illustrations.  As such it is an interesting bit of martial arts history.

 

An assortment of Chinese teas. Source: Wikimedia.

An assortment of Chinese teas. Source: Wikimedia.

 

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group.  We discussed the logic of Taijiquan’s forms, African-American martial arts history and hand combat as intangible cultural heritage.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.

 


Chinese Martial Arts in the News: February 15th, 2015: The Business of Kung Fu, Gender in Martial Arts Studies and Wudang Meets Wu Tang

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Introduction

Welcome to “Chinese Martial Arts in the News.”  This is a semi-regular feature here at Kung Fu Tea in which we review media stories that mention or affect the traditional fighting arts.  In addition to discussing important events, this column also considers how the Asian hand combat systems are portrayed in the mainstream media.

While we try to summarize the major stories over the last month, there is always a chance that we have missed something.  If you are aware of an important news event relating to the TCMA, drop a link in the comments section below.  If you know of a developing story that should be covered in the future feel free to send me an email.

Its been a while (almost a month) since our last update so there is a lot to be covered in today’s post.  Let’s get to the news!

 

A modern interpretation of Lion Dancing in Hong Kong. Source: CNN

A modern interpretation of Southern Lion Dancing in Hong Kong. Source: CNN

 

Chinese Martial Arts in The News

Our first order of business is to wish everyone a Happy Lunar New Year!  Over the last week I discussed the holiday from a historical and theoretical perspective here and here.  Needless to say the Spring Festival celebrations have dominated recent news cycles.  Lion Dances and martial arts demonstrations have traditionally been a part of these celebrations in both the East and West.  The news has been full of accounts of these events as they have unfolded in practically every major city.  There are have literally been too many articles to list here.

However, the following feature by CNN stood out to me while I was reviewing this coverage.  Titled “Chinese Lion Dancing Meets Cirque du Soleil” it profiles a large Lion Dance company in Hong Kong that is renowned for its innovative, heart stopping performances which do not hesitate to make use of modern visual effects technology.  The goal of the troupe is to reach a “more modern” audience.  Not unexpectedly their approach has raised protests among more traditional Lion Dance practitioners.  Yet as I was listening to the interview I was struck with how much this discussion reminded me of the technical innovation and “culture of the spectacular” that became part of Cantonese Opera performance in the Republic Period.  Be sure to play the short video that goes along with the article as its well worth watching.

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

A group of African disciples study the traditional arts at Shaolin.

Two of the stories in today’s news round-up touch on the topic of “Kung Fu Diplomancy” and the various ways in both state and private actors have attempted to use the martial arts to shape the public’s perception of China’s “national brand.”  The first of these follows a large Chinese Wushu Tournament in Nigeria.  Over three hundred athletes (from the governmental, military, police and private sectors) participated in the “Chinese Ambassador’s Championship.”  At stake were the requisite trophies and scholarships for the top performers to visit China for additional martial arts training.

The individuals who discussed the tournament did not shy away from acknowledging its roots in China’s public diplomacy strategy.

“Also speaking, the Culture Counsellor in the Embassy of China, Mr. Yan Xaingdong said the Wushu championship was set up to encourage a sustainable relationship between China and Nigeria through sports.”

Wu Tang and the Three Levels of a Martial Artist. Source: Vice

Wu Tang and the Three Levels of a Martial Artist. Source: Vice

 

One of the most interesting stories over the last few weeks appeared on the Vice blog.  In “Wu Tang and the Three Levels of a Martial Artist” Nick Wong interviews and discusses the career of his  uncle, Kurt Wong, a Wudang Master.  This slightly longer piece speaks to a number of issues regarding the place of the Chinese martial arts in popular culture.  Different mediums, including music and videogames are freely invoked by the author.  But what I was most struck by was the complex role of history in his explanation of Wudang Kung Fu.  Notice that he combines lineage, political and biographical history in his explanation of what the Chinese martial arts are, and how they are experienced by the individual practitioner.   Also fascinating is how he turns to RZA of the Wu Tang clan to further translate and situate the Chinese martial arts for a young contemporary audience.

 

Cui Eyes Expansion in China. Source: South China Morning Post.

Cui Eyes Expansion in China. Source: Straits Times.

 

The Straits Times published a piece profiling the aspirations and tribulations of the One Championship fight promotion company as it attempts to expand the market for MMA in China. While the Cui outlined an ambitious agenda for the next twelve months, the article itself didn’t pull its punches in noting the difficulties that various MMA leagues have experienced in attempting to do business in China.  One Championship in particular was only able to host about 20% of these events that they had originally announced for 2015 and their reputation suffered a further setback after a fighter died while cutting weight before a match.  Still, Cui says that his company has learned from the setbacks and is ready to move on in both China and the rest of the Asian market.

“Cui will not rest until more households are hooked on MMA. He said: “This is the only sport that can say it is truly Asian. Why obsess over sports in other continents? Let’s show the world how much talent we have in Asia.”

A Wing Chun school shooting a video for the relatively new Martial Tribes social media platform. Source: South China Morning Post.

A Wing Chun school shooting a video for the relatively new Martial Tribes social media platform. Source: South China Morning Post.

The South China Morning Post ran an article profiling a new social media platform (Martial Tribes) designed and launched by a Hong Kong Entrepreneur in 2015.  The platform seeks to become an alternative to Facebook for martial artists.  It has already attracted 100,000 members and is shooting for up to a million by the end of the year.  In addition to allowing users to build profiles, send messages and post content, it specializes in tools that allow teachers to share and monetize their knowledge.  There cannot be any doubt that social media has disrupted the ways in which martial arts knowledge is shared, taught and discussed.  This platform seems determined to harness these innovations in the creation of a new sort of marketplace matching students and potential instructors.  It will be interesting to watch this story and see what impact, if any, platforms like this have on the business of teaching the martial arts.

Taijiquan may be part of a balanced workout routine. Source: LA Times.

Taijiquan may be part of a balanced workout routine. Source: LA Times.

Are you looking to add a little balance to your workout?  How about an effective exercise for improving your balance, flexibility and state of mental serenity?   If so the following article in the LA Times suggests that you take a second look at that local Taijiquan class.  In addition to the widely discussed physical health benefits of Taiji as a low impact work out, there may also be psychological factors to consider.

“This practice is good for the mind as well, notes Dr. Michael Irwin, professor at UCLA’s department of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences. In reference to a 2011 study in which tai chi was credited for helping to reverse depression in elderly patients, he says that “Tai chi, as a mind-body intervention, targeted stress response pathways as well as inflammation which can contribute to depression.”

Of course the article concludes with a reminder to consult your physician before starting a new exercise regime.  And if I had to guess your doctor would probably also appreciate if you practiced your forms while firmly planted on the ground.  That would also decrease the risk of falling for senior citizens.

Embracing Chinese Philosophy is the Key to learning the TCMA. Source:

Embracing Chinese Philosophy is the Key to learning the TCMA. Source: The Courier Mail

 

A paper in Australia recently ran a short profile of a Sifu Henry Sue, a Mantis Kung Fu instructor, in Brisbane.  It is brief and does not really delve all that much into the connections between Kung Fu and philosophy as promised by the title. But Sue’s personal story of turning to the martial arts after a history of racial abuse and bullying is an interesting one. Sue is said to currently own and run the oldest Kung Fu academy in Australia and now has students around the world.  You can read more here.

A still from the sequel to Couching Tiger Hidden Dragon, The Sword of Destiny.

A still from the sequel to Couching Tiger Hidden Dragon, The Sword of Destiny.  Source: SCMP.com

Chinese Martial Arts in the Entertainment Industry

During the last few weeks two major stories have dominated the discussion of the Chinese martial arts in the movies.  The first of these focuses on the progress of the eagerly awaited sequel to Couching Tiger Hidden Dragon titled The Sword of Destiny.  This much anticipated film features a new director and will be released 15 years to the day after its formidable predecessor.  The cast will feature both new and returning faces, but in interviews with the press it is clear that everyone feels a high degree of pressure to live up to the artistic excellence of their predecessor.

The article in the SCMP discussing the project plays up the significance of the wuxia elements of the story (both in its literary roots and as a genera of movie making) and asks what impact a repeat success of this type of film might have on Hollywood. Might it open a wider space for Chinese films in Western theaters beyond the Hong Kong style Kung Fu genera? The article also questions whether Harvey Weinstein’s decision to release the film on Netflix at the same time as theaters (which has resulted in multiple chains refusing to show the film) might hurt its economic prospects and diminish its viability in the marketplace.  After all, there has been a stigma that follows “direct to DVD” films.  Still, the ways in which audiences consume media are rapidly changing, so we will have to wait to see how this plays out.

Kung Fu Panda 3

The reviews are in, and pretty much everyone loves Kung Fu Panda 3.  My three year old nephew gave it an especially strong review, though like many of the toddlers in the audience he was confused as to why the theater decided to lead with the Pride and Prejudice and Zombies trailer.  Letters were written to the theater management and I hear that they expressed just the proper amount of abject begging for forgiveness.

Pretty much every major paper and television station has now run something on this movie, suggesting the degree of market saturation it is likely to enjoy.  I thought that this review in the Canyon News nicely summed up the juxtaposition of Eastern and Western family values that the film played on.  Meanwhile the South China Morning Post took a closer look at the business side of the project and what it portends for future trans-pacific partnerships.

Sheen Yun and the spiritual side of the martial arts. Source:

Sheen Yun and the spiritual side of the martial arts. Source: The Epoch Times

 

Lately the Chinese martial arts, often in conjunction with music and dance, have been making an increased number of appearances on the theatrical stage.  I just ran across an article profiling a Shen Yun dance performance which spoke to this, as well as the ways in which private actors in civil society (in this case religious ones) can also draw on the cultural capital of the traditional martial arts to present their own image of China and Chinese values on the global stage.  Kung Fu diplomacy, it seems, is not a game played only by the state.  It is an area contested by a wide variety of private and civil actors.

In the case of the current article, all of this came to a head when Tsveta Manilova, a Bulgarian model and photographer, was interviewed about her reaction to a recent performance of Shen Yun.  Here are the money quotes:

Of all the story-based dances in the program, one taught Ms. Manilova something about China that she didn’t know: that the spiritual discipline Falun Gong, whose adherents practice peaceful meditation, is persecuted in China today.

She took the dance “Hope for the Future,” personally. In the dance, people of faith are attacked by Chinese Communist Party police.

“It was quite upsetting,” Ms. Manilova said. “I am from a communist country, too,” she said.

Ms. Manilova is originally from Bulgaria where communists reigned 50 years and also forbade spirituality.

She knew that China was originally a deeply spiritual place, with Buddhism in their ancient past. Even martial arts has a spiritual basis, she says.

It’s not just about “warfare, it’s something spiritual. It’s something that connects them to their religion and nature—all the living creatures in our world,” she said.

“People should have the right, if not to everything else, they should have the right to have their religion,” she said.

Readers interested in a quick rundown on the relationship between the Falon Gong movement and the Shen Yun performance troupe may want to check out this wikipedia article.  Of course the Epoch Times, based out of New York City, was also founded by a group of Falon Gong practitioners.  Or, if your prefer a more secular approach to martial arts and dance, you might want to check out this article on the Jackie Chan’s Longyou Kung Fu Company’s recent trip to Chicago.

 

 

Gender Issues Conference held at

A presentation at “Martial Arts Studies: Gender Issues in Theory and Practice” held on Feb. 5th Brighton University.

 

Martial Arts Studies

The last month has seen a number of developments in the growing interdisciplinary field of martial arts studies.

On February 5th the Martial Arts Studies Research Network presented the first in a series of smaller, issue specific, conferences.  This gathering was titled “Martial Arts Studies: Gender Issues in Theory and Practice.”  Hosted at Brighton University it brought together about 30 scholars who shared their research on a wide range of issues relating to gender in various aspects of the martial arts and the possibility that these fighting systems might become vehicles for social transformation.  Apparently a number of the presentations generated very lively discussions by the participants.  Hopefully we will be seeing some of these papers in print soon.

In the mean time we are fortunate that a number of attendees have written up their own reports on the conference.  Perhaps the most comprehensive of these was recorded by Paul Bowman, and I would encourage you check it out.  It gives a great overview of how this part of the conversation is currently evolving.  Also very helpful is the report at the Budo-Inochi blog which provides a lot of detail and its own perspective on the event.

While shorter readers will also want to take a look at Luke White’s discussion of the event.  Of particular importance is his concluding discussion where he asks why academically focused martial arts studies events can be uncomfortable spaces and whether the casual sexism of the martial arts training hall is being allowed to infiltrate academic gatherings on the subject.  Of particular importance is what role an author’s personal experience in the martial arts should play in their academic discussion of the subject.  Both Paul Bowman and Alex Channon have discussed (and responded to) these concerns in a blog post titled “The Gender of Martial Arts Studies.”

An Evening of HEMA at Brock University.

An Evening of HEMA at Brock University.

On February 4th Brock University (Ontario, Canada) treated their faculty and students of Medieval and Renaissance Studies to an evening of 15th century Italian martial arts.

Brennan Faucher and Alex Unruh from the Niagara School of Arms presented some of the techniques and styles that they practice, which are based on the teachings of the Medieval Italian knight and fencing master, Fiore dei Liberi.

“Fiore’s system allows for an easy transition from one system to another,” said Faucher. “If you study how the human body works, you will be better able to use all the weapons.”

Fiore’s treatise on martial arts, The Flower of Battle, was written in 1410 and includes pictorial demonstrations of different moves for a variety of combat styles. Fiore starts with a basic grappling system, and then moves on to duels with a dagger, long-sword, spear and pole-axe. He also includes instructions for fighting with or without armour and fighting on horseback or on foot. Fiore’s system is called “Armizare”.

This sounds like a fantastic event.  The one thing that really caught my attention though was the way it was discussed by the organizer of the lecture series.  He went to lengths to explain that normally they discussed “academic” topics, but for a change of pace they had decided to look at something “outside of the box.”  This raises some interesting questions about the place of this sort of historical exploration and reconstruction in our understanding of Renaissance Studies.  Can the martial arts contribute to an academic discussion in this area, or do they sit entirely outside of the realm of “serious” conversation?

Consensual Violence by

Consensual Violence by Jill D. Weinberg

 

Students of martial arts studies have some upcoming books to look forward to.  The first of these (California University Press) has an announced release date June 7th, 2016.  Written by Jill D. Weinberg it is titled Consensual Violence: Sex, Sports, and the Politics of Injury.  Interestingly it seems to speak directly to some of the issues raised by Alex Channon’s paper at the recent conference on gender and violence in martial arts studies.  Here is the publishers statement on the text:

In this novel approach to understanding consent, Jill D. Weinberg features two case studies where groups engage in seemingly violent acts: competitive mixed martial arts and sexual sadomasochism. These activities are similar in that consenting to injury is central to the activity, and participants of both activities have to engage in a form of social decriminalization, leveraging the legal authority imbued in the language of consent as a way to render their activities legally and socially tolerable. Yet, these activities are treated differently under criminal battery law.

Using interviews with participants and ethnographic observation, Weinberg argues that where law authorizes a person’s consent to an activity, consent is not meaningfully regulated or constructed by the participants themselves. In contrast, where law prohibits a person’s consent to an activity, participants actively construct and regulate consent. This difference demonstrates that law can make consent less consensual.

Synthesizing criminal law and ethnography, Consensual Violence is a fascinating account of how consent gets created and carried out among participants and lays the groundwork for a sociology of consent and a more sociological understanding of processes of decriminalization.

Jill D. Weinberg is Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology at DePaul University and a scholar at the American Bar Foundation.

The Amazons by Adrienne Mayor.

The Amazons by Adrienne Mayor.

Students of gender and martial arts studies will also want to check out the recently re-released volume Amazons: Lives and Legends of Warrior Women across the Ancient World by Adrienne Mayor (Princeton UP).

Amazons–fierce warrior women dwelling on the fringes of the known world–were the mythic archenemies of the ancient Greeks. Heracles and Achilles displayed their valor in duels with Amazon queens, and the Athenians reveled in their victory over a powerful Amazon army. In historical times, Cyrus of Persia, Alexander the Great, and the Roman general Pompey tangled with Amazons.

But just who were these bold barbarian archers on horseback who gloried in fighting, hunting, and sexual freedom? Were Amazons real? In this deeply researched, wide-ranging, and lavishly illustrated book, National Book Award finalist Adrienne Mayor presents the Amazons as they have never been seen before. This is the first comprehensive account of warrior women in myth and history across the ancient world, from the Mediterranean Sea to the Great Wall of China.

Mayor tells how amazing new archaeological discoveries of battle-scarred female skeletons buried with their weapons prove that women warriors were not merely figments of the Greek imagination. Combining classical myth and art, nomad traditions, and scientific archaeology, she reveals intimate, surprising details and original insights about the lives and legends of the women known as Amazons. Provocatively arguing that a timeless search for a balance between the sexes explains the allure of the Amazons, Mayor reminds us that there were as many Amazon love stories as there were war stories. The Greeks were not the only people enchanted by Amazons–Mayor shows that warlike women of nomadic cultures inspired exciting tales in ancient Egypt, Persia, India, Central Asia, and China.

Driven by a detective’s curiosity, Mayor unearths long-buried evidence and sifts fact from fiction to show how flesh-and-blood women of the Eurasian steppes were mythologized as Amazons, the equals of men. The result is likely to become a classic.

Adrienne Mayor is a research scholar in Classics and the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology Program at Stanford.
I should also note that this book has been a highly awarded.

Zach Woznicki, right, and Karn Charoenkul, center, lock arms while Justin Sanchez, left, and Ian Cabeira battle in the background during an open practice held by Chapman's Martial Arts Club on Thursday. ????///ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: 12/3/15 - FOSTER SNELL, ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER - ch.martialarts.1215 Ð This request is for our feature on the Chapman Martial Arts Club. The club will have open practice at 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 3. We'll want shots of the students practicing various styles of martial arts

Zach Woznicki, right, and Karn Charoenkul, center, lock arms while Justin Sanchez, left, and Ian Cabeira battle in the background during an open practice held by Chapman’s Martial Arts Club .
Source: FOSTER SNELL, ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Lastly there have been a couple of articles looking at the practice of the martial arts at various universities and colleges.  Following our recent interview with Andrea Molle regarding the Budo-lab research center I was happy to find this piece profiling the Chapman University Martial Arts Club.  The article discusses the innovative relationship between the particle and theoretical engagement with the martial arts at Chapman.  Both the interview here at Kung Fu Tea and this follow-up article are well worth checking out for anyone interested in the place of the martial arts on the modern university campus.

A Taijiquan class at Wellesley College.

A Taijiquan class at Wellesley College.

This piece, titled “Achieve Balance with the Martial Arts,” outlines a more traditional presentation of the Chinese martial arts as part of the physical education curriculum at Wellesley College.  Its a nice piece and it looks like the students have access to quality Hung Gar and Taijiquan training.

Chinese tea utensil. Source: Wikimedia.

Chinese tea utensil. Source: Wikimedia.

Kung Fu Tea on Facebook

 

As always there is a lot going on at the Kung Fu Tea Facebook group.  We discussed the mythology of swords, what blogs your should be reading and the various martial aspects of the New Years celebration.   Joining the Facebook group is also a great way of keeping up with everything that is happening here at Kung Fu Tea.

If its been a while since your last visit, head on over and see what you have been missing.

 


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