CONTRIBUTOR
Thomas A. Green earned his PhD in Anthropology from the
University of Texas (Austin). After teaching at Idaho State University
and the University of Delaware, he joined the faculty in Anthropology
at Texas A&M University. Folklore and cultural anthropology
comprise his primary teaching duties. He has conducted research
among groups ranging from urban gang members and Northern
Chinese martial artists to Native American political activists and
African-American cultural nationalists with a focus on the ways
that traditional art forms identify and manage cultural conflict. He
currently collaborates with Chinese colleagues on the vernacular
martial culture of the contemporary PRC. In addition to academic
articles, he has published twelve volumes on these topics, including
Martial Arts of the World: An Encyclopedia of History and
Innovation, co-edited with Joseph R. Svinth. Green has served in
editorial roles for academic journals in the U.S. and Europe, including
the Journal of American Folklore.
THE fifty-two HAND
BLOCKS RE-FRAMED
THOMAS A. GREEN
THE REHABILITATION OF A VERNACULAR MARTIAL ART
DOI
ABSTRACT
10.18573/j.2016.10062
From the late 1980s, a cluster of related African-American
vernacular fighting styles became a focus of contention among
martial artists. Over the next twenty years, evidence drawn from
popular culture, social science, and sport validated the existence
of vernacular styles such as Jailhouse Rock and the 52s. This
paper examines the recent ‘re-framing’ of the 52s as a heritage
art, a uniquely African-American expression for cultivating
health, fitness, and ethnic pride, as well as the development of a
structured, culturally-based curriculum which began in order to
ensure its embodied preservation.
KEYWORDs
Vernacular martial arts,
African-American, aesthetics,
cultural revitalization,
US prisons.
CITATION
Green, Thomas A. 2016.
‘The Fifty-Two Hand Blocks
Re-Framed: Rehabilitation
of a Vernacular Martial Art’,
Martial Arts Studies 2, 23-33
MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES
The Fifty-Two Hand Blocks Re-Framed
Thomas A. Green
Introduction
martial arts that pursue continuity and claim to avoid deviation from
traditional (i.e., received) solutions to conflict scenarios (solutions that
are commonly embodied in pre-arranged formal exercises such as kata
in Japanese martial arts and the bunkai drawn from these choreographed
routines). VMAs, by contrast, do not rely on structured curricula to
establish common levels of progress from basic to more complex skills.
In fact, it is common for at least a portion of one of these fighting
methods to be learned solely through observation of actual street fights
as distinct from instruction isolated from the flow of authentic combat
in which a martial arts student is shown a technique. Thus, knowledge
usually is transmitted face-to-face and in a casual fashion.
The Fifty-two Hand Blocks (aka the 52s) is an African-American
vernacular martial art (VMA) that is generally regarded as a variant
of Jailhouse or Jailhouse Rock (JHR), an umbrella term for those
VMAs historically associated with penal institutions in the United
States (‘jailhouses’ colloquially).1 According to most practitioners, the
fighting style does not literally utilize fifty-two blocks, although at
least one entrepreneur does a thriving online business selling DVDs
on which he demonstrates the use of the fifty-two blocks of his system.
A definitive etymology for the name has yet to be determined. Oral
tradition suggests several sources for the selection of the number ‘52’.
One popular explanation traces the name to the ‘Divine Mathematics’
of the Nation of Gods and Earths (NGE), also known as the Five Per
Cent Nation of Islam or ‘Five Percenters’, the 5% of black men who
have knowledge of self. These ‘gods’ are male members of the group;
women are designated ‘earths’. The religion was established in the
mid-1960s by Clarence 13X (born Clarence Smith) a former member of
the Nation of Islam. The number 7 according to the mnemonic system
for memorizing NGE theology (‘Mathematics’) has divine significance
(5 ‘Power’ plus 2 ‘Wisdom’ equals 7; this in turn describes God, or
perfection [Swedenburg 1997]).
Adherents to this theory draw evidence from lyrics of the New York hip
hop group the Wu-Tang Clan, of which many members are also NGE
members, which appear to allude to the 52s. Consider, for example, the
lyrics to the song ‘Soul in the Hole’ (the title song on the soundtrack for
the 1997 basketball documentary Sole in the Hole):
Yo, we throwin’ 52 blocks at outside shots to bubble up the snot
box / No penalties or shot blocks, its similar to Comstock kid /
You catch an elbow in this hell Hole of concrete.
These lyrics not only reference the fifty-two blocks, but also Comstock
(a New York State Correctional Facility) and the use of elbow strikes (a
technique favored by many 52s fighters). Although the NGE connection
is intriguing, the most widely accepted explanation associates the name
with the prank game ‘52 Card Pick-Up’. Like 52 Card Pick-Up, the
Fifty-two Hand Blocks entails trickery and demands the spontaneity
and creativity to ‘play the hand one is dealt’ in a fight [see Green 2003,
2012].
The freedom of expression that prevails in the 52s typifies VMAs.
Herein lies one of the major differences between VMAS and codified
1
Additionally, the Jailhouse Rock designation is likely an allusion to the famous
Elvis Presley ilm and title song.
24
Teaching, meanwhile, often takes the form of an experienced fighter
passing along techniques in a random fashion to a favored novice.
This transmission, as suggested above, should not be characterized
as inheritance in the traditional sense; when attribution is noted,
individuals credit teachers because the mentor was influential, out of
the student’s respect for the teacher, or to enhance a protégé’s own
reputation by association with a locally prestigious fighter. The ubiquity
of bricolage, the appropriation of physical bits and pieces that are
consistent with the prevailing habitus of the local movement traditions
(e.g., dance, games, and motor habits acquired through work) that
informs VMAs, further militates against static continuity. Finally, while
demonstrable proficiency matters to practitioners, and contesting for
status and prestige within the social group is pervasive, this differs
radically from a mastery of a physical canon to attain rank as developed
in standardized, globalized, bureaucratized martial arts. These factors
combine to make VMAs ephemeral phenomena.
The Fifty-two Hand Blocks is best characterized as a regional style of
JHR associated with one of the boroughs of New York, most often
Brooklyn, although this may be the result of media attention in the early
21st century. New York martial arts teacher, professional fighter, and
former hip hop club bouncer Novell Bell [personal communication,
2009] describes the following local variations of the 52s:
Brooklyn cats was known for they aggressive, fast, crazy, wild
attacks. These cats were mostly face hunters, always throwing
wild blows to the face trying to knock a person out, and most
times they did, because of the fast, aggressive attack. Many
brothers from Queens didn’t like Brooklyn cats, because they
were the kind of people that if you beat one of their boys in a
one on one fight in their ‘hood, they still jump your ass!
Queens 52 Blocks practitioners utilize more strategy, generally
Queens 52 was more of counter fighters, they like to evade,
redirect and catch opponents off balance then finish their
Spring 2016
MARTIAL
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opponent. Queens cats were more of showmen. When a
Queens cat fought using the
52 style they like to look good kicking your ass, and some
Queens cats was so nice with their hands that they would
talk shit [to make an opponent lose his cool] at the same time
kicking your ass.
Bronx 52 style in my opinion was more kickers, sweeps and
grappling. I say this because every God I saw and met from the
Bronx that fought using the 52 always try to apply low kicks to
attack the legs of their opponent. I think the Bronx 52 style use
their legs more because of all the hills they have to walk up in
that area.
[Bell, personal communication, 2009; see also Green 2012]
In general, the African-American VMAs such as the 52s exhibit
principles that Robert Farris Thompson identifies in West African
dance aesthetics [Thompson 1999: 72-74]. In this aesthetic, opposites
are brought together to form a sense of balance and order. In terms of
the interplay of the opposing elements of the 52s, the ‘sick’ (‘good’, in
this case because of a capacity to inflict damage) is balanced against the
‘sweet’ (controlled virtuosity). Roger Abrahams’ notion of the tensions
between sweet talk (sensible, decorous, harmonious) and broad talk
(aggressive, intrusive, contentious) in creolized African Caribbean
performance also sheds light on the 52s [Abrahams 1983].
The 52s is characterized by ‘a particular mindset, a collection of
strategies, techniques, rhythms, and attitudes learned in the heart of the
fight. On this issue, everyone who has actually been exposed to the 52s
agrees’ [Green 2012: 291]. The system is dictated not by adherence to
a structured curriculum, but rather, by the application of an aesthetic
similar to a disk jockey’s freestyle or a jazz musician’s improvisation; it
is a riff, a variation on a theme which may be derived from the available
kinesic repertoire [Wilson 1999]. For example, oral tradition suggests
that there is a connection between the 52s and urban dance (uprocking
and break dancing). The aesthetic, then, is the ‘sweet’ frame into which
the martial bricoleur fits his ‘sick’ techniques. This is quite different
from those standardized martial arts in which one learns a canonized
physical repertoire.
martialartsstudies.org
The Fifty-Two Hand Blocks Re-Framed
Thomas A. Green
In Search of the ‘Lost Art’
Africanists claim that there is a direct line of development from
Continental African systems to JHR and the 52s. [Marks, personal
communication, 2005; Newsome, ‘Jailhouse Rock’]. These methods
survived into the present due to their being taught in prisons, where
they remained a black method of defense, in a country in which racist
courts and penal laws have created a system of de-facto slavery. There is
in fact compelling evidence that the roots of African-American martial
culture are deep. A close examination of the historical record hidden
in biographies, newspaper articles, court cases, and similar venues
reveals the survival of creolized African-descended fighting styles. One
such case is the autobiography of escaped slave Henry Bibb in which
he gives an account of the practice in 19th century Kentucky of forcing
bondsmen to fight on Sundays and holidays for the entertainment of
their masters. In the distinctive fighting style described by Bibb, ‘the
blows are made by kicking, knocking, and butting with their heads; they
grab each other by their ears, and jam their heads together like sheep’
[Bibb 1969 (1849): 68; see also Wiggins 1977]. This African-American
fighting method is often identified as ‘knocking and kicking’ [Kouri
1992, Desch-Obi 2008], although the art has been given other regional
labels such as ‘pushing and dancing’ as described in a 1733 South
Carolina newspaper notice (the notice offered a reward for the capture
of a runaway slave who was a ‘famous Pushing and Dancing master’
[Rath 2000: 109-111]).
A Reconstruction era court case (1868-1876), also from South Carolina,
featured the prosecution of African-American Paul Harris, who was
charged with assault and battery for a ‘knockin’ attack consisting of
strikes to the eyes, kicks to the shins, and a head-butt to the belly of
the plaintiff [Gonzales 1922]. An article in the Brooklyn Eagle dated
November 23, 1902 describes several episodes involving an AfricanAmerican farm worker who achieved notoriety in rural Louisiana as a
street-fighter by use of his skill at head-butting. The art persisted well
into the 20th century as demonstrated by a passing mention in John
Gwaltney’s Drylongso, in which he wrote that Jackson Jordan, Jr. ‘still
gives occasional lessons and demonstrations [of] knocking and kicking’
[Gwaltney 1981: 94]. Ten years later, Yale student Christopher Kouri,
through interviews with Gwaltney and new field research, added
additional credibility to the existence of knocking and kicking [Kouri
1992]. Most recently, historian Thomas J. Desch-Obi’s Fighting for
Honor (2008) offers an extensive account of Gullah (the descendants
of enslaved Africans who lived in the Lowcountry regions of Georgia
and South Carolina) fighting methods, one of which is knocking and
kicking, in the contemporary Southeastern U.S.
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The Fifty-Two Hand Blocks Re-Framed
Thomas A. Green
Debates regarding the origin, name, and differences between local
variants notwithstanding, there is a consensus that the 52s evolved from
prison styles mentioned above under the blanket label of Jailhouse or
JHR [Green 2003, 2010, 2012]. Evidence of such a style has appeared
in print from time to time. In 1974, a former inmate reported in an
article published in Black Belt magazine that ‘the different [New York
state] prisons … have their own fighting styles’ [Darling and Perryman
1974: 21]. In the same article, poet and playwright Miguel Piñero, who
was incarcerated repeatedly from the age of eleven through his midtwenties, identified fighting styles he had learned while imprisoned:2
Franklin Avenue Posse in which author Douglas Century documented
the Brooklyn hip hop scene of the late 20th century through the life
of aspiring recording artist, former convict, ex-boxer, and 52s adept
Kawaun Adon Akenhoten VII, aka ‘Big K’. Two years later, Century
published an article in Details magazine titled ‘Ghetto Busters’ [2001]
in which he documented and included photographs of techniques
demonstrated by Brooklyn practitioners whose names had become
legendary during the 1970s-1980s.
The first thing I did in the joint was to check out the style
and learn to fight with a home piece – somebody from my
neighborhood on the streets. I learned the Woodbourne
shuffle, an evasion technique that first was used in the joint at
Woodbourne [New York State Correctional Facility] and got
passed around. Then I learned wall-fighting, and somebody
taught me the Comstock [Great Meadow Correctional Facility
in Comstock, NY] style.
[Darling and Perryman 1974: 21]
Thirteen years later, Terry O’Neill briefly documented the prison
fighting style JHR in a popular article about the film Lethal Weapon
(1987) and its star Mel Gibson [O’Neill 1987]. Gerard Taylor also
references an interview on the Warner Brothers website with Gibson
in which the actor discusses his introduction to JHR by Dennis
Newsome, one of three fight choreographers for the film along with
Cedric Adams (capoeira) and Rorion Gracie (Brazilian Jiu-jitsu) [Taylor
2007]. In the years following the initial publicity campaign for Lethal
Weapon (and as recently as this year [Kurchak 2016]) Gary Busey, the
film’s antagonist, has made numerous statements about JHR, including
one on his IMDb biography where he makes the puzzling claim that he
is a JHR black belt. The conversation revolving around JHR, and often
debating its existence, continued for a short time, primarily in martial
arts circles. Dennis Newsome maintained a media presence, but this
most often focused on capoeira with JHR as a secondary topic.
As discussed above, in the 1990s, references to the Fifty-two Hand
Blocks appeared in the lyrics of the hip hop group the Wu-Tang Clan.
However, one frequently referenced phrase from the album Liquid
Swords [Geffen Records 1995] – ‘Your fifty-two Hand Blocks was useless
[against guns]’ – supported the contention that the firepower and rules
of engagement of urban gang warfare had made the unarmed fighting
methods of the 52s obsolete. As the decade was drawing to a close, 1999
saw the publication of a book titled Street Kingdom: Five Years inside the
2
26
In 2001, Century’s primary resource on the 52s remained incarcerated
and anonymous; therefore, Dennis Newsome, by virtue of the publicity
surrounding Lethal Weapon, continued to be regarded by the general
public as the most valuable source of knowledge on prison-based
martial arts styles. Newsome’s reputation was enhanced in 2001 when
John Soet published Martial Arts Around the World, Volume 2 featuring
him demonstrating JHR techniques. Newsome’s appearance in this
context is puzzling. Although he offered instruction in the Brazilian
art of capoeira, an African-descended martial art that continued to ride
on a similar media-driven wave of popularity generated by Only the
Strong (1993), he remained closed to requests to do the same with JHR,
especially to non-African-Americans.
By the end of the 20th century, the internet had generated innumerable
new avenues for communication and debate. Forums devoted to martial
arts provided the venue for heated debates regarding the existence of
the 52s and, if they existed, their etiology and characteristics. Douglas
Century and martial arts practitioner-scholars such as Jason Couch,
Daniel Marks, and ‘Stickgrappler’ (only known by this screen name)
proved to be key figures in the debate. While Couch and Stickgrappler
conducted non-academic research at a very high level, their
investigations had no larger agendas. On the other hand, Daniel Marks,
like Newsome, believed that African-American VMAs represented not
only effective fighting methods but unique cultural treasures, as well.
He has often used the term ‘gems’ to refer to the African-descended
arts. Marks’ agenda sought to promote the 52s as a martial art and as a
heritage art to serve as a vehicle for self-actualization and community
self-esteem, an agenda he advanced when, in 2003, Century facilitated
contact between Marks and Big K, his primary resource for 52s
information and the protagonist of Street Kingdom.
Piñero was also photographed for the article in a Comstock defensive posture.
Spring 2016
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The Fifty-Two Hand Blocks Re-Framed
Thomas A. Green
‘Climate of the Times’
Social Factors Contributing to the
Popularity of the 52s
success Only the Strong. In many cases, the capoeiristas were distinctively
Caucasian. Adams and Joselito Santos (capoeira name: Mestre Amen),
who portrayed protagonist Mark Dacascos’ mentor in Only the Strong,
were notable exceptions.
Diverse social factors contributed to the rise of interest in the 52s
early in the 21st century. Influences date back to the 1960s Afrikanist
movement which promoted the martial arts as means of community
self-defense by training in Asian arts, both individually and as members
of groups such as the Nation of Islam’s (NOI) self-defense branch the
Fruit of Islam. For example, notable African-American martial artists
Moses Powell (Musa Muhammad) and Lil’ John Davis were associated
with the NOI. According to oral tradition, Powell’s Asian-derived
Sanuces Ryu system was influenced by ‘Jail House Boxing’ [Daniel
Marks, personal communication, 2004].
More aligned with the cultural missions of Daniel Marks and Dennis
Newsome are those Afrikanist martial arts that sought to bridge the
cultural gap imposed between African-Americans and Continental
Africa by the New World Diaspora. Some of these are eclectic martial
arts, such as Kupigana Ngumi grounded in African philosophical
systems [Shaha Maasi, personal communication, 2008] used to promote
pan-Afrikan solidarity. Kupigana Ngumi drew on karate, kung fu, and
bando and was created by Nganga Tolo-Naa (born Raymond Cooper)
and Shaha Maasi (born William Nichols) during the late 1960s [Hinton
and Rahming 1994: 94]. During the 1970s, Kilindi Iyi, a boxer and
practitioner of Asian martial arts, turned his attention to African
martial culture; as he observed, ‘if all people around the world have
martial arts, well, Africans must have martial arts also’ [Green 2004].
He eventually developed what he characterizes as a blend of African
martial arts which he continues to teach from his Ta-Merrian Institute
in Detroit, Michigan [Green 2004]. This list of African-inspired martial
systems is far from exhaustive, but it suggests the strength of the desire
on the part of African-Americans to reclaim a martial heritage that had
been obscured by the rigors of bondage in the American Diaspora. This
quest is one of the influences that served as a catalyst for the ‘52s fever’
at the turn of the 21st century.
In 1975, Jelon Vieria introduced capoeira to the US as a dance form.
Over the next decade, African-descended martial culture increasingly
drew the attention of mass audiences. Even before Vieria’s tour,
television audiences in 1973 had been introduced to the martial
dimensions of capoeira in the Kung Fu series (Season 1, Episode 13)
in which African-American actor Moses Gunn portrays a Brazilian
capoeirista. During the 1980s, the popularity of capoeira grew as its
martial characteristics were featured in films such as Brenda Starr
(1989); The Mighty Quinn (1989), a film which, like Lethal Weapon,
relied on Cedric Adams for fight sequences; and the major commercial
martialartsstudies.org
Dennis Newsome provides an important historical link in the causal
chain from capoeira to the 52s. Perhaps because of his JHR/Lethal
Weapon connection, his African Reconnection Project in San Diego,
California has been particularly high profile. According to Newsome
(capoeira name: Mestre Preto Velho), his capoeira training, when
combined with training in African dance and related ethnic traditions,
‘reconnects the youth to their African Cultural past, modifying
thought processes and recapturing their African sense of morals,
ethics, and artistic Aesthetics’ [World Beat Center 2002a]. Newsome
characterizes the adult portions of the program as an ‘entity’ conceived
to train African-Americans, who in turn will train others. This intent
also informed the ‘each one, teach one’ philosophy of Moses Powell
[Muhammad, Final Call 2-12-2014]. Newsome adds: ‘The motivation
behind this program is to restore and maintain the moral and cultural
heritage and strength of African-American communities through the
practice of Capoeira Angola Sao Bento Grande’ learned from Antonio
Oliveiro Benvindo (capoeira name: Mestre Touro) [World Beat
Center 2002b]. Besides capoeira, Newsome’s curriculum incorporates
Caribbean and African stick fighting systems and an African system of
head-butting that he learned from Ethiopian, Joseph Tewolde [Planet
Capoeira 2002; personal communication with Dennis Newsome, 2002
and 2016].
These influences created conditions that generated an appreciation
for African and African-descended martial systems. Along with the
appreciation for this martial heritage came a perception of the loss of
this heritage among African-Americans. This led in turn to efforts to fill
the lacunae in the historical record imposed by the repressive conditions
of bondage.
Of course, other factors contributed to a wider-than-East Asian
view of the martial arts in the closing decades of the 20th century.
Exposure to and a growing interest in Filipino martial arts arose in
the late 1960s and 1970s due to the careers of Florendo Visitacion
(instructor of Moses Powell and Lil’ John Davis) in New York, Dan
Inosanto in California, and Bruce Lee (with whom Inosanto exchanged
information) globally; the popularity of Bloodsport (1988), which helped
launch the career of Jean-Claude Van Damme and stimulate further
cinematic explorations of exotic martial arts; and, in 1993, the debut of
the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), which led to the explosion
of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) and which served as fuel for the
continued search for the fighter’s Holy Grail – the ultimate martial art.
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The Fifty-Two Hand Blocks Re-Framed
Thomas A. Green
Revitalization and Re-invention
African-descended and European fighting methods occurred [Green
2003]. As a result, during a 2003 interview, he objected to my bringing
up the possibility that the distinctive fighting styles of boxers Floyd
Patterson and Mike Tyson, both of whom are cited as bringing the JHR
style to international boxing, had been passed along by manager/trainer
Constantine (Cus) D’Amato (1918-1985). Newsome insisted that Tyson
brought elements of JHR to his fights and strenuously resisted counterarguments. He continues to object to teaching JHR as a part of his open
curriculum. As noted above, the arts he promotes (in addition to his
primary public art of capoeira) are the African arts (as he labels them) of
Caribbean Kalenda and Nguni (Zulu) stickfighting.
With the ‘re-discovery’ of African-American VMAs, researchers with
diverse agendas worked to reconstruct JHR, the 52s, and related fighting
arts. As noted above, some sought to promote them not only as martial
arts but as heritage arts that could be vehicles for self-actualization and
community self-esteem. From an anthropological perspective, these
efforts can be compared to cultural revitalization projects [Wallace
1956]. More precisely, these projects were nativistic, they were attempts
to revive or perpetuate elements of a group’s ‘original’ culture [Linton
1943: 230]. Such enterprises operate to preserve cultural integrity
in the face of an external threat by drawing on models constructed
from an idealized past [Green 1981]. A coherent view of the past
provides explanations for present conditions and traditional models for
reorganization. Such reframing is necessary for formulating strategies
to defend social and cultural integrity and to arrive at a more satisfying
future. In the case of the African-American Diaspora, the histories
were not always in agreement, and at times gaps in the historical
documentation were filled with speculation. The ethnic bond enabled
by the narratives, however, is more important than the authenticity of
the bonding agent. In instances of cultural revitalization, all versions
of the group’s story focus on strengthening a common identity. As the
debate over African-American VMAs heated up at the end of the 20th
century, long-standing racial conflicts added fuel to the fire.
As a confirmed Africanist, Dennis Newsome asserts that the roots of
JHR are in the fighting systems that slaves brought with them to the
Western Hemisphere during the colonial era [Capoeira Angola 2002c;
Dempsy 1999]. He advocates the following scenario. The parent arts of
JHR developed as local forms during the plantation period. One of these
VMAs, ‘Barnyard’, can be traced to the era and locale of Nat Turner, he
claims [personal communication 2002].
Newsome’s historical narrative argues that these systems survived
into the present due to their being taught in prisons [Planet Capoeira
2002a]. Even after Emancipation of the slave population, social factors
– bigoted legislation, racist courts, and the oppressive penal system
– operated in tandem to maintain a system of de-facto slavery in the
U.S. that followed African-Americans (migrations from the American
South to the North notwithstanding). In his words, the ‘politics and
racism that continue to influence the penal system in the U.S. make
this prison combat system thrive as a functional necessity of modern
African-Americans’ [Capoeira Angola 2002b]. Whereas Newsome
notes the JHR influences in the unconventional tactics of certain
African-American professional boxers, he minimizes any influence
from European culture on JHR – such as the colonial era boxing that
others have cited as an arena in which cross-fertilization between
28
Research has consistently been the first order of business for Daniel
Marks. As his biography from his original website dedicated to the 52s
and related arts such as hip hop states:
For over 30 years. Mr. Marks, who possesses a Black Belt in
karate [as well as expertise in boxing, jiujitsu, and kali], has
researched African-American martial arts. He first heard of 52
Blocks from fellow officers at the beginning of his decade-long
military career in the 1980s and was intrigued by the genre
but found that information and tutelage was scarce … In 1993,
Mr. Marks moved to New York, pursuing a social work track
and working in a group home as well as completing a degree
in Computer Science. At that point, he [began] … researching
the culture and its connectors more intently, meeting with
practitioners … recording their narratives … [and] piecing
together the puzzle that is Black Martial Culture. Mr. Marks
supports his passion and his research with earnings from his
own LLC as well as his position within the field of high end IT
technology and computer applications.
[http://fwape.com/bio.php]
The martial project that Marks undertook involved both ‘library’
research (especially on potential parent forms of Continental Africa
and creolized VMAs in the Americas) and oral history to document
practitioners of the 52s from what has been considered the ‘golden age’
of the 1960s-1980s. Marks’ historical re-construction coincides with
Newsome’s up to a point. Although his primary focus became VMAs
as they emerged in the urban Northeastern US, particularly Brooklyn,
New York, his earliest efforts, which had been launched prior to
the ‘web wars’ of the late 1990s, included African-descended martial
culture in the South. In his words: ‘We can’t forget the Gullah [AfricanAmericans of the Georgia Sea Islands] influence on this fight’ [Marks
2004, personal communication]. Family members provided some of his
earliest data on the African-American martial culture of the South. He
reports the following concerning his grandfather:
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He’s from Greenville South Carolina. He has never heard of
the names like K&K [knocking and kicking]; he’s 68, but he
knew of the fighting, especially butting. ‘Man, I don’t do no
butting. They’ll kill you with the head, them guys’. He said that
the fighting that they learn[ed] was for survival. He was also
in the military. Another quote, when asked about his knife
skills, his reply was, ‘Man listen, I ask a cat to hold a quarter
out [extended his hand]. Draw my razor and put it back before
the quarter hit the ground’. Could be a tall tale, but it shows
the type of skill one would need to use the razor for survival.
And his favorite words were ‘don’t let me have to pop my blade
cause I cut you quicker than s**t’.
[Marks, personal communication, 2004]
Marks’ research led him from the Gullah enclave in the Georgia Sea
Islands to the Nation of Gods and Earths to hip hop [Green 2003, 2012].
Throughout the work on this project, Marks maintained his conviction
that his was a martial reconstruction with deep historical roots that had
the potential to impact the future of the African-American community.
In his words:
I’m just trying to do what needed to be done a long time ago.
Which is shed a little light on this side of the globe. To see so
many young people give up on life before they have a chance to
live. Simply because they don’t believe that they matter or have
made contributions to this world. This isn’t about false Pride
or following the yellow brick road. It’s about real people with
real problems struggling to survive the best way they know
how. Then realizing that they got played, and now they want
to pass on a little bit of what they learned. I’m just glad that I
was put in a spot to gain from these Brothers [older members of
the African-American community who have expertise in JHR
and the 52s] before they pass into faded memories and urban
legends.
[Marks, personal communication, 2003]
As the existential controversy over African-American VMAs raged on,
in 2003, Douglas Century created opportunities for Big K to connect
with Daniel Marks. As noted above, Marks had been working to
reconstruct the 52s through interviews with skillful fighters from the
1970s and 1980s for the art’s value as not only an effective fighting
method but also for its unique cultural contributions relating to music,
dance, and sport. There are thus important differences between the
original ‘street practices’ and the re-framed 52s, the most important
of which is that Marks took the 52s out of the shadows and sought to
promote them as a martial art and as a heritage art.
Drawing on the street arsenals of surviving experts and especially on
the skills of Big K, the work of developing a structured curriculum
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began. The goal was to develop a coherent, embodied preservation of
the 52s as distinct from the piecemeal and generally fortuitous survival
that is the inevitable fate of most VMAs. I have argued above (and
at length elsewhere, e.g. Green [2012]) that the 52s incorporate an
African-descended aesthetic traditionally expressed in the polarities
of hot-cool, sweet-sick, sweet-broad [see also Abrahams 1983]. This
aesthetic system values improvisation and variations on a central theme,
as in the jazz concept of ‘riffing’. Following that traditional practice, the
re-invented 52s mindset served as a catalyst for improvisation on the
mechanics of a base art. Boxing was a reasonable choice for a martial
foundation. Marks argued both in the martial arts forums and on his
original website fwape.com (Fwape is from Haitian creole and means ‘to
strike or throw to the ground’) that the use of boxing followed historical
precedent as well. He argued that, from the anonymous Africans who
acquired British-derived boxing skills in the course of plantation era
‘human cockfights’ through African-American pugilists Bill Richmond
(the Terror of the London Prize Ring, 1763-1869), Jack Johnson
(1878-1946), Archie Moore (1913-1998), and Mike Tyson, a distinctive
Black boxing style had been intertwined with African-American VMAs
[Green 2003]. Big K’s stint as a professional boxer undoubtedly played
an additional role in the selection of boxing.
As the efforts of Marks and Big K gained momentum and the 52s
achieved a greater degree of legitimacy, others launched attempts to
capitalize on and profit from the interest in the system. This became
obvious in the latter by the absence of historical or cultural rhetoric
beyond claims of ties to a ghetto and/or criminal (gang or prison)
pedigree. In some cases, the actual term ‘52’ in one form or another
was attached to the products that emerged in the wake of Century’s
Street Kingdom, his Details article, and a series of similar pieces in both
popular and academic venues. Apparently, efforts at capitalizing on
the popularity of the 52s and JHR began as early as 2003 with Diallo
Frazier’s reputed autobiography of his years as an ‘urban soldier’,
Revelations of a Warrior. In 2004, Frazier initiated production of a series
of DVDs on ‘Ghetto Blocks’ through TRS (Threat Response Solutions)
Productions. In 2014, after his stint as consultant and ‘52s coach’ to
Larenz Tate in the BET production of Gun Hill (2011), Frazier published
Tao of 52: Discovery of the Lost Science, which reiterated much of the
existing online and previously published print information on the 52s.
The launch of YouTube in 2005 and the subsequent posting of video
clips, many of them featuring Marks and Big K, unleashed a torrent of
instructional material. Per this article’s opening remarks, more than
one of the new crop of masters misinterpreted the derivation of the ‘52
Hand Blocks’ and assumed that the number alluded to the number of
defensive maneuvers contained in the art and not the NGE numerology
nor the prank 52 card Pick-up [Green 2012]. This misapprehension
compelled martial entrepreneurs to contrive a variety of techniques
that, as far as can be determined, are not independently corroborated as
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having circulated in any vernacular transmissions of the 52s.
Directed by Kamau Hunter, the formal association of Marks and Big
K with Yasin was indicated by the DVD’s being labeled a Blockstar/
Fwape/Bartendaz Production. Framing 52 is an abbreviated print
reiteration of points made in Break the Glass with written commentary
by Marks and photographs by Hunter. The 2007 printing credits these
two as authors. A subsequent printing [2008] adds Big K and Yasin
as co-authors. 2008 was the point at which the consortium organized
Constellation 52 Blocks Combat and Fitness.
Lyte Burley launched the most aggressive attempts at marketing
his version of the 52s. At the time of writing, he had produced six
instructional DVDs which he sells (along with t-shirts, hoodies, and
other apparel) through his website, and has also posted dozens, if not
hundreds, of online videos. New self-proclaimed experts continue to
pop up, marketing contrived styles cobbled together from basic boxing
techniques, wing chun kung fu, karate, modern versions of Bruce Lee’s
jeet kune do, print sources, and competitors’ videos. I was contacted
more than once after 2003 (when I began publishing academic pieces on
JHR, the 52s, and related vernacular arts) by individuals purporting to
be students, journalists, or fellow academics who were later revealed to
be on fishing expeditions to hijack the practical expertise that I did not
have.
During the years following their meeting, Marks and Big K were joined
by urban fitness innovator Hassan (‘Giant’) Yasin, founder of Bartendaz
Fitness, and by filmmaker Kamau Hunter. Marks, Big K, and Yasin
came together to ‘re-frame’ the 52s as a heritage art, a unique expression
of African-American culture for cultivating health, fitness, and pride in
cultural heritage. Hunter created visual records of the process.
The initial fwape organization founded by Marks, after a period of
posting informational and instructional clips on YouTube and the
fwape website, issued Boxing for Combat as a Blockstar Production in
2007. As the title implies, this instructional DVD offers an introduction
to the basic boxing techniques that were beginning to form the core of
the re-invented 52s curriculum. 2007 also saw the release of Break the
Glass: The Official 52 Hand Blocks Documentary. Drawing extensively on
Marks’ previous field research with the OGs (‘Original Gangsters’ or, in
tribute to the NGE, ‘Original Gods’) who used the 52s in the streets and
prisons in the 1970s and 1980s, the two DVD set is an effort to confirm
Marks’ claims concerning the existence and most recent antecedents of
the curriculum that he and Big K had begun to develop.
In essence, Break the Glass advanced the Constellation 52 agenda in the
following ways. Significant members of the African-American martial
community (including influential Afrikanist Tayari Casel of Kupigani
Ngumi) attested to the existence of the 52s and asserted that the 52s
had evolved from the boxing-based prison system Stato (Upstate New
York Correctional Facility). Interviewees also claimed that the urban
gangsters of the 1950s and 1960s abided by ethical warrior principles
similar to Constellation 52’s C.O.D.E: ‘character, order, discipline, and
equality’ [http://52blocks.blogspot.com/2009_01_01_archive.html].
Establishing the latter was crucial to the ‘rehabilitation’ of the outlaw
system as a tool for building a community movement.
30
Constellation 52 Combat and Fitness offered training seminars open
to the public regardless of race and continued to produce books,
documentaries, and instructional DVDs on boxing-based 52s. In
the re-invented 52s, techniques are built using a toolkit consisting
of boxing drills, dance moves, and boxing equipment. Physical
attributes (strength, endurance, flexibility) are developed through the
bodyweight-based exercises that are Yasin’s riff on exercise protocols
developed over the years utilizing the minimal equipment available in
prison yards, cells, school playgrounds, and inner city parks.
Implementing the 52s aesthetic, Yasin added lateral movements and
bicycling legs to the conventional vertical up and down of the pullup, for example. These modifications bring additional muscle groups
into play and intensify the basic movement. They also add style and
performance to the most standard, old-school calisthenics, just as
the 52s adds flash to the boxing paradigm. Like the re-framed 52s,
these exercises are based on an outcaste model, prison training, and
what have been called ‘Thug Workouts’. And, like the re-framed
52s, the intent is to convert negative to positive. This is obvious in
the inspirational lectures that Yasin serves up along with demanding
workout routines. He even reinvented the word ‘THUG’ to become
an acronym for ‘talented humans under great stress’ [Daniel Marks,
personal communication, 2010]. This alliance represented the most
ambitious effort to date to document and revitalize JHR, the 52s, dance,
physical culture, and related practices in African-American cultural
history.
Constellation 52 benefitted inadvertently from the rising popularity of
MMA. Indeed, indicative of a unique back-and-forth transmission, the
early UFCs had fueled an interest in JHR and the 52s as ‘ultimate martial
arts’, while years later, as the UFC and MMA were becoming more
mainstream, fledgling MMA fighter Rashad Evans sought out the 52s in
search of an ‘edge’. In 2005, Evans was introduced to the 52s by Marks
and Thomas Lomax a few months before joining the cast of Season 2
of the Spike TV competitive reality series The Ultimate Fighter (which
he would go on to win before eventually becoming a UFC champion in
2008). Evidence that Constellation 52 had gained traction (primarily via
YouTube clips) not only as self-defense and African-American heritage
but also as physical culture and combat sport training is signified by
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Thomas A. Green
the release of Best Hands for MMA in 2009. The DVD featured a video
testimonial by Rashad Evans and the statement that ‘52 Blocks is the
best dirty boxing and inside fighting for MMA’ [2009, back cover].
A subsequent DVD titled Changing of the Guard represents a significant
turning point for Constellation’s interpretation of the 52s. The contents
of the DVD, therefore, deserve detailed consideration. As Daniel Marks
asserts in the promotion for the DVD, ‘it ends a chapter and starts with
Constellation’ [Promotion for Changing of the Guard 5/22/10]. The work
is intended to pay tribute to those ancestors and ancestral arts that have
gone before, allowing the Constellation 52 ‘family’ to move forward
as a new entity that preserves the positive element of the past while
distancing itself from the negative image that came with practicing an
underground outlaw VMA.
Taking inventory of the African-descended VMAs in the Americas,
from those well-known (capoeira) to the less familiar (garrote, cocobale,
maní), Changing of the Guard opens with the assertion that there has
been less information available on the Black VMAs of the U.S. than
anywhere in the Western hemisphere. The film addresses this ignorance
by fleshing out the history, in turn, of 200 years of boxing (from the
plantation to the prize ring): Stato, Jailhouse, and the Fifty-two Hand
Blocks. Like Break the Glass, it is rich in oral history. Going even further
than its predecessor, however, Changing of the Guard includes legends of
the streets and beyond, such as Happy (‘Robot’) Crump, a 1970s karate
competitor and dance innovator, and King Saladin, a reputed student of
the notorious 52s fighter Mother Dear.
While the relationship of the 52s to hip hop and break dancing has
been discussed by the members of Constellation and elsewhere [Green
2012], consideration of the ties between JHR and the blues among other
musical traditions of the 1950s and 1960s sets Changing of the Guard
apart from the pack. Through the comments of their interlocutors the
film-makers explore the code of honor that prevailed before gangs
turned to guns. Changing of the Guard was made, we learn, to ‘preserve
and serve’ this embodied cultural heritage art. While remaining
acutely aware of the history of their art, with this film Constellation 52
announced their intent, as Marks declares, to ‘move on’.
In 2012, Constellation 52 Combat and Fitness reorganized as
Constellation 52 Global (G52G) in a partnership including Marks, Big
K, and Yasin. While not neglecting the 52s’ cultural background, the
current agenda increasingly focuses on fitness and combat. Their global
outreach has had its greatest success in Brazil and Finland, and the
combat has had direct applications to boxing and MMA. By December
2013, Yasin was no longer associated with C52G and turned his
energies to developing his own fitness and self-improvement programs
such as the Bartendaz, Life Is Movement, and G.I.A.N.T. (Growing Is
a Noble Thing). As of 2016, the forces behind C52G are Marks, Big K,
and Mike Djangali.
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martialartsstudies.org
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EDITORS
EDITORIAL ADVISORY PANEL
Paul Bowman
Benjamin N. Judkins
Oleg Benesch University of York
Stephen Chan SOAS
Greg Downey Macquarie University
D.S. Farrer University of Guam
Adam Frank University of Central Arkansas
Thomas A. Green Texas A&M University
T. J. Hinrichs Cornell University
Leon Hunt Brunel University London
Felipe P. Jocano Jr University of the Philippines
Gina Marchetti Hong Kong University
Meaghan Morris The University of Sydney
Daniel Mroz University of Ottawa
Meir Shahar Tel Aviv University
Dale Spencer Carleton University
Douglas Wile Alverno College
Phillip Zarrilli Exeter University, Emeritus
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
Kyle Barrowman
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Journal DOI
10.18573/ISSN.2057-5696
Issue DOI
10.18573/n.2016.10060
Martial Arts Studies
Journal design by Hugh Griffiths