Analysis of genuine karate 2 : sociocultural development, commercialization, and loss of essential knowledge

Author(s)

    • Bayer, Hermann

Bibliographic Information

Analysis of genuine karate 2 : sociocultural development, commercialization, and loss of essential knowledge

Hermann Bayer

YMAA Publication Center, c2023

  • : hardcover

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 173-181) and index

Martial arts

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Genuine Okinawan Karate was developed as a fighting tool. Non-Okinawan Karate are for other purposes. Karate practitioners, scholars, and everyone caring about Asian martial arts and its culture will enthusiastically appreciate this eye-opening work. Dr. Bayer substantiates further how the art Karate was used to prepare a nation (Japan) for total war, how it was deliberately industrialized into a worldwide Japanized Karate-Do inflation, and how its following transformation into athletic showmanship destroyed the art’s unity and distinctiveness. The author endorses Karate-Jutsu as a genuine Okinawan martial art even as foreign knowledge and skills from India (speculated) and from China (proven) were integrated― and he explains the imitative social mechanism used to turn this local fighting art into a symbol of national identity. Since martial arts were initially understood as a moral code-neutral tool, like a weapon, this happens to contradict the modern understanding of Karate being a peaceful art with inherent non-violent values. In truth, moral codes or guidelines on how to use this tool were developed separately, not within the art. A new “back to the roots” Karate-Jutsu movement gains importance and establishes a counterculture to Karate-Do’s industrialization, helping to integrate some neglected reminiscences of Karate-Jutsu back into Karate-Do. Such a development brings Japanized Karate-Do versions closer to their martial origins, whereas pure Karate-Jutsu will be preserved as a point of reference by a group of dedicated curators. Contents include: Okinawa is the birthplace of Karate-Jutsu and Japan is the birthplace of Bu-Jutsu. How Karate and Budo were used for Japan’s war preparations. Senpai seniority was the social mechanism to integrate Karate into Japan’s martial arts tradition. Consequences of an ancient fighting art being turned into athletic showmanship. In Sports-Karate there is no more Kata in Kumite, and there is no more Kumite in Kata either. The modern misconception of avoiding a fight by all means. The path toward mastery in Karate. Sensei correct your errors and blunders, you have to correct mistakes yourself. Today’s Karate-Jutsu movement is the counterculture to Karate-Do’s industrialization. Karate’s market structure in the 21st century.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Structure of the Text, Research, and Analysis Content and Structure Methods and Analysis Used Quantitative and Qualitative Research Characteristics    Chapter I: Avoiding a Fundamental Misunderstanding: Why Different Terms Are Needed for Today’s Different Karate Variations Classic Okinawan Karate Jutsu Traditional Japanese Karate-Do Modern Sports-Karate Chapter II: Did Karate-Jutsu Originate in Okinawa or in China? A Contribution to Historic Reasoning in Martial Arts History Throughout History Foreign Knowledge Is Integrated into Existing Ideas China Is the Birthplace of Ch'üan fa, Japan Is the Birthplace of Bu-Jutsu, Okinawa Is the Birthplace of Karate-Jutsu Is the Presented Reasoning Plausible? Summary Chapter II Chapter III: Japan’s Assertion of Okinawan Karate―How a Sub-Cultural Intangible Heritage Is Used as a National Cultural Symbol Okinawa’s History Creates Unique Socio-Cultural Conditions Assertion of a Sub-Cultural Symbol as a National Cultural Symbol The First Reason For The Japanization of Okinawan Karate: Japan’s Preparations for War Karate and Budo as Means to Create an All-Embracing Warrior Spirit Karate as Means to Secure the Human Raw Material for Japan’s Armed Forces and to Demonstrate Socio-Cultural Superiority The Second Reason For The Japanization of Okinawan Karate: Japan’s Cultural Integration Efforts Conformity and Group Orientation in Japanese Culture Senpai Seniority as Social Mechanism to Integrate Karate into Japan’s Martial Arts Tradition Summary Chapter III Chapter IV: The Metamorphosis of an Ancient Fighting Art into Athletic Showmanship Commercialization of Sports-Karate and Its Consequences Consequence One: Loss of Essential Knowledge Offensive Moves Changed into Defensive Ones Systematic Knowledge About Nerve Strikes And Grappling Came to Be Patchy Excurse: A Psychological Perspective of Sensei Itosu’s Motivation to Teach Karate to Kids Consequence Two: The Unity of Kata and Kumite Separated into Unconnected Sport Disciplines Kumite’s Changed Purpose in Sports Karate Kata’s Changed Role and Purpose in Sports Karate Consequence Three: The Modern Misconception of Avoiding a Fight by All Means Karate-Jutsu’s Initial Moral Code Modern Alterations Violence against Women, Karate-Jutsu and Karate-Do (by Dr. Joyce Trafton) Summary Chapter IV Chapter V: The Path to Mastery in Karate-Jutsu―Growing into Higher Levels of Understanding Karate-Jutsu Three Core Components of Mastery Advanced Stage of Holistic Perception and Insight Advanced Level of Knowledge and Understanding “Automatic” Application of Insight and Knowledge Milestones on a Path towards Mastery “Inductive” vs. “Deductive” Learning Karate-Jutsu Sensei Correct Errors and Blunders, Mistakes You Have to Correct Yourself No More True Mastery in Today’s Changed World? Summary Chapter V Chapter VI: The Outlook―What Happens to Karate in the 21st Century? ‘Arts and Crafts Movement’ as Counterculture to Industrialization Offers a Historic Blueprint Today’s Karate-Jutsu Movement Is the Counterculture to Karate-Do’s Industrialization Postwar Industrialization and Commercialization of Japanese Karate-Do ‘Back to the Roots’ Karate-Jutsu Movement as Countercultural Response The Resulting New Market Structure Sports-Karate Remains the Prevalent Type Karate-Do Perpetuates Japanization’s Lasting Impact but Will Improve with Additional Karate-Jutsu Incorporations A Group of Dedicated Karate-Jutsu Curators Will Secure the Art’s Genuine Points of Reference List of Abbreviations Explanation of Asian Terms List of Photos and Graphs References Index Bibliographical Note

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Details

  • NCID
    BD04594693
  • ISBN
    • 9781594399268
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Wolfeboro
  • Pages/Volumes
    xix, 188 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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