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ISSUE EDITORS

Winter 2016 Paul Bowman


ISSN 2057-5696 Benjamin N. Judkins

MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES
THE DEFINITION OF PINK GLOVES STILL
MARTIAL ARTS STUDIES GIVE BLACK EYES
Paul Bowman CHANNON & PHIPPS

TAOLU GONG AND FA IN


DANIEL MROZ CHINESE MARTIAL ARTS
TIMOTHY J. NULTY

APPLIED LINGUISTICS, PERFORMANCE THEORY &


MUHAMMAD ALI’S JAPANESE FAILURE
JARED MIRACLE

SYNTHESIZING ZHENSHI NEWS OF


(AUTHENTICITY) & SHIZAN THE DUELS
(COMBATIVITY) ALEXANDER HAY
WAYNE WONG
ABOUT THE JOURNAL
Martial Arts Studies is an open access journal, which means that
all content is available without charge to the user or his/her
institution. You are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute,
print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal
without asking prior permission from either the publisher or the
author.

C b n d
The journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-
NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Original copyright remains with the contributing author and


a citation should be made when the article is quoted, used or
referred to in another work.

Martial Arts Studies is an imprint of Cardiff University Press,


an innovative open-access publisher of academic research,
where ‘open-access’ means free for both readers and writers.
cardiffuniversitypress.org

Journal DOI
10.18573/ISSN.2057-5696
Issue DOI
10.18573/n.2017.10091

Martial Arts Studies


Journal design and production by Hugh Griffiths
MARTIAL issue 3
ARTS STUDIES
WINTER 2016

1 Editorial
Benjamin N. Judkins and Paul Bowman

6 The Definition of Martial Arts Studies


ARTICLES Paul Bowman

24 Pink Gloves Still Give Black Eyes


Exploring ‘Alternative’ Femininity in Women’s Combat Sports
Alex Channon and Catherine Phipps

38 Taolu
Credibility and Decipherability in the Practice of
Chinese Martial Movement
Daniel Mroz

50 Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts


Timothy J. Nulty

64 Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory, and


Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

71 Synthesizing Zhenshi (Authenticity) and Shizhan (Combativity)


Reinventing Chinese Kung Fu in Donnie Yen’s Ip Man Series
Wayne Wong

89 News of the Duels


Restoration Duelling Culture and the Early Modern Press
Alexander Hay

102 Now with Kung Fu Grip!


BOOK REVIEWS Jared Miracle
review by Michael Molasky

105 The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and Its Music


Paetzold and Mason
review by Colin P. McGuire

109 Fighting Scholars


Garcia and Spencer
review by Anu Vaittinen

112 The Body and Senses in Martial Culture


Lionel Loh Hang Loong
review by Alex Channon
Martial Arts Studies is part of a network of projects that connect
academics, practitioners and institutions as they contribute to
this rapidly expanding field of studies.

MARTIAL Open access peer-reviewed


ARTS STUDIES journal published twice a year
JOURNAL to share the latest research
and scholarship in the field
martialartsstudies.org

MARTIAL Connecting and engaging


ARTS STUDIES researchers and practitioners
RESEARCH NETWORK to shape the multidisciplinary
field of Martial Arts Studies
mastudiesrn.org

MARTIAL An academic book series


ARTS STUDIES of Martial Arts Studies
MONOGRAPHS monographs from Rowman
and Littlefield International
goo.gl/F0o3DX

MARTIAL The Annual International


ARTS STUDIES Martial Arts Studies
CONFERENCE Conferences
goo.gl/gRyzf2
EDITORIAL
Benjamin N. Judkins and Paul Bowman

What is the meaning of ‘forms’ practice within the traditional Asian


martial arts? Were Bruce Lee’s movies actually ‘kung fu’ films?
Was the famous Ali vs. Inoki fight a step on the pathway to MMA
or a paradoxical failure to communicate? What pitfalls await the
unwary as we rush to define key terms in a newly emerging, but still
undertheorized, discipline? The rich and varied articles offered in Issue
3 of Martial Arts Studies pose these questions and many more. Taken as
a set, they reflect the growing scholarly engagement between our field
and a variety of theoretical and methodological traditions.

Many monographs, academic articles, book chapters, conference papers


and proceedings that have appeared over the last year have been forced
to address the question that Paul Bowman raised in the very first issue
of this journal in 2015: Is martial arts studies an academic field?

Looking back on the rich achievements of the last year, the answer must
certainly be ‘yes’. Yet, as Bowman reminds us in his contribution to
the present issue [Bowman 2017], fields of study do not simply appear.
They are not spontaneously called forth by the essential characteristics
or importance of their subject matter. Rather, they are achievements of
cooperative creativity and vision. Fields of study, like the martial arts
themselves, are social constructions.

Over the next year, we hope, in a variety of settings, to stimulate even


more systematic and engaged thinking about the various ways that
one might approach the scholarly study of the martial arts. Given
the diversity of our backgrounds and areas of focus, how can we best
advance our efforts? What sort of work do we expect martial arts
studies, as an interdisciplinary field, to do?

In this issue’s first article, Bowman turns his attention to the unfolding
debate about the definition of martial arts [Channon and Jennings 2014;
Wetzler 2015; Judkins 2016; Channon 2016]. This discussion is prefaced
with a brief exploration of some of the failed precursors to martial arts
studies, including hoplology. Bowman concludes that efforts to theorize
the orientation of martial arts studies as a field are likely to put us on
a better pathway for sustained development than arguments for or
against any particular definition of the martial arts themselves. While
Bowman does not suggest that any single methodological approach
should dominate the emerging field, he offers a strong critique of
‘scientism’ in all its forms.

Alex Channon and Catherine Phipps, in an article titled ‘Pink Gloves


Still Give Black Eyes’, ask what martial arts studies can tell us about
the construction and performance of gender roles in modern society
[Channon and Phipps 2017]. Their ethnographic study focuses on
the ways that certain symbols and behaviors, when paired with
achievements in the realm of fighting ability, are used to challenge and
rewrite an orthodox understanding of gender. This leads the authors

martialartsstudies.org 1
MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES
to conclude that future scholars interested in the subversion of gender
should carefully consider the possibility that appropriation and re-
signification may be critical mechanisms in their own areas of study as
well.

Daniel Mroz and Timothy Nulty draw heavily on their overlapping


backgrounds in Chen style taijiquan with a pair of separate yet
complimentary articles [Mroz 2017; Nulty 2017]. Both of these
contributions ask us to consider how various theoretical approaches,
drawn from a variety of fields, can help us to pragmatically understand
basic elements of the embodied practice of the martial arts.

Mroz begins his article with a brief discussion of the practical, narrative,
theatrical and religious explanations of prearranged movement patterns
(taolu) within the Chinese martial arts. Noting the shortcomings of such
interpretive efforts he employs the twin concepts of ‘decipherability’
and ‘credibility’, drawn from the Great Reform movement of 20th
century theater training. He advances a framework that points out
certain shortcomings in the ways that we typically think about the
practice of taolu, and goes on to suggest a new perspective from which
their practice might more fruitfully be understood.

Following this, Nulty draws on Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s notion of


‘embodied intentionality’ to elucidate the distinction between gong
(skill) and fa (technique) in martial arts training. After demonstrating
the ways in which this approach facilitates the understanding of other
concepts critical to taijiquan, Nulty argues that the gong/fa distinction
outlined in his article is in fact widely applicable to the study of a variety
of martial arts.

The articles that follow go on to examine the representation of the


martial arts in various types of media, and their semiotic or discursive
status. Jared Miracle draws on the realms of applied linguistics and
performance theory in an attempt to reevaluate the famous, but ill-
fated, 1976 bout which pitted the American boxer Muhammad Ali
against the Japanese professional wrestler Antonio Inoki [Miracle
2017]. After reviewing a range of sources, including newspaper reports,
eyewitness interviews and personal correspondence, Miracle concludes
that the event should be understood as an example of robust, but failed,
communication.

Wayne Wong turns his attention to new trends in Hong Kong martial
arts cinema. After setting out a discussion of the action aesthetics
developed in the films of such legendary performers as Kwan Tak-hing
and Bruce Lee, Wong turns his attention to Donnie Yen’s immensely
successful Ip Man franchise. In discussing the innovative fight
choreography in these films, Wong notes a new set of possibilities for
the positive portrayal of wu (martial) Chinese culture on screen. Wong
argues that the innovative recombination of images and approaches
in Yen’s films present students of martial arts studies with a new, and
more comprehensive, understanding of the nature of the southern
Chinese martial arts.

Lastly, in ‘News of the Duels – Restoration Dueling Culture and the


Early Modern Press’, Alexander Hay attempts to bridge the gap between

2 Winter 2016
MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES
popular representations of violence and our historical understanding
of martial culture [Hay 2017]. Specifically, he asks what reports in the
press both reveal and conceal about the changing nature of violence in
British society during the 1660s and 1670s, particularly with regards to
duels. Despite pervasive censorship, a review of historical newspapers
suggests insights into how these deadly encounters evolved as individual
swordsmen gave way to both firearms and groups on horseback. The
social upheaval that gripped British society during this period was
reflected in parallel transformations both in how violence was carried
out and in how it was publicly discussed.

The issue concludes with reviews of recently published books. The first
is Michael Molasky’s assessment of Jared Miracle’s Now with Kung Fu
Grip! – How Bodybuilders, Soldiers and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial
Arts for America [Miracle 2016]. Following this is Colin P. McGuire’s
review of The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and Its Music: From Southeast
Asian Village to Global Movement, edited by Uwe U. Paetzold and Paul H.
Mason [Paetzold and Mason 2016]. Then Anu Vaittinen discusses Raúl
Sánchez García and Dale C. Spencer’s edited volume, Fighting Scholars:
Habitus and Ethnographies of Martial Arts and Combat Sports [García
and Spencer 2014]. And, to close this issue, Alex Channon offers his
review of Lionel Loh Han Loong’s The Body and Senses in Martial Culture
[Loong 2016].

Taken together, we believe that these articles and interventions


illustrate how a wide spectrum of theoretical and methodological
approaches make substantive contributions to our understanding of
the martial arts. But, of course, the range of approaches present here
is not in any way comprehensive. A considerable variety of tools and
lenses remain to be explored and applied in martial arts studies. Yet,
collectively, it is clear that these authors are advancing a compelling
vision of the type of field that martial arts studies is in the process of
becoming.

Our thanks go to all of our contributors, as well as to our editorial


assistant Kyle Barrowman, our designer Hugh Griffiths, and all
at Cardiff University Press, especially Alice Percival and Sonja
Haerkoenen.

martialartsstudies.org 3
MARTIAL References
ARTS STUDIES

Bowman, Paul. 2015. ‘Asking the Question: Is Martial Arts Studies an


Academic Field?’, Martial Arts Studies 1, 3-19.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2015.10015

Bowman, Paul. 2017. ‘The Definition of Martial Arts Studies’, Martial


Arts Studies 3, 6-23.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10092

Channon, Alex. 2016. ‘How (not) to Categorise Martial Arts: A


Discussion and Example from Gender Studies’, Kung Fu Tea, available
at: https://goo.gl/zdElcY

Channon, Alex, and George Jennings. 2014. ‘Exploring Embodiment


through Martial Arts and Combat Sports: A Review of Empirical
Research’, Sport in Society 17.6, 773–789.
https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2014.882906.

Channon, Alex and Catherine Phipps. 2017. ‘“Pink Gloves Still Give
Black Eyes”: Exploring “Alternative” Femininity in Women’s Combat
Sports’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 24-37.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10093

García, Raúl Sánchez and Dale C. Spencer [eds]. 2014. Fighting Scholars:
Habitus and Ethnographies of Martial Arts and Combat Sports. London:
Anthem Press.

Hay, Alexander. 2017. ‘News of the Duels – Restoration Duelling


Culture and the Early Modern Press’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 90-102.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10097

Judkins, Benjamin N. 2016. ‘The Seven Forms of Lightsaber Combat:


Hyper-Reality and the Invention of the Martial Arts’, Martial Arts Studies
2, 6-22.
http://dx.doi.org/10.18573/j.2016.10067

Loong, Lionel Loh Han. 2016. The Body and Senses in Martial Culture.
London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Miracle, Jared. 2016. Now with Kung Fu Grip! – How Bodybuilders, Soldiers
and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial Arts for America. Jefferson, NC:
McFarland.

Miracle, Jared. 2017. ‘Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory, and


Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 65-71.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10095

Mroz, Daniel. 2017. ‘Taolu: Credibility and Decipherability in the


Practice of Chinese Martial Movement’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 38-50.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10094

4 Winter 2016
MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES

Nulty, Timothy J. 2017. ‘Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts’, Martial


Arts Studies 3, 51-64.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10098

Paetzold, Uwe U. and Paul H. Mason. 2016. The Fighting Art of Pencak
Silat and Its Music: From Southeast Asian Village to Global Movement.
Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.

Wetzler, Sixt. 2015. ‘Martial Arts Studies as Kulturwissenschaft: A


Possible Theoretical Framework’, Martial Arts Studies 1, 20-33.
https://doi:10.18573/j.2015.10016

Wong, Wayne. 2017. ‘Synthesizing Zhenshi (Authenticity) and Shizhan


(Combativity): Reinventing Chinese Kung Fu in Donnie Yen’s Ip Man
series (2008-2015)’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 72-89.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10096

martialartsstudies.org 5
CONTRIBUTOR Paul Bowman, Professor of Cultural Studies at Cardiff University,
is author of ten books, including Martial Arts Studies: Disrupting
Disciplinary Boundaries (2015). He is founder and director of the
AHRC-funded Martial Arts Studies Research Network and co-
editor of the journal Martial Arts Studies. His most recent book is
Mythologies of Martial Arts (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017)

THE DEFINITION OF
MARTIAL ARTS STUDIES
PAUL BOWMAN

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j.2017.10092 This article argues against all forms of scientism and the
widespread perceived need to define martial arts in order to
study martial arts or ‘do’ martial arts studies. It argues instead for
the necessity of theory before definition, including theorisation
of the orientation of the field of martial arts studies itself.
KEYWORDs Accordingly, the chapter criticises certain previous (and current)
academic approaches to martial arts, particularly the failed
martial arts studies, definition, theory, project of hoplology. It then examines the much more promising
paradigm, Draeger, hoplology, Wetzler, approaches of current scholarship, such as that of Sixt Wetzler,
polysystem theory, Laclau, poststructuralism, before critiquing certain aspects of its orientation. Instead of
discourse accepting Wetzler’s ‘polysystem theory’ approach uncritically,
the article argues instead for the value of a poststructuralist
CITATION ‘discourse’ approach in martial arts studies.

Bowman, Paul. 2017. ‘The


Definition of Martial Arts
Studies’, Martial Arts Studies 3,
6-23.
MARTIAL The Definition of Martial Arts Studies
ARTS STUDIES Paul Bowman

Dealing with Disciplinary Difference emerging fields, where senses of tradition and tacit agreements about
convention have yet to be set.
I was once invited to contribute a chapter to a collection being prepared
on martial arts and embodied knowledge. When all the draft chapters This is the situation of martial arts studies today, in which huge
were in and the editors were happy with the collection, the entire disciplinary differences are palpable from one work to the next. Such
manuscript was then sent off to be assessed by two academic reviewers. vast differences are present because even though the emergence of the
Of my own contribution, one reviewer said: the chapter by Bowman is field is being driven by a sense of shared and communal investment
terrible; it is not publishable, and should be rejected. The other reviewer in an object (‘martial arts’), this shared interest is not yet matched by
said: the chapter by Bowman is the best contribution to this volume, anything like a shared approach. In other words, the shared academic
and greatly enhances and enriches it. Faced with two diametrically interest in ‘martial arts’ is currently drawing together academics from
opposed views from two presumably equally reliable peer reviewers,1 many very different fields. Yet the deceptiveness of the term ‘martial
the editors themselves held the casting vote. They decided that they arts’ combined with the diversity of this community, with its myriad
liked the chapter overall, thought it had value, and wanted to include it. premises, multiple perspectives, methods and orientations, seems to
But they elected to share the reviews with me and invited me to make necessitate the creation of some kind of consensus around the object,
any changes I thought appropriate in light of them. field and approach to ‘martial arts’. Hence, understandably, people feel
the need to establish a definition of martial arts [Jones 2002; Lorge 2012;
The experience of receiving such polarised views was educational. I Lorge 2016; but see also Judkins 2016b].
share this anecdote here to introduce a cluster of interrelated issues.
These start with the matter of how to establish value in an emergent Because of this perceived necessity, at this point, many works would
academic discourse, the problematic of bias attendant to all acts and move directly into a discussion of definitions, attempting to settle the
processes of evaluation and verification, and the fact that the shape, matter of which definition of martial arts should and should not be
form, borderlines, organisation and orientation of academic fields are used, and where and when [Channon 2016; Lorge 2016]. However,
neither natural nor inevitable. Rather, these emerge in negotiation with rather than entering into the discussion about how best to define
decisions made by a host of agents and agencies, including academics, martial arts, in what follows I will instead argue that the question of the
editors, reviewers, research councils, funding bodies, and publishers, all definition of martial arts is both a distraction and a red herring for the
of whom make their evaluations with reference to established criteria emerging field of martial arts studies. The more pressing task, I argue,
and values. Accordingly, decisions as to what good or bad work looks is not the establishment of a consensus around the definition of our
like, and what ‘deserves’ to be published, are themselves reflective object. Rather, it is the establishment of a shared, circumspect, literate
of values tied into interpretations of what good, correct or proper and analytical, theoretically informed critical discourse with rigorously
academic work in this field ‘should’ look like. formulated problematics that can contribute in diverse ways to both
academic and public debates.
This does not mean that everything is already decided or
overdetermined by pre-established ‘structures’ or ‘systems’. Rather, In short, I argue somewhat against the current of recent debates, and
it means that senses of propriety, validity, appropriateness, fit, and even against the grain of many academic approaches, that we do not
so on, are always establishments or achievements that are ongoing, in need to define martial arts at all. Rather, I propose that we need to
negotiation, subject to dispute, up for question, challenge, revision theorise the entire field or nexus of research, including the place, point
and review. Such negotiation and renegotiation can be perceived in and purpose of definition within it. Indeed, my contention is that if we
all academic disciplines, but it is inevitably more cacophonic in newly allow ourselves to be animated by defining martial arts without both
theorising and constructing the field, then martial arts studies may
founder and fail, like so many past attempts to establish an academic
1 At the time, the emerging field that we now call martial arts studies was field of study for martial arts.2
yet to be established, and the editors later commented that they had actually struggled
to find suitable academics to act as peer reviewers who were not already contributors to
the collection itself. Today there would be peer reviewers aplenty for such a collection. 2 For an important and valuable contrast to this argument, see Peter Lorge’s
This could be taken to demonstrate many things, including the proposition that the recent work [Lorge 2016], which argues against using theory – because it is difficult and
establishment of an academic field involves not only the establishment of (new) shared off-putting – and instead for the virtues of deepening and refining historical knowledge.
objects of attention, shared problematics and shared methodologies, but also the As Lorge sees it, deeper historical knowledge can both enrich martial artists’ practice and
production of (new) academic subjects – i.e., individual scholars with a recognisable clearly illustrate to the academic community the value of martial arts as a valid topic of
disciplinary identity, conferred or established reciprocally in the process of emergence of the academic study. I believe it is possible to concede Lorge’s points and still argue for the value
discourse itself. and necessity of theory ‘before’ or ‘beneath’ this.

martialartsstudies.org 7
MARTIAL The Definition of Martial Arts Studies
ARTS STUDIES Paul Bowman

Approaching Martial Arts Studies for martial arts. Most famously, of course, Richard Burton in the 19th
century and Donn Draeger later in the 20th century attempted to found
Before following through on this, some further reflection on my and ground an academic discipline that they called ‘hoplology’ [for an
opening anecdote seems called for. Ironically, even back at the time overview, see Spencer 2011]. However, this or these projects repeatedly
of this brush between my work and two border guards at the gates foundered. The question is: why?
of a then unclear and embryonic field, I had already long accepted
Roland Barthes’ argument that readers can and will have very different Even more pertinently, perhaps, is the related question of why a
responses to the same text [Barthes 1977]. But I had never encountered connected field of martial arts studies took until today to begin to
such symmetrically opposed opinions from scholars I had presumed emerge at all. Consider the fact that over the last two decades it became
must work to some degree in the ‘same’ area – i.e., holding an academic increasingly easy to carry out online academic searches and to discover
interest in ‘martial arts’ refracted through one or another approach of that all sorts of different kinds of studies of all sorts of issues involving
the arts or humanities. The vastly differing verdicts surprised me even martial arts are being carried out across a surprising number of different
though I already believed I knew that academic disciplines are spaces of disciplines. Yet there have been few sustained dialogues and fewer
argumentation and disagreement rather than consensus. Today, I am dedicated spaces for the academic study of martial arts.3
no longer surprised by the appearance of such difference in what is still
a very young and uncertain field. Indeed, as mentioned, encountering My contention is that the matter of the approach or paradigm is central
extreme disciplinary differences is currently our daily bread. The to both questions. It relates not only to all failed past attempts to
question is: is such diversity simply something to be either shrugged off establish any kind of martial arts studies but also to the stubborn non-
or celebrated, or might it harbour a problem? What might it mean if the appearance of martial arts studies until today, despite scattered studies
object and field of martial arts studies continues to be conceived of very of martial arts in diverse disciplines.
differently by different people from different disciplinary backgrounds?
In short, is it a problem that we are still frequently experiencing such To consider the recent situation first: there is a sense in which the
widely differing approaches to the academic study martial arts? very heterogeneity of the ways of approaching martial arts – the very
richness of the potential field – may paradoxically have played a part
On the one hand, no. There will always be disciplinary difference, and in preventing the creation of a single interconnected, interacting
even vast differences in conceptuality and orientation within ‘the same’ field. The logic of this proposition is as follows: the creation of an
discipline or field. Different academic origins and kinds of training academic discourse requires the emergence of shared problematics and
bring with them differing questions, differing objects of attention, discussions around – at the very least – matters of which questions
differing values, methods, and so on. And for the foreseeable future, are to be asked and which methodologies are best suited for their
martial arts studies will inevitably be built from work and approaches exploration. Yet, in recent decades, although there have been a great
hailing from different disciplines. Moreover, no-one will ever be number of academic studies on all manner of things to do with martial
surprised, for instance, if a study of martial arts as they appear in one arts, no single field or conversation has emerged, because of the very
or more works of literature differs significantly from a study focused heterogeneity of approaches to radically heterogeneous questions.4
on questions of experiments in or around pedagogy [compare Liu 2011
with Lefebvre 2016 for instance]. So where might the problem come in?

Far be it from me to advocate any kind of unitary, univocal, mono-


3 The long-running Electronic Journals of Martial Arts and Sciences is a
disciplinary or monoculturalist approach in martial arts studies. That noteworthy project that has attempted to construct such dialogues and spaces (http://
would be neither desirable nor possible. Nonetheless, in order for a ejmas.com/). I defer a discussion of this project here, however, in order to focus on more
field or discipline to emerge and survive, there must be coherent and ‘stark’ examples, at this time, for clarity.
meaningful internal (community) and external (cross-disciplinary)
4 Moreover, far from informing, enlivening and expanding academic discourses
discourses and exchanges. In order for this to happen, the matter of
on martial arts, the heterogeneity of approaches and diversity of kinds of work actually
what we might call ‘the approach’ is important. There are stakes and
seems to have prevented many people from reading, engaging, or even being aware of the
consequences attached to the matter of the paradigms that organise our plethora of academic literature being produced on martial arts across the disciplines. Works
efforts. continue to appear that present themselves as if they are the first to deal with the martial
arts. Whether proceeding by making grand proclamations to this effect or by lacking a basic
To illustrate, one might briefly consider the possible reasons for the literature review, the net result is the same. (Thanks to Ben Judkins for making this point in
repeated failure of attempts to create a field of academic study of and personal email communication.)

8 Winter 2016
MARTIAL The Definition of Martial Arts Studies
ARTS STUDIES Paul Bowman

What seems key to disciplinary emergence is a sense of a shared project. and its flawed theoretical orientations – in other words, its flawed
But, this does not mean that a field demands a unitary or univocal paradigm and approach.
approach. Far from it. Taking too limited a conception of the object
and of the field, particularly when this is combined with too limited There are many possible ways to illustrate the conceptual and
or problematic an approach, can equally stymie growth. This might orientation problems at the heart of hoplology. But for the sake of
be illustrated by a consideration of perhaps the most well-known past brevity and clarity I will limit myself to one quick example. This is
attempt to establish a field for the academic study of martial arts – taken from the front page text of the International Hoplology Society
hoplology. website,5 which proudly trumpets the ‘three axioms of hoplology’.
These three axioms are:

Hoplological Hopes 1. The foundation of human combative behavior is rooted in


our evolution. To gain a realistic understanding of human
Hoplology is surely the most famous example of the failure of martial combative behavior, it is necessary to have a basic grasp of its
arts studies to attain a stable and sustainable academic presence. evolutionary background.
According to the website of the International Hoplology Society,
hoplology was founded by Sir Richard F. Burton in the 19th century. 2. The two basic forms of human combative behavior are
However, it then (says the website) ‘remained dormant’, until Donn predatory and affective. Predatory combative behavior is
Draeger picked up the baton at some unspecified point, after the that combative/aggressive behavior rooted in our evolution
1960s, a baton he carried until his death [‘About the International as a hunting mammal. Affective combative behavior is that
Hopology Society’ 2016]. The International Hoplology Society is aggressive/combative behavior rooted in our evolution as a
now based in Hawaii, and presents itself as ‘an independent, not-for- group-social animal.
profit organization’ which ‘offers its services to scholars, universities,
museums, collectors, private and governmental organizations, writers 3. The evolution of human combative behavior and
and publishers around the world’ [‘About the International Hopology performance is integral with the use of weapons. That is,
Society’ 2016]. behavior and performance is intrinsically linked to and
reflects the use of weapons.
Given this evidence of its continued and current existence, readers may
be surprised by my claim that hoplology is a failed academic project. [‘About the International Hopology Society’ 2016]
Hoplology still exists. The published work of Donn Draeger itself is
of mythic status in most narratives of the history of Western attempts From an academic point of view, the fundamental problem with
to establish serious and reliable scholarly knowledge of East Asian these axioms is that they are not academic. Rather, they are tenets,
martial arts. Nonetheless, what provides the clearest evidence that beliefs, and assertions. They may appear scientific on first glance, but
the project failed is the lack of any significant academic presence for they are actually scientistic. Specifically, they reflect an attempt to
hoplology. It is neither a discipline, nor a discourse, nor an unfolding align hoplology with the controversial (and equally dubious) field of
research programme, nor an interdisciplinary nexus of debate. The sociobiology [Wilson 1975], which itself has long been accused of
fact that hoplology continues to haunt us in the form of the hopes and scientism and biological determinism, among other things [Schreier
aspirations of its proponents does not change the fact that as a field of
study it never really made it to where any such field of study most wants
to be – the university. The university was always where Draeger and
other proponents wanted hoplology to be. But it never really made it.

It ‘never really made it’ for lots of different kinds of reasons. There were
of course both personal and ‘political’ elements at work that arguably
hampered Draeger’s attempts to get hoplology into a university 5 Although focusing on such an example may be open to the criticism that it
[Miracle 2015]. But my contention is that, more significantly, there has not been taken from a properly academic context and so should not be subjected to
have always been fundamental obstacles to its academic survival, and academic critique, nonetheless this example has been selected because these are words
that these have always boiled down its flawed conceptions of its object that have been placed ‘front and centre’ and presented as expressing the heart of the
hoplological academic project.

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et al. 2016; Bethell 2016].6 The function of these scientific-sounding This article seeks to contribute to such a reflection, by moving away
‘axioms’ on the homepage is to gesture to the society’s declared from failed projects like hoplology and discussing instead some
commitment to scholarship and research. Unfortunately, this gesture significant recent contributions to the crucial debate about what martial
actually demonstrates the opposite: it reveals its constitutively arts studies is and how it might elaborate itself and develop. Before
doctrinaire orientation. As such, the text commits quite a few academic engaging with these, however, it will be worthwhile to give some more
crimes, which all effectively add up to a kind of unintentional (but attention to the matter of the significance for academic discourses of
certain) self-ostracising and auto-abdication from the world of serious differing approaches and values.
academic debate and discussion.

Of course, neither Burton nor Draeger were the author of these Moving from ‘Thing Itself’ to ‘Field Itself’
words. But it is clear that the table was already set and the door opened
to welcome them in advance by the kinds of approach common to One helpful way to understand why differences of opinion and
hoplology since the beginning. This is such a limited raison d’être, orientation will always occur within academic disciplines and discourses
articulated with reference to and in terms of a very limited and is proposed by arch-poststructuralist Jacques Derrida [Derrida and
problematic deployment of an already problematic set of contentions. Ferraris 2003]. Derrida proposes that academic fields are essentially
So it will always be highly unlikely to pass as academic in any field or always at war with themselves. The reason for this is that they
context. Few, if any, 21st or even 20th century academic journals, for essentially construct both their own objects and approaches and their
instance, would accept any allegedly academic article that proceeded own yardsticks for evaluating them. In this sense, a discipline essentially
according to such ‘axioms’ (as the case of Gottschall, discussed in the ‘constructs the object of argumentation and the field of argumentation
earlier footnote, illustrates [Gottschall 2015]). itself’ [Arditi 2008: 115]. There is no immutable or incontestable
fixed point outside of the discipline’s own discourse from which to
Rather than this, in order to thrive within academia, what is required is adjudicate anything that takes place within it. But what takes place
something very different. Specifically, martial arts studies must emerge within it depends on a host of variables, including preferences in terms
as a coherent communicative self-sustaining field of meaningful and of premises, protocols, practices, procedures, and so on. Therefore,
productive exchanges and interactions that might be diversely relevant. Derrida proposes that:
To do so it will be necessary to undertake a sustained and explicit
examination of and engagement with the stakes and consequences of A field is determined as a field of battle because there is no
the different conceptualisations, orientations and methods available metalanguage, no locus of truth outside the field, no absolute
to the field. This implies a sustained reflection on premises, remits, and ahistorical overhang; and this absence of overhang – in
orientations and methods, along with ongoing dialogues with other other words, the radical historicity of the field – makes the
disciplines and the principled awareness of other established and field necessarily subject to multiplicity and heterogeneity. As
unfolding approaches across academia. Any conceptualisation of the a result, those who are inscribed in this field are necessarily
field that starts out as an apologetic exercise for only a single set of inscribed in a polemos, even if they have no special taste for
assumptions or methods by definition cannot do this, and will be highly war. There is a strategic destiny, destined to stratagem by the
unlikely to attract wider academic interest. question raised over the truth of the field.
[Derrida and Ferraris 2003: 13]

6 The semi-autobiographical pseudo-academic book, The Professor in the Cage: Any academic field is ‘a field of battle because there is no metalanguage,
Why Men Fight and Why We Like To Watch by Jonathan Gottschall, is perhaps the most no locus of truth outside the field’. This ‘makes the field necessarily
well-known recent iteration of this kind of deeply problematic approach [Gottschall 2015]. subject to multiplicity and heterogeneity’. Hence, when faced with
The book, appropriately, starts from the failure of an English professor’s ongoing project to divergent opinions or evaluations of any given approach, argument,
persuade anyone to use ideas from evolutionary biology in literary studies. From this failure, assessment or experiment within a field, there can be no simple appeal
Gottschall turns to his stagnating academic career and the birth of his interest in MMA. In to any higher authority outside the field.7 After all, how could anyone
all of this, the book applies simplistic sociobiologistic ideas to the subject of ‘fighting’. There
is much that might be said about the limitations and skewing effects of all such pseudo-,
crypto- and actual sociobiologistic approaches, and they warrant sustained critique. But such
7 During the 1980s, much was made of the fact that such a perspective reveals
critiques should be careful to avoid being dragged into a scientistic cul-de-sac. There are far
that there is always an aporia at work in the legitimation of knowledge [Derrida 1992],
better approaches to ‘fighting’ available than those which rush naively and crudely to ideas
a kind of ineradicable tautology, and even what Lyotard called a ‘legitimation crisis in
of evolutionary advantage [see for example Gong 2015; Jackson-Jacobs 2013].
knowledge’ [Lyotard 1984 (1979)].

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outside of a field be universally acknowledged as existing or operating Again, these are battles around the question of the paradigm (or
in an informed, experienced or expert enough fashion to adjudicate paradigms) that structure a field. The choice of paradigm determines
on what takes place within the field? Do scientists ask philosophers the kind of questions that can be asked, the type of work that will
to adjudicate on and decide the value of their methods and findings? seem to ‘need’ to be done, and the ways in which such work will be
Do lawyers? Kant thought that all fields could be interrogated and in a approached.
sense audited by philosophy. But do those working in fields other than
philosophy agree? Indeed, do philosophers really (still) feel entitled, Reflecting on the ways that academic disciplines and universities
informed or expert enough to do so?8 work, Derrida argued that what takes place within academic discourses
involves ‘not an opposition between the legitimate and the illegitimate,
Of course, there are many crossovers and connections between certain but rather a very complicated distribution of the demands of legitimacy’
fields. Work in one discipline often incorporates elements developed [Derrida 2003: 18]. At the very least, then, the determination of such
in other disciplines. Economics is often heavily involved in the use matters as best versus worst is no simple matter. It does not easily come
of mathematics, for instance. And the academic study of visual art down to a clear question of whether something is ‘right’ or ‘wrong’. For,
regularly calls upon the approaches and insights of such fields as history, if there is no fixed point outside of and transcending the field, then the
philosophy, cultural theory, sociology, and so on. But such crossovers, source of the determination of such values can only come from within
connections or collaborations are neither entirely free, nor inevitable, the field itself – from among the paradigms constructed within it.
nor established without a battle or disagreement. Rather, such
connections are contingent achievements, produced either through a The problem is that because there will always be more than one
sense of ‘obviousness’ (or appeals to norms – as in, ‘of course the study paradigm in play (and in process), there will be no sustained consensus
of art and the study of history overlap and interact’) or through the arising within the field. In a sense, there are only ever shared, modified
effort of making the case for the validity of their connection (as in, or replaced problematics, and rarely any widely held consensus about
‘perhaps recent advances in meteorology could be applied to help us the formulation of the object, the parameters of the problem, or the
learn more about cultural dynamics’). framework for any exploration or method of approach.

Currently, art history rarely appeals to mathematics for justification or The proposition that academic disciplines are battlegrounds may either
corroboration of the knowledge produced in its own disciplinary space. disappoint or delight. It may disappoint those who cleave to the idea
Although it is not impossible or inconceivable, any move to make the that academic disciplines principally trade in the establishment of
discourse or discipline of art history reliant upon mathematics – or truth about reality, and that they find out and know more and more
subject to any kind of mathematical validation – would be met with about truth and reality as time goes on, as the discipline progresses.
considerable resistance within that field. To propose that the academic Conversely, the idea of disciplines as battlegrounds may appeal to
discourse around fine art, art history, and so on, should be subject to others, and for any number of reasons. However, it is important to
mathematical procedures would provoke a vehement battle. But the point out that the type of ‘war’ being formulated by Derrida here is
point to be made here is that this battle would merely be different in not some Darwinian or neoliberal notion of ‘survival of the fittest’.
scale or intensity, not kind, from the ongoing day to day disagreements Rather, Derrida is making a claim about the inevitable and inescapable
within the academic study of fine art and art history around such emergence of pluralities of voices, positions and styles of attempting to
matters as whether, say, the psychoanalytic paradigm developed in the establish or verify things within disciplines.
wake of the work of Jacques Lacan is of more use to art scholars than
the sociological paradigm of Pierre Bourdieu, and so on. This depicts a condition of incessant and interminable disagreement,
in which not only are there no absolute or eternal winners, there are
not even agreed criteria for determining what notions like ‘survival’,
‘demise’ or indeed ‘fittest’ might possibly mean. (Has hoplology
8 One reader of a draft of this article commented: ‘All the ones that I talk to ‘survived’? In what way? Is it ‘the fittest’? For what?) In this kind of
do!’ The reader then went on to suggest that faith in one’s methods to tackle any problem context, there will always be more to any disagreement than one
actually seems to be part of the nature of a discipline. Furthermore, the reader suggested,
matter or one issue. Indeed, ‘disagreement’, in this sense, can usefully
this may also be why so many researchers would rather bring their ‘tried and true’ methods
be formulated as follows – as ‘less a confrontation between two
to martial arts studies than stop to ask ‘Is this question significant, and is this method an
appropriate lens for addressing it?’ This is so even though asking such questions seems to
established positions – as in the case of a debating society – than an
be such an important first step. engagement between “parties” that do not antedate their confrontation.
A disagreement constructs the object of argumentation and the field of
argumentation itself’ [Arditi 2008: 115].

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In academia, the mode and manner of our argumentation, as well as such questions as why and how. Different answers produce differing
the very object of our attention itself, must all be understood to be conceptualisations of the aim, object and field, and entail different
essentially particular kinds of institutional construct. Our objects are approaches. So we need to ask: What are our aims? Which approaches
‘disciplinary objects’, essentially invented within, or at least ‘worked best serve such aims?
over’ by our own discourses [Mowitt 1992]. Our approaches to them
are constructs too. This is so even though many people seem to believe In the terms of Thomas Kuhn’s now classic approach to understanding
that academic disciplines and fields just happen; that they are born the ways that academic knowledge is produced, established and
spontaneously or emerge ineluctably in response to external realities of transformed, the emergent field of martial arts studies would currently
the world. However, this is not at all the case. Academic subjects are not be classified as ‘pre-paradigmatic’ [Kuhn 1962; Nicholls 2010]. This is
born, they are made.9 because there is little to no consensus about its objects, orientations,
methodologies or approaches. Some connections, crossovers and
collaborations across disciplines are being formed, thanks to newly
The Paradigms of Martial Arts Studies formed research networks, conferences and increasingly visible
publications. But the wider field has long been confined to discrete
In light of this, it is important to realise that an early and essential islands of disparate disciplinary approaches in small enclaves. So,
challenge for the nascent field of martial arts studies was always going although some scholars are now producing works that engage with the
to be the field itself. That is to say, at the same time as exploring and question of the approaches and paradigms of martial arts studies, there
engaging with problematics within the field, it is also necessary to more remains much that still needs to be done to establish anything like a
clearly and indeed securely establish martial arts studies first as a field coherent topos.10
of study, and then as a legitimate field of study [Bowman 2015a; Wetzler
2015]. There is much to be said about this. But what I principally want to
argue in what follows – in an argument that runs contrary or transverse
This matter may not seem to amount to too much of a serious problem, to many discussions and impulses in and around the field – is that none
given the abundant empirical evidence that martial arts studies is a field of this entails a ‘need’ to define martial arts.
that is mushrooming internationally. There are currently conferences
and publications appearing in many languages in many countries.
But the fact that this is happening without much in the way of a Against Definition
conversation about how to study martial arts is troubling [Bowman
2015a; Wetzler 2015; Judkins 2016a]. History is littered with failed There is a widespread belief in and around the nascent discourses of
attempts to establish any kind of coherent and sustainable academic martial arts studies that a primary and orientating task must be to define
discourse of martial arts studies. As I have been suggesting, perhaps this martial arts [Monahan 2007; Cynarski 2008; Lorge 2012; Channon and
is in large part because of a lack of sustained communal effort to forge Jennings 2014; Cynarski, Sieber, and Szajna 2014; Lorge 2016]. The
conceptual development via cross-disciplinary dialogues. matter of defining martial arts has also prompted some valuable recent
reflections on the many problems and issues that it raises [Wetzler
Moreover, in the present moment, we should not forget that until very 2015; Judkins 2016b; Channon 2016]. However, I want to intervene
recently, one of the most frequently posed questions in and around by arguing that this very belief and orientation harbours problems
these waters was: will martial arts ever be a valid topic of academic study? If [Bowman 2015a; Bowman 2016b]. More precisely, my argument is that
today we are hearing a resounding ‘yes!’, there nonetheless remain not
only ‘strictly academic’ but also ‘pressingly practical’ reasons for posing
10 Hence the importance of the question of the paradigms of martial arts
studies. From the outset, we must pluralise the question because it is evident from the
range of scholarship and avenues of enquiry currently beginning to be explored across the
9 There are many accounts of these processes. See, for example, Anderson disciplines that differing conceptualisations of both object and field emerge reciprocally
on the formation of English Literature as a global discipline [Anderson 1991], Hall on with different approaches and orientations. To establish the paradigms of martial arts
the formation of cultural studies [Hall 1992], Fabian on how anthropology constructs its studies, one approach would be to map current approaches, analyse their orientations and
objects [Fabian 1983], Chow on the invention of film studies [Chow 2007], or, perhaps most interrogate their current and potential interconnections, in order to generate an overarching
famously, Foucault on the invention of psychiatry [Foucault 1989 (1963)]. Indeed, as one awareness of the field in its multiplicity and heterogeneity. Of course, the question that
commentator put it to me: why should there be a field of martial arts studies, distinct from arises here is that of the map itself: what are the characteristics of the lens through which
the wider study of movement, performance and embodied knowledge? the cartographer is looking?

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it is actually an error to think that forging definitions must be primary, For Theory
or indeed even necessary, in academic work. Often, the belief in the
necessity of definition is already an effect of a tacit acceptance that a Fortunately, early work in the recently established journal Martial
certain manner, mode or register of academic discourse must be the Arts Studies has, from the outset, attempted to move beyond the
proper, best or necessary method. Indeed, it arguably boils down to a (dis)orientation caused by becoming trapped in the taxonomical
belief that the only or best kind of academic work is scientific, and that labours associated with defining. Issue one of Martial Arts Studies,
science starts from definitions. for instance, contained several different efforts to conceptualise the
field and to work out ways that it could profitably and productively
There are at least two problems with this. One problem lies with any develop [Bowman 2015b; Wetzler 2015; Farrer 2015; Barrowman
attempt to make studies of human life, culture and society emulate 2015]. Significant among these is Sixt Wetzler’s ‘Martial Arts Studies
‘science’. In our case, this would take the form of trying to force the as Kulturwissenschaft: A Possible Theoretical Framework’ [Wetzler
study of martial arts to conform to a certain (scientistic) conception of 2015].12 This article is a particularly notable contribution to the field, so
science. For it is important to be aware that scientific approaches are I would now like to turn to it.
neither the only nor necessarily the best, nor sometimes even viable
approaches. (Must we use scientific methods to explore martial arts In his article, Wetzler carries out a number of important tasks. He
in/and literature, film, music, gaming, philosophy, religion, gender, identifies the pitfalls that can arise when academics use the object-,
identity, or politics, and so on?) The second problem relates to the idea folk-, or practitioner-language of the practices that they are taking as
that science starts with definitions. This involves a misunderstanding of their objects of study. From here he broaches the problem of adequate
science. Science starts from theory. Scientific method always and only academic terminology, asking: what terms should scholars use when
boils down to the attempt to test, verify or falsify a theory.11 Such work talking about this or that aspect of martial arts in/and/as culture,
often seems to involve numbers, but science does not necessarily involve politics, history or society? He argues that academic terms should
numbers. Some statements about science or elements of it involve surely not be the same as the terms and concepts used by practitioners
numbers. But what is primary in science is theory. themselves, either to characterise what they do or to carve up the
conceptual spectrum of categories and hierarchies. This discussion
On the other hand, or at the other end of the supposed spectrum of moves Wetzler into a reflection on the well-worn problems of
approaches, even putatively non-scientific approaches to any subject conceptualisation and – surprise, surprise – definition.
also involve theory – whether consciously acknowledged or not, and
whether the theory is postulated explicitly (to orientate the work) In an important move, however, rather than arguing for or against this
or whether it emerges out of the work, through different kinds of or that definition of martial arts, Wetzler deconstructs and reveals the
encounter with ‘objects’, ‘things’, ‘processes’, ‘phenomena’ or ‘stuff’ – limits of a range of conventional and popular categories that circulate
and regardless of whether we want to call such stuff ‘text’, ‘evidence’, within martial arts discourses, and points to the essential impossibility
‘material’, ‘archive’, ‘fieldwork’, ‘results’ or ‘data’. The belief that such of establishing fixed referential categories in these waters [28]. He
encounters, or any results or statements about any of this, necessarily or proposes instead that martial arts studies analyses should be orientated
properly begins or ends with ‘definition’ is a misunderstanding. As such, by looking for and at the ‘dimensions of meaning’ attendant to any
any approach that positions the matter of how to define martial arts as given construct of martial arts. To this end he proposes five plausible
if it is a primary or somehow fundamental question is misconceived or but always provisional dimensions of meaning: preparation for violent
badly formed. conflict, play and competitive sports, performance, transcendent goals,
and health care. After making a case for these dimensions and inviting
As Alex Channon has recently reminded us (although he argues for the others to expand or refine his conceptualisation of them, Wetzler turns
utility of principled moments of definition), definitions quickly produce to the matter of how to conceive of, frame, and conceptually manage
hierarchies, and help to erect values, borderlines, norms and exclusions (in order to analyse and discuss) matters of martial arts studies without
[Channon 2016]. falling into what Derrida would call ‘metaphysical traps’, what cultural
theorists would call ‘essentialism’, and what Wetzler calls the pitfalls of
‘lexical illusion’.
11 One reviewer of this article challenged my use of the word ‘verify’ here, as
it jars with scientific terminology. However, I have elected to keep the word, because my
thinking is more influenced by Jacques Rancière than by scientific method per se. Rancière 12 My own contribution was entitled ‘Asking the Question: Is Martial Arts Studies
argues that attempts to establish, prove or argue for something – anything, anywhere – an Academic Field?’ [Bowman 2015b] In this article, I stopped short of explicitly addressing
ultimately involve constructing ways of trying to verify (rather than falsify) the proposition, the question of which particular theories or approaches the field might involve (even
position or belief one is supporting [see for instance Rancière 1992]. though my preferences were surely readily inferable).

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The way to avoid making conceptual mistakes, Wetzler argues, is to category ‘tough combat sport’, in this case by kickboxing,
find an adequate theory. The one he proposes as valid and viable for which was replaced by Muay Thai, which was replaced by
martial arts studies is Even-Zohar’s polysystem theory. Wetzler quotes MMA. However, not all is lost for karate. When the style held
the following important passage from Even-Zohar: the centre of the self-defence system, it also had a connotation
of being a pastime for bullies and hooligans. While losing the
Systems are not equal, but hierarchized within the polysystem. centres of those systems karate was able to gain ground in the
It is the permanent struggle between the various strata … systems including ‘martial arts for pedagogical purposes’ and
which constitutes the (dynamic) synchronic state of the system. ‘self-perfection by Eastern practices’ (both systems obviously
It is the victory of one stratum over another which constitutes representing Dimension 4: Transcendent Goals), whose centres
the change on the diachronic axis. In this centrifugal vs. it shares today with other Japanese budo styles, along with
centripetal motion, phenomena are driven from the centre to yoga, qigong, and various meditation practices in the second
the periphery while, conversely, phenomena may push their case.
way into the centre and occupy it. However, with a polysystem [Wetzler 2015: 28]
one must not think in terms of one centre and one periphery,
since several such positions are hypothesized. A move may take Wetzler’s ensuing discussion of the insights that such an approach
place, for instance, whereby a certain item (element, function) opens up is extremely suggestive and rewarding – even though it does
is transferred from the periphery of one system to the not broach the matter of how anyone might ever establish what is at
periphery of an adjacent system within the same polysystem, the ‘centre’, ‘periphery’ or other ‘position’ of this or that ‘system’ – all
and then may or may not move on to the centre of the latter. of which will surely always be in question. Nonetheless, it has already
[Even-Zohar 1990: 13-14, quoted in Wetzler 2015: 28-9] generated (or at least enriched) some highly significant work, most
notably in the form of Benjamin N. Judkins’ recent study of the Star
Then Wetzler explains how this theoretical paradigm might be used in Wars inspired phenomenon of Lightsaber combat [Judkins 2016a].
martial arts studies:
Using the ‘five dimensions of meaning’ that Wetzler proposes can be
Transferred to the development of the Asian martial arts associated with martial arts practices in different configurations at
in Western culture within recent decades, this means: The different times and in different places, Judkins easily demonstrates that
total realm of the martial arts is the polysystem in question, the perhaps unlikely pastime of Lightsaber combat training can in fact
which can itself be understood as a system within the ultimate entirely reasonably be classed as a martial art. This is so even though
polysystem ‘culture’. The cultural meaning of the polysystem such a conclusion might surprise or dismay certain scholars of martial
‘martial arts’ is not monolithic, but instead consists of several arts and even if many of Lightsaber combat’s own practitioners would
systems that each have their own relevance within the not feel entirely comfortable making such a claim.
polysystem. Such systems might be ‘use for self-defence’ or
‘preferred way of combat for the silver screen’, while the ‘items’ Judkins’ approach to the quite possibly controversial example of
that occupy these systems are the individual martial arts styles. Lightsaber combat, informed by Wetzler’s intentionally rigorous
[28] (looking) framework, has the benefit of challenging quite a few
different positions – including, most importantly, any essentialist or
Furthermore, the theory seems to offer ways to conceptually grasp ‘referentialist’ approach that proceeds on the assumption that something
change within and across systems. Wetzler continues: is a martial art if it is somehow ‘obviously’ a martial art. So, such works
as these by Wetzler and Judkins – along with the arguably even more
To clarify with an example: Upon its arrival in the West, radical approach of recent work by Chris Goto-Jones, which argues that
karate was perceived mostly for the Dimension 1: Preparation certain kinds of computer gaming can become martial arts practices
for Violent Conflict, and thus at the centre of the system ‘self- [Goto-Jones 2016] – are all valuable, and not least because they
defence’. However, it has been driven to the periphery of ‘self- foreground the limitations of any hasty attempt to define martial arts.
defence’ by other styles, especially by wing chun, which was Moreover, not only do such approaches all problematize the impulse to
then in turn driven from the centre by krav maga. Regarding rush to definitions, they also do so without sidestepping or avoiding the
the perception of Dimension 2: Play and Competitive Sports, issue of how to specify and handle martial arts as an object of academic
karate was again driven from a centre, this time of the attention.

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For my purposes, a key value in this work is the demonstration of the recurrently, in making appear – in each alleged system, in each
primacy and productivity of theory before definition. Such frameworks self-interpretation of and by a system – a force of dislocation, a
clearly exceed the frames and orientations of hoplology, for instance, limit in the totalization, a limit in the movement of syllogistic
which is mired in inessential preconceptions and doxa. As such, it is synthesis. Deconstruction is not a method for discovering that
in full support of Wetzler’s efforts and in broad agreement with the which resists the system; it consists, rather, in remarking, in
orientations of such scholars that my present contribution to this the reading and interpretation of texts, that what has made
debate about definition and theory aspires be read. This is so even it possible for philosophers to effect a system is nothing
though my own contribution does involve criticisms of Wetzler’s other than a certain dysfunction or ‘disadjustment’, a certain
proposed theoretical paradigm for martial arts studies. But these incapacity to close the system. Wherever I have followed this
are less like fundamental disagreements and more like questions for investigative approach, it has been a question of showing that
further consideration. Importantly, any criticisms I have will neither the system does not work, and that this dysfunction not only
be ‘anti-theory’ nor ‘pro-definition’. Rather, in what follows, I seek less interrupts the system but itself accounts for the desire for
to disagree with Wetzler and more to point out some potential pitfalls system, which draws its élan from this very disadjoinment, or
and problems attendant to any avoidance of theory or insistence on disjunction. On each occasion, the disjunction has a privileged
definition in martial arts studies. site in that which one calls a philosophical corpus. Basically,
deconstruction as I see it is an attempt to train the beam of
analysis onto this disjointing link.
Defining Problems: Relationality before Definition [Derrida 2003: 3-4]

A well-known part of the problem that arises when trying to define Systems fail to be systematic; system is impossible. This also accounts
the objects or foci of martial arts studies is semiotic openness, slippage, for the desire for it, and the possibility of the deconstruction of it.
instability and the incessant ongoing changes that take place across Adding ‘poly’ to the word ‘system’ does not solve, resolve or dissolve the
cultures, communities, societies, technologies and practices. Wetzler matter. Pluralizing merely defers acknowledging the fact that there may
tackles this by proposing a framework for structuring academic inquiry be no system other than in the ‘lexical illusion’ of the eye that wishes to
and proffering a set of theoretical terms for grasping what he represents perceive/believe that there is systematic organisation and some kind of
as ‘systemic’ but what I would prefer to call discursive change. I prefer systematic process at work, even if we can only ever ‘discover’ (invent)
to approach the world in terms of the language of texts and discourses it afterwards.
rather than elements, functions, systems and polysystems, and so
on, for ontological reasons that boil down to the primacy (proposed As an alternative to what Derrida would call ‘metaphysical’ thinking
by poststructuralist theory) of relationality, rather than the notion of about systems, the poststructuralist notions of text and discourse
‘system’ or even ‘systematicity’. As Derrida writes of ‘system’: provide alternative concepts, metaphors, vocabularies and paradigms
[Laclau and Mouffe 1985; Mowitt 1992; Bowman 2007]. Key here
If by ‘system’ is meant – and this is the minimal sense of the are the notions of relation or relationality, on the one hand, and force,
word – a sort of consequence, coherence and insistence – a on the other. It seems worthwhile to discuss these notions further,
certain gathering together – there is an injunction to the as they are important dimensions, but they are currently un- or at
system that I have never renounced, and never wished to. This least underdeveloped in Wetzler’s proposed framework for analysis in
can be seen in the recurrence of motifs and references from martial arts studies.
one text to another in my work, despite the differing occasions
and pretexts…. ‘System’, however, in a philosophical sense that To start with the matter of relation first. Can an identity ever be said
is more rigorous and perhaps more modern, can also be taken to be anything other than relational? As Ernesto Laclau and Chantal
to mean a totalization in the configuration, a continuity of all Mouffe argued in the 1980s, ‘identities are purely relational’ so ‘there
statements, a form of coherence (not coherence itself), involving is no identity which can be fully constituted’ [Laclau and Mouffe
the syllogicity of logic, a certain syn which is no longer simply 1985: 111; Bowman 2007: 18-19]. Already this kind of perspective,
that of gathering in general, but rather of the assemblage of with origins in Saussurean linguistics and semiotics, problematizes
ontological propositions. In that case deconstruction, without the notion of ‘elements’ within a ‘system’, and replaces the notion of
being anti-systematic, is on the contrary, and nevertheless, ‘entities with identities’ with a much more fluid sense of their ongoing
not only a search for, but itself a consequence of, the fact incompletion and irreducible contextuality.
that the system is impossible; it often consists, regularly or

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Almost two decades after his influential 1985 monograph with Chantal content with the moment of referring to entities and identities ‘through
Mouffe, in a dispute with Slavoj Žižek about politics and society, Laclau simple designations such as classes, ethnic groups and so on’: because
was still making the same arguments. In response to Žižek’s now such terms ‘are at best names for transient points of stabilization’.
infamous (and what Laclau always regarded as ill-thought-through) In other words, signification should not be studied in isolation from
adoption of a kind of crude Marxist and quick Leninist position on the considerations of force.13
question of how to make radical political change in the world, Laclau
argued that: So, Laclau’s broadly deconstructive perspective challenges us to
think about the making or establishment of any identity in a way that
We gain very little, once identities are conceived as complexly exceeds the lexical illusion of systematicity and emphasizes instead
articulated collective wills, by referring to them through the complexity of contingent processes of articulation [Laclau 1994].
simple designations such as classes, ethnic groups and so on, This differentiated perspective – which replaces ideas of structures and
which are at best names for transient points of stabilization. systems with those of iteration, reiteration, dissemination, dislocation,
The really important task is to understand the logics of and so on – forms the main part of my critique of the use of polysystem
their constitution and dissolution, as well as the formal theory in martial arts studies, or at least my critique of Wetzler’s
determinations of the spaces in which they interrelate. advocation of it. However, to reiterate, making such a critique is not
[Butler, Laclau, and Žižek 2000: 53] my primary aim here. Wetzler is a sparring partner, not an opponent.
Rather, the matters that I ultimately want to challenge are somewhat
Laclau pitched his argument about how to approach political entities, different.
identities and processes in terms of the vocabulary and concerns of
a poststructuralist and post-Marxist political theory, whose essential
proposition runs like this: because everything – and by ‘everything’ Changing Discourses
what is meant is everything – can be seen to be contingent and hence
conventional, then therefore everything is to be regarded as irreducibly Specifically, I want to point out that Laclau’s approach to discourse
political [Arditi and Valentine 1999; Marchart 2007]. analysis involves rather different investments than thinking about the
academic definition of any activity, entity or identity. Indeed, although
There is much to be said about this argument [Bowman 2007; Laclau’s argument here includes the injunction that academics be
Bowman 2008]. I return to it here not just as a rejoinder to Wetzler’s rigorous and forensic in their conceptual grasp of their key terms,
advocation of an irreducibly metaphorical use of ‘system’ (even though it is not limited to this injunction. Moreover, the position Laclau
he seems to present ‘system’ as if it is not metaphor but reality), but also advocates does not merely involve the endless or supposedly ‘useless’
because I believe it is vital (and vitalising) to try, as Laclau urges us, ‘to problematizing of terms (something deconstruction was once regularly
understand the logics of [the] constitution and dissolution [of entities accused of), whether to try to reconfigure and refine the definitions and
and identities], as well as the formal [or informal] determinations of the
spaces in which they interrelate’.
13 Laclau’s use of the word ‘stabilization’ here is significant. It seems to owe
This is important not least because, if ‘identities’ can also be understood something to the fact that Derrida once emphasised the importance of the ideas of
as ‘complexly articulated collective wills’, then to understand either stabilisation and destabilisation in a published conversation with Laclau in the 1990s
‘wills’ or ‘identities’ as arising ‘systematically’ could have a problematic [Mouffe 1996]. In his response to Laclau and others, Derrida said: ‘All that a deconstructive
impact on the way we understand such important matters as (for point of view tries to show, is that since convention, institutions and consensus are
example) political struggle. Stated bluntly, to rely on polysystem theory stabilizations (sometimes stabilizations of great duration, sometimes micro-stabilizations),
might cause us to follow a line of thinking in which political struggles this means that they are stabilizations of something essentially unstable and chaotic. Thus
it becomes necessary to stabilize precisely because stability is not natural; it is because
and political identities come to be conceived as somehow merely being
there is instability that stabilization becomes necessary; it is because there is chaos that
the systematic unfolding of some kind of predetermined plan.
there is a need for stability. Now, this chaos and instability, which is fundamental, founding
and irreducible, is at once naturally the worst against which we struggle with laws, rules,
This is why the notion of force is also key. Entities and identities are not conventions, politics and provisional hegemony, but at the same time it is a chance, a
just matters of signification, or of systems, but also of force. Force is chance to change, to destabilize. If there were continual stability, there would be no need
the other side of signification, a key part of the process of establishing for politics, and it is to the extent that stability is not natural, essential or substantial, that
meaning [Protevi 2001]. This is why Laclau believes we should not be politics exists and ethics is possible. Chaos is at once a risk and a chance, and it is here that
the possible and the impossible cross each other’ [Derrida 1996: 84].

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distinctions that academics use in their work or those that practitioners of someone doing taekwondo: that posture comes from taekwondo’.
use in their practice, or to show them to be impossible. The fact that taekwondo was only invented in the 1950s [Gillis 2008;
Moenig 2015] and that its patterns (or kata) were only subsequently
Rather, for Laclau – and indeed for the overwhelming majority of changed from the Japanese martial arts from which it was derived,
works of cultural theory developed through and since the 1980s – the seems to problematize the idea that an ancient statue may depict a
fundamental point to be taken on board is not that we should work taekwondo posture. The possibility that the taekwondo posture might
out how best to define something; it is rather that we must face up have been invented deliberately to depict the ancient statue in order
to the fact that ‘things’ are neither simply nor necessarily ‘things’: to strengthen the ideological claim that taekwondo is ancient was not
that all identities are at root contingent discursive achievements, really encouraged or entertained at all.15
or establishments, or, to use Laclau’s words, ‘transient points of
stabilization’.14 Entities and identities are discursive achievements, produced through
efforts and institutions, arguments, demonstrations, articulations,
Moreover, our shared use of a term like ‘martial arts’ or ‘system’ demonstrations, and indeed processes and acts of institution (where
stabilizes our discourse. But it can also impose and project a fixed ‘institution’ is to be read as both noun and verb). What something ‘is’
view – our present view – of all sorts of dimensions of culture emerges through forceful – often enforced – processes of narration
and society, both backwards in time and outwards across different and representation. ‘Mindfulness’ is an entirely modern construct.
linguistic, geographical, cultural, religious and social contexts. ‘Taekwondo’ is no older than the 1950s. The resignification of such
So, the establishment of a shared and stable term has its benefits institutions as ancient is an effect of the contingent but motivated
(predication and communication being among them). But it inevitably modes and manners of their discursive articulation and emergence.
also comes at a cost – which we might render in a number of ways,
including projection, simplification, hypostatisation, generalisation,
transformation, or even cultural, conceptual or linguistic imperialism. Optimistic Relations
Wetzler calls this ‘lexical illusion’. As in: we say ‘martial arts’ in English Theoretically, I have revisited some broadly poststructuralist points (all
here today, but did or do they say or mean anything like it there too) briefly here because I believe that remembering and taking into
(elsewhere) or then (elsewhen), without difference or remainder? consideration these lessons in our various ongoing research projects
Or are we misrecognising the things ‘out there’ (and ‘then’) that we into martial arts – and the international development of the field of
talk about in our terms, here and now? As an example, consider how martial arts studies – will allow us to move on, and specifically to move
frequently it is currently said that ‘mindfulness meditation’ has been on from a certain kind of fixation on definition. (Neither Wetzler nor
practiced within Eastern movement traditions and martial arts for Judkins suffers from this fixation, however, and my comments about
millennia. (Before we heard this said so much about mindfulness, we the problems with definition are not directed towards either of these
heard it said about qigong [Palmer 2007]. And before that, it was said scholars.)
about yoga [Spatz 2015]. And so on.) Such propositions are all based on
acts of fantasy and projection, back into a fantasized notion of ‘long, long I am drawing attention back to poststructuralist theory because, rather
ago’ [Fabian 1983]. than orientating and habituating us into an academic life of taxonomical
labours centred on defining and demarcating, such approaches proceed
Such acts of projection are clearly faulty. They also have any number from the proposition that identities are always irreducibly relational
of potential ideological dimensions and material and discursive effects. and incomplete, and hence contingent, open and ongoing. Identities are
Consider a second example. On a tour I was given during a visit to the constituted by and within discourses, and they always emerge as points
new Mecca of Taekwondo in South Korea, the Taekwondowon, our in clusters of moving constellations of related, contiguous, cognate,
guide pointed to a picture of an old statue and said, ‘look, this is a statue differentiated, associated, contrasting and oppositional terms, in all
kinds of possible relations – linguistic, semiotic, lived, institutional,
academic, legislative, and so on.
14 Accordingly, given that ‘martial arts studies’ takes its very name and focus
(‘martial arts’) from what Wetzler deems to be the dubious and problematic realm of ‘object
language’, there can therefore be no ‘metalanguage’ that is not contaminated by this fact. As 15 After my visit, I blogged about this here: https://goo.gl/FXVF6T. I also went on
Laclau and Mouffe argued in the 1980s, because there is never anything like a fixed centre, to discuss it in ‘Making Martial Arts History Matter’ [Bowman 2016] and in Mythologies of
stable system, or simple outside, there can be no metalanguage [1985]. Martial Arts [Bowman 2017].

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One point to be emphasised again is the role not just of lexical illusion Their more or less opposite opinion is that, on the contrary, what
but also of force within the construction of entities and identities. we all always need is an explicit theory. I say explicit theory, and not
Whether using what Wetzler terms object language or metalanguage, just ‘theory’, because, arguably, everyone always has a theory, even if
we always think through and with inherited terms, and hence they don’t consciously know what it is. By ‘explicit theory’, here, I am
conceptual differentials and differentiations – inheritances that we are referring to anything from an overarching theory of ontology to an
more or less forced to work with and, to some degree, within [Derrida actively thought-through image or sense (to use Laclau’s terms again)
1976 (1967)].16 of how discourses and identities are constituted, and the logics of their
processes of establishment, stabilization, interaction, transformation,
Now, although I am critical of the scramble for definitions, nonetheless, and dissolution.17
it strikes me that the growing prominence of the matter of definition
does attest to a lot that is promising in the current stage of development It is in this sense that I am arguing for more theory, an injection of
of martial arts studies. It is evidently a reflection of the drive to found theory, and the permeation of theory, before definition. But I am not
and ground and legitimate and build the field rigorously, and according proposing a return to the intellectual battles of the 1980s and 1990s, in
to proper academic protocols. To this extent, despite the scientistic which the introduction of Continental Philosophy into the humanities
features of some forays into this new terrain, our current moment is of led to a state of trench warfare between those who ‘did theory’ and
great significance. So we may be optimistic. However, in the current those who ‘did empirical work’ [Hall 2002]. Furthermore, although I am
rush to try to define and establish ‘things’, there is always the risk that arguing explicitly ‘for theory’, I want to be clear that I am certainly not
we labour under misapprehensions. My concern is that some of the therefore arguing ‘against empirical work’, or ‘history’, or ‘reality’, or
misapprehensions we see arising today may come to constitute an anything like that. Moreover, I would follow neither Žižek nor Derrida
obstacle or impediment in the development of the field tomorrow, nor anyone else who might ever position capital-T-Theory or capital-
pushing it towards becoming something dominated by what Žižek once P-Philosophy as the necessary start or end point of ‘proper’ academic
termed ‘naïve empiricism’ or ‘naïve cognitivism’ [Žižek 2001]. Decades work on martial arts.
before Žižek, Derrida too had worried about something similar, that he
called ‘incompetent’ and even ‘irresponsible’ empiricism [Derrida 2001 Rather, I want to insist that it will be vital and vitalising for work
(1967)]. in martial arts studies to embrace certain aspects of cultural theory,
especially when – as in the current moment – people seem to feel an
What such thinkers mean in making claims like ‘empiricism is naïve, apparent ‘need’ to do something properly academic, a need that so many
incompetent, or even irresponsible’ – is that there is a kind of untenable people seem to believe is to be interpreted as defining our object. For,
idealism and simplicity at the heart of approaches that begin from the faced with the (apparent) challenge of ‘needing’ to define, as we have
premise that to make sense of the world we should simply look around already seen, with even the tiniest bit of theory, we are able to pause
us, focus on things, classify them and count them; and that through a to reflect on the fact that before definition there is relation. Words and
process of testing and disputing around categories, we might eventually meanings and practices and values travel and twist and turn and
get at the truth of reality and get it right. change and move in relation to larger and other forces and processes.
These may or may not be systemic, systematic (Wetzler, Even-Zohar),
conjunctural (Hall), discursive processes of articulation (Laclau), or
16 Nonetheless, as Saussure taught us, when we are thinking about our
‘dislocated’, ‘out of joint’ or even ‘hauntological’ [Derrida 1994 (1993)],
linguistically instituted categories, first and foremost we must remember that there are only
and so on.
‘differences without positive terms’. Moreover, as Derrida went on to demonstrate, there
are no easily specifiable or simply stable referents ‘behind’ these differences. The flipside
of signification is force [Protevi 2001]. There is no stability in signification without force. All such theories would concur that martial arts will always be
Furthermore, as Gayatri Spivak added: the institution of any difference in the production of relationally determined. Laclau and Mouffe theorised this in terms
an identity in discourse, the drawing of any demarcation that distinguishes and hierarchizes of ‘discourse’ and ‘articulation’ [Laclau and Mouffe 1985]. Stuart
entities and identities, is essentially and irreducibly a political act, with more or less overtly Hall insisted on the need to establish a sense of what he called the
political consequences [Spivak 1990; Spivak 1993]. Such poststructuralists sometimes ‘conjuncture’. According to Hall, any analysis requires what he called
even formulate dimensions of this in terms of violence [Bowman 2010]. This means that, ‘conjunctural analysis’ – that is, an analysis informed by an acute
if we were to follow this logic through to one of its conclusions, it would become possible
to argue that more or less any identity is in some sense ‘martial’ (it has either been fought
for or fought against), as well as stabilized but conflictual. Within martial arts studies, quite 17 I use the word ‘sense’ here, because I think that we can only ever get an image,
what these acts and their consequences may be remains to be seen. But hopefully such sense or feeling for ontology anyway. I hesitate to say ‘structure of feeling’. This is because,
reflections as this may cause some hesitation, and possibly reorientation, before the battles as Derrida himself made clear, the very idea, term, notion or (possible) concept of ‘structure’
continue over this or that ‘correct definition’. is rarely ever much more than a metaphor anyway.

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awareness of the historical moment and context, and the forces and happily liberated from the stifling imperative to define and demarcate
relations that produced it. Without this, we cannot really know or without any real sense or sensitivity to the complexities of matters of
understand anything about any entity or identity, whether martial arts, time, place and the interplay of forces that both produce and transform
class, ethnicity, or any other kind of identity or entity in process. meanings, practices and contexts.

Of course, there may be many ways to characterise and analyse a To illustrate the value of this framework, we might quickly consider
conjuncture. As deconstruction sought to teach us, no context is ever one final example: the deliciously marginal or problematic case of
fully closed [Derrida 1988]; so we might never know for sure whether taijiquan. Using Williams’ approach, we will be able to reconfigure
we know for sure everything salient about a context or a conjuncture. discourse and debate about taijiquan, away from a sclerotic fixation
Maybe we can’t really know for sure that we know anything at all for on the question of whether it can even be ‘defined’ as a martial art or
sure. Yet what we can do is attempt to assess a context in terms of forces a combat sport, or self-defence, or a form of what we now insist on
and relations, relative weights and gravities, and the ways in which calling ‘mindfulness meditation’, etc., and into an understanding of
forces and fields constitute, colour and condition entities, identities and what ‘taijiquan’ has been and has done and might be and might do in a given
practices. This may not be too far from Wetzler’s proposed use of Even- conjuncture.18
Zohar’s polysystem theory – or it may be a world away.
As Douglas Wile has argued, taijiquan emerged in a discursive foment in
which China was threatened ideologically, economically and politically
Alternative Discourses [Wile 1996]. Its 19th century proponents elaborated its philosophy
along obscurely yet immanently nationalist lines, so that taijiquan came
In this article, I have proposed the necessity of theory for martial to stand in stark opposition to any and all things Western or European
arts studies, and entered into a critique of one proposed branch of [see also Lorge 2016]. In this process, residual Taoist ideas and
theory. I have done so because part of what needs to be theorised is the principles were mixed into a growing alternative worldview that was
orientation of the discipline’s discourse, and I would prefer to steer that oppositional to everything supposedly non-Chinese. This is also precisely
discourse as far away from anything approaching scientism as possible. why Maoism tolerated taijiquan, of course, and why it ‘survived’ the
My chief criticism of the tropes of ‘systems’ would be that this approach Cultural Revolution: it amounted in its elaboration to a collective,
risks pointing the discourse of martial arts studies back towards a combined, non-Western, non-competitive, non-individualistic
scientistic orientation. calisthenics avowedly rooted in a non-religious worldview. But this was
‘survival’ via a formalisation that amounted therefore to a mutation on
Given this criticism, an obvious question is what, therefore, my a genetic level. So, in a sense, post-Mao, the term taijiquan essentially
proposed alternative approach would be. My answer relates to my had a transformed meaning referring to a transformed practice [Frank
ongoing arguments from poststructuralism about the need for attention 2006].
not just to signification (‘dimensions of meaning’) but also to force, as in
the forms of different relations to and entanglements within different In its journey to the West, as we know, in the Western imaginary,
kinds of social, cultural, economic and other forms of power. taijiquan was ostensibly deracinated from any nationalistic inflection
or valence, and became articulated to (connected with) a range of
In Britain, Raymond Williams long ago proposed that it is possible open-ended discursive configurations or conjunctures: from the
to formulate and look at entities, practices and identities and to assess counterculture to new age ideology and onwards into therapeutic and
them in terms of whether they are dominant, residual or emergent, and even medical culture [Frank 2006]. In all this, it becomes differently
to ask whether they may be acting in ways that are either in line with articulated or constructed at different times and places, often existing
a dominant or hegemonic ideology, or whether they may be alternative with utterly contradictory and heterogeneous (non-systemic, non-
or even oppositional to it [Williams 1977]. This may seem like quite systematic) partial, immanent or potential meanings at the same time.
an old and crude paradigm. This kind of approach has certainly been Furthermore, any of those involved in taijiquan in any of its different
hugely refined and developed over the decades [Laclau and Mouffe
1985; Laclau 1994; Butler, Laclau, and Žižek 2000]. But I draw attention
to this seminal paradigm here because, even as simple as it is, it offers 18 Note again the way that we now ‘see’ ‘mindfulness’ everywhere, from
a viable and flexible framework through which many different kinds meditation in modern America to martial arts in ancient China, even though even a few
of studies of martial arts and society might be initiated. All of these are years ago we wouldn’t have seen anything as mindfulness, anywhere, because no one other
than a few specialists were using the term.

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times and places will believe themselves to be either or both learning a actually existing real and unitary things [Bowman 2012]. All meanings,
martial art, either or both for sport or for self-defence, and/or involved all practices, are stabilizations. The questions to be asked then surely
in healthful calisthenics, and/or preserving or changing a culture, and/ include explorations of why certain stabilizations take place at certain
or involved in a religious or mystical practice. And so on. times in certain ways, why some people often become so fixated on
fixation or stuck on stabilization, and what it is that both stabilization
We can multiply our examples, and look at the ways in which certain and destabilization are ‘doing’ in any given context at any given time.
words and moves have drifted and disseminated and flipped and
mutated all over the place, around the world, through time and space,
and examine the processes of their emergence and development within
each new context; the ways they become mixed up and mixed in with
existing concerns and outlooks, and reciprocally modify and move
existing situations. This may or may not be systemic or systematic.

I have mainly referred to the theoretical models of people like


Laclau, Derrida, Hall and Williams here. And I have done so mainly
because I believe that there is – to a greater or lesser extent – a kind
of theoretical ontology that connects their outlooks, despite their
many other differences. This outlook is essentially poststructuralist or
postfoundationalist [Sedgwick 2003].19 And as much as many people
may still have a distaste for so-called ‘high theory’, I maintain that
martial arts studies will only benefit from a sustained engagement with
what there is to be learned from high theory – as much as there is to be
learned from engaging with the most intimate ethnography, the most
detailed historiography, the most multi-layered sociology, and so on.

Some of the first lessons relevant to us here would relate to an


awareness of the slippage and vicissitudes of signification that require
us to pay very close attention to the shifting and drifting apparent
referents of our focus, their different meanings in different times
and places, the genetic mutations and quantum leaps that occur in
‘cultural translation’ from one time to another, one place to another,
one language to another, even one utterance or instance to the next,
and the rather frustrating fact that, despite our eternal desire to see
unity and simplicity, cultures and practices are always ‘in bits’, always
in process, incompletion, dispute and contestation. There is no unity
to the lexical illusion that guides us, whether it be martial arts, combat
sports, self-defence, culture or society – apart from that which seems to
be conferred by the use of such terms themselves.

Discussing such entities often has much in common with discussing


unicorns, fairies, justice, Father Christmas, or how many angels might
fit on the head of a pin or through the eye of a needle. Discussing such
things can create a ‘reality effect’ that can lead people to believe these are

19 Interestingly, Sedgwick [2003] also sees an affinity between poststructuralist


and Buddhist ontologies, and she ponders whether she is drawn to the former because of
her interest in the latter or to the latter because of her agreement with the former.

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martialartsstudies.org 23
CONTRIBUTORS Alex Channon is Senior Lecturer in Physical Education and Sport
Studies at the University of Brighton, UK. His research explores
various aspects of the relationship between sport, gender and the body,
with a particular focus on martial arts and combat sports. Alex is the
co-editor of Global Perspectives on Women in Combat Sports
[Palgrave Macmillan, 2015], and the co-founder of the anti-violence
initiative, Love Fighting Hate Violence [www.lfhv.org].
Catherine Phipps is a PhD student at the University of Greenwich, UK.
Her research explores LGBTQ+ inclusion in university-based sport,
with her wider research interests including gender and combat sports.
Catherine currently competes in boxing and muay thai.

PINK GLOVES STILL GIVE BLACK EYES


Exploring ‘Alternative’ Femininity in Women’s Combat Sports

ALEX CHANNON &


CATHERINE PHIPPS

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j.2017.10093 This article considers the gendered significance of women’s
participation in combat sports, with a specific focus on the
performances of femininity by female combat athletes. Against
lines of argument which posit that women’s enactment of
femininity is the result of restrictive, coercive, and ultimately
KEYWORDs conservative cultural pressures, respondents in two separate
studies suggested that a purposeful, selective enactment of
combat sports, femininity, gender, femininity, when understood in combination with their
martial arts, women. fighting ability, signified an important challenge to orthodox
understandings of gender. As such, our data suggests that
manoeuvring within normative cultural parameters of gender
may, ironically, help to stimulate change in its structure of
CITATION meanings, given that the feminine performances of these fighters
ultimately posed symbolic challenges to cultural constructions
Channon, Alex and Phipps, Catherine. 2017. of (‘normal’) women as inevitably weaker and inferior athletes
‘Pink Gloves Still Give Black Eyes: Exploring compared to men. We therefore advocate that scholars with an
‘Alternative’ Femininity in Women’s Combat interest in exploring the subversion of gender remain mindful
Sports’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 24-37. of the possibility that such subversive impulses might occur
via the appropriation, and re-signification, of some of its more
orthodox norms.
MARTIAL Pink Gloves Still Give Black Eyes
ARTS STUDIES Alex Channon and Catherine Phipps

Introduction broader research base in this area. Secondly, and far more widely noted,
Women, Combat Sports, and Gender has been the tendency for men (or women themselves) to resist or
counteract the gender-subversive potential of women’s MACS practice
Much has been written over the past two decades about the experiences in numerous ways. Such resistance can come in the form of passive
of women participating in martial arts and combat sports (MACS) of or overt opposition to participation [e.g., Lafferty & McKay 2004;
various kinds [e.g., Guthrie 1995; Halbert 1997; McCaughey 1997; Hollander 2009] but more commonly involves modes of practice and/
Mennesson 2000; Hollander 2004; Sisjord and Kristiansen 2009; or representation which reify, rather than challenge, hierarchal gender
Lökman 2010; Paradis 2012; Mierzwinski et al. 2014; Allen-Collinson relations [Hargreaves 1997; Paradis 2012; Channon and Jennings 2013;
and Owton 2015; Jennings 2015; Kavoura et al. 2015; Channon and Weaving 2014]. In this latter respect, the ways in which practitioners
Matthews 2015a; see also Follo 2012 and Channon and Jennings ‘do’ gender is of particular importance in mediating the potentially
2014 for wider reviews of this literature]. A significant amount of transformative consequences of women’s integration into an otherwise
the scholarly work concerning these female martial artists, boxers, ostensibly ‘masculine’ cultural sphere.
wrestlers, and self-defence practitioners has echoed themes prominent
within the broader field of research on women’s sport, identifying in The performance of femininity by women within MACS has thus been
particular the ‘empowering’ experiences of female fighters and the the subject of scholarly discussion. Often, female fighters’ embodiment
broader, gender-subversive potential involved with these phenomena of femininity is considered somewhat oppositional to, or even
[e.g., Hargreaves 1997; McCaughey 1998; De Welde 2003; Noel 2009; incompatible with, their development of fighting skills [Halbert 1997;
McNaughton 2012; Velija et al. 2013]. McCaughey 1998; Guérandel and Mennesson 2007; Kavoura et al.
2015]; it can also be framed as symbolic of the limited extent to which
This is unsurprising given the gendered character of combat-oriented MACS practices can challenge wider social formations of (hierarchal)
activities in general and MACS in particular. Commonly viewed as gender difference [Mennesson 2000; Velija et al. 2013; Paradis 2014;
‘quintessentially masculine’ [see Mennesson 2000 and Gammel 2012], Weaving 2014]. In this sense, the extant feminist literature on women
such activities often serve as cultural sites through which masculinity is in MACS, with its overarching commitment to exploring how female
symbolically articulated as the male embodiment of strength, toughness, practitioners can challenge or subvert women’s subordination, has
and physical power [Matthews 2016]. Thus, women’s successful entry often tended to reaffirm what Jayne Caudwell describes as the general
into these symbolically ‘masculine’ spaces has the potential to pose tendency among wider feminist sport sociology to read sportswomen’s
particularly dramatic challenges to wider social discourses of male femininity as ‘duped’ [Caudwell 2006: 155]. That is to say, performances
superiority, owing to the way in which female fighting ability and the of femininity tend to be construed as blocking the gender-subversive
combat-ready female body destabilise patriarchal gender norms and potential of sport and as evidence of women’s passive or coerced
women’s concurrent symbolic subordination to men [Hargreaves 1997; conformity with male-centred, heteronormative culture. Such
McCaughey 1997; Gammel 2012; Channon and Matthews 2015b]. In reasoning often supersedes attempts at interrogating how femininities
this respect, much research into women in MACS strikes an optimistic might also be purposefully, reflexively, and perhaps even subversively
tone, with scholars frequently advocating women’s participation performed by women in sport; indeed, there has been comparatively
as a potential source of individual empowerment and also wider, little attention paid within MACS research to the ways in which
progressive social change. femininity might be actively reinvented or performed in potentially
transformative ways [see De Welde 2003].
However, analyses of these phenomena have also drawn attention to
the problematic nature of women’s engagement in MACS. Firstly, It is this particular aspect of women’s engagement in MACS which our
objections to women’s embodiment of the ‘violence’ implied by MACS current article seeks to explore; namely, the constructions of femininity
involvement, with respect to its links to masculine domination and among female combat sport athletes, as well as their attendant meanings
the destructive character of gender oppression, has been noted by relative to the central thematic concern of gender subversion through
some scholars [e.g., McCaughey 1997; Lafferty and McKay 2004]. MACS participation. Before turning to this task, it is necessary to
However, this political critique is itself often problematized by pro- provide a fuller explanation of how we are conceptualising ‘femininity’
MACS feminist scholars (by way of, for instance, McCaughey’s [1997] in this article.
conception of ‘physical feminism’) and has had little impact on the

martialartsstudies.org 25
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ARTS STUDIES Alex Channon and Catherine Phipps

Theorising Femininity ‘accountability’), femininity thus becomes an important way of


Identity, Performance, and Power achieving socially acceptable womanhood. Exactly what type of woman
a person is socially recognised as being will be mediated by the specifics
Adopting a critical social constructionist position, we argue that of that person’s gender performance and the interaction of femininity
femininity is best viewed as a culturally specific, dynamic, and internally with other identity categories (such as ethnicity, age, social class,
diverse construct. Rather than a fixed set of characteristics arising from nationality and sexuality, to name a few), but the resulting multiplicity
and residing within individuals, femininity is discursively constituted of femininities shares an orientation towards substantiating a public
and performatively manifested – i.e., it is something which people identity of ‘woman’.
socially learn and actively ‘do’ relative to institutionalised structures
of meaning [West and Zimmerman 1987]. Typically associated with Meanwhile, critical theorists such as Raewyn Connell [1987]
female bodies and the lives of women, femininity is most readily understand constructions of femininity – particularly when such
intelligible when it is considered as oppositional to corresponding constructions are embodied by women – as lending themselves to the
constructions of masculinity. However, following Mimi Schippers, we subordination of women. This is most often the case when femininity is
argue against the analytical reduction of femininity to a descriptive label constructed as oppositional to masculinity in hierarchal, complementary
applied to the ‘behaviours of girls and women’ [Schippers 2007: 89]. relationships [Connell 1987; Weedon 1999; Bourdieu 2001].2 Typically,
Moreover, as Maddie Breeze notes, viewing femininity as ‘anything that those things thought of as masculine (e.g., rationality, physical strength,
women happen to do’ [Breeze 2010: 129] reduces the utility of the term, etc.) are more culturally valued than those counterpoised qualities
both as a way of understanding gender as conceptually separate from constructed as feminine (e.g., emotionality, physical weakness, etc.).
sex and as a means of grasping the power dynamics often embedded Collectively, this value system makes ‘the relationship articulated
within men’s and women’s gender practices. through the quality content of femininity and masculinity’ the ‘central
feature of gender hegemony’ [Schippers 2007: 94]. If (‘real’) men are
In this sense, naming something as ‘feminine’ must involve an socially recognised and valued for doing ‘powerful’ things – such
evaluation of the sociological relevance of the word. What, exactly, as deliberately building their bodies’ strength or being decisive and
does ‘femininity’ (or for that matter ‘masculinity’) help us to understand influential leaders – and (‘real’) women are recognised and valued
about people’s lives, and to what ends do we use this word to for doing the opposite – such as reducing the size of their bodies or
describe them or their behaviour? Our answers to these questions remaining bound to the domestic sphere – then men’s superiority
take inspiration from Candace West and Don Zimmerman’s [1987] is rooted in the very acts which socially construct the sex categories
influential ‘doing gender’ approach, which posits that feminine of ‘men’ and ‘women’ to begin with. Thus, individuals’ performative
gender performance serves to socially mark people as ‘women’. In embodiment of gender constructs more than just social identities; it is
this model, men and women are recognised as such owing to the also an integral component of the reproduction of sexual inequalities.
convincing presentation of a correspondingly gendered self, which
is evaluated according to prevailing cultural norms. In lieu of their Policing Feminine ‘Normality’ in Sport
biological sex being known by others, if a person performs femininity
to an appropriate extent then that person will be socially recognised Such dynamics have particular relevance for participation in (combat)
as a woman.1 In the context of continual gender assessment (or sports, long associated with both the embodiment and display of power
and idealised notions of masculinity [Channon and Matthews 2015b;
Mennesson 2000]. According to Judith Butler’s [1990] theory of the
1 To elaborate a little further, we recognise that men and/or people heterosexual matrix, female athletes practicing such sports, which
with male bodies can and do perform or embody ‘feminine’ behaviours and characteristics most often require them to forgo socially normalised constructions
and that those things that are culturally considered to be feminine are certainly not the of femininity, risk having their status as ‘real’ women (often conflated
sole preserve of women or females. However, if ‘men’ are being socially recognised as such,
with, but not reducible to, being heterosexual) called into question
it is because they continue to simultaneously deploy masculine signifiers to such an extent
[Tredway 2014]. This is particularly so for women of colour, given the
that their femininity is insufficient to mark them as ‘women’. Their status as men might
be questioned – particularly given that male femininity is often considered indicative of
homosexuality, traditionally viewed as anathema to ‘true’ masculinity [see for instance
Kimmel 1994] – but they nevertheless continue to be socially categorised as men despite 2 At this point, we are cautious to emphasise the constructed nature of
the mediating influence of an atypical gender performance. There is certainly more that hierarchal gender binaries. While it is abundantly clear that gender does not objectively or
could be said around the phenomenon of male femininity but, for lack of space, it is beyond statically exist in binary form, it is nevertheless often the case that it is socially constructed
the scope of this present article to do so. in this manner.

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pervasive whiteness of Western femininity and its historical role in the maintain assumptions about the inherent superiority of the male body
colonialist project of ‘othering’ non-White people [see Pieper 2014], and the status of sport as a male preserve [Krane 2001; Meân and
but so too has it been a particular problem for ‘out’ lesbian athletes, Kassing 2008]. In addition, it also shores up the notion that women
whose sexuality has historically been considered to confirm many of the ought to be sexually desirable to men if they are to be socially valued
more pernicious myths surrounding women’s athleticism as indicative [Engh 2011], a phenomenon LA Jennings [2015] recently referred
of feminine deficiency. For such athletes, their non-conformity to to in her historical study of women’s combat sports as ‘the centrefold
orthodox visions of femininity may not preclude them from being imperative’.
socially recognised as women – often accomplished through a direct
surveillance of their physical bodies [Jakubowska 2013; Pieper 2016] – ‘Alternative’ Sporting Femininities
but their discursive positioning as ‘aberrant’ or ‘deviant’ diminishes the
symbolic value of their embodiment of apparently masculine qualities As such, overt performances of femininity by sportswomen have
[Tredway 2014]. tended to be broadly positioned as problematic, signifying either direct
collusion with male power or an unwillingness to overtly challenge
In this sense, because they are unable to count as ‘real’ or ‘normal’ it – something seemingly possible only through women’s effectively
women within this heterosexist (and ethnocentric) system of meaning, ‘unapologetic’ engagement in behaviours thought to constitute
female athletes’ individual appropriation of power through sport masculinity. As noted above, this logic has tended to feature in many
avoids troubling the hierarchy maintained through normative gender studies of women in MACS. However, while such theorising has been
performance [Griffin 2002]. In other words, what they are capable of commonplace in the sociology of sport, it is also important to allow for
is argued to not represent the capacities of other, ‘normal’ women; at the possibility that performances of femininity might, in some contexts,
best, they count as ‘honorary men’, and are thereby dismissed from be understood or experienced as a source of resistance against the
troubling normative symbolic constructions of male superiority [Griffin male-centred gender order rather than always imagined as implicitly
2002; Kavoura et al. 2015]. And thanks to the stigmatising, homophobic supportive of it.
conflation of lesbianism with female masculinity often accompanying
this process, as well as the historical marginalisation and denigration In this respect, the notion of ‘alternative femininities’ [Schippers
of homosexuals within sport,3 participating in ‘masculine’ sports can 2002; Carlson 2010; Finley 2010] provides conceptual space for
present a great deal of ‘gender trouble’ for women, regardless of their describing practices which are intelligible as feminine (i.e., they
actual sexuality [Lindner 2012]. are socially understood as somehow signifying ‘woman’) but work
against the maintenance of male hegemony. This is not to say that any
Those women who nevertheless do participate in culturally recognisable expression of femininity which departs from orthodox
masculinised activities thus often find themselves pressured to maintain or traditional feminine styles ought to be read as ‘alternative’, nor
and display ‘enough’ femininity to preserve their social status as that women’s apparent embodiment of masculinity should in and of
heterosexual women. Described as the ‘female apologetic’ [Felshin itself be considered ‘alternative’. Rather, it is those gendered practices
1974], many female athletes attempt to ‘balance out’ the implied which overtly signify both ‘woman’ and ‘power’ which – in our view –
masculinity of athleticism with a correspondingly overt performance constitute a genuinely alternative form of femininity.
of femininity – which, historically speaking, is a well-evidenced
phenomenon within the sociology of sport [see Hargreaves 1994; Research on women’s sport has begun to identify such alternative
Heywood and Dworkin 2003]. On an individual level, this can prevent modes of femininity practiced by a range of female athletes [e.g.,
many women from reaching their athletic potential by limiting their Thing 2001; Finley 2010; Hardy 2015], but perhaps the most recent
body’s development of size or skill [see Dworkin 2001; Sisjord and and prolific site for discussion of this phenomenon has been within
Kristiansen 2009], while on a broader societal level it often serves to the scholarly work on women’s roller derby. This largely female,
full-contact, combative team sport has provided scholars with ample
opportunities to explore the construction of alternative femininities
due to its woman-centred and woman-led ethos, its overtly feminised
3 Although this is beyond the scope of the present article, recent research
has suggested a much less hostile environment for gay and lesbian athletes in many (and often sexualised) aesthetic, and the masculine connotations of its
sport settings in Western Europe and North America [see Anderson 2011; Dashper 2012; physicality. Roller derby thus serves as an interesting example of the
Cunningham 2012]. However, this does not necessarily mean that heterosexual female potential for women athletes to deliberately adopt overtly feminised
athletes are now completely unaffected by the suspicion of lesbianism often attached to styles coupled with visible displays of strength and self-authorisation
female masculinity.

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ARTS STUDIES Alex Channon and Catherine Phipps

– qualities often assumed as masculine but here reconciled with local through the use of chain-referral sampling. While the interviewees in
constructions of femininity. The extant research on this sport has the first study were generally participating at lower competitive levels
highlighted the need to examine the degree of agency women claim than those in the second study, this was the only notable variation
when embodying (often overtly sexualised) femininities [Beaver 2014], in the characteristics of either sample with respect to their patterns
the ways in which feminine signifiers are re-claimed to denote power of participation. Across the studies, participants were aged between
rather than to balance out the power indicated by masculinity [Carlson 19-38 years old (mean ages of 25 and 29, respectively), all but one
2010], and exactly what can be described as alternative femininity self-identified as heterosexual (with one lesbian participant), and most
[Breeze 2010; Finley 2010] relative to the concerns about sexual self-identified as White (with British Asian women comprising three
signification, power, and conceptual integrity outlined above. participants in the first study and one participant in the second study).
Across the combined sample, only two were not British nationals (one
Similar to these scholars, we found instances in our own research into being Norwegian, the other Australian), although these participants had
women’s MACS practice wherein women overtly and consciously both been living, working, and training/competing in England for at
performed femininity in specific ways, ways which were experienced least five years prior to interview.4
as both indicative of womanhood and as a means of claiming power,
and both for themselves and sometimes on behalf of other women, as Similar themes were explored in both studies, including initial
well. In the sections that follow, we discuss how women involved in involvement in their respective disciplines, motivations for on-going
competitive martial arts articulated their understanding of femininity participation, questioning the ‘masculine’ image of MACS, and women’s
in these ways. Before explaining these findings, though, we offer a brief perspectives on expressing/negotiating femininity within their training
account of our research methodology. and competition settings. Similar findings arose from both studies,
which formed the basis of the collaboration represented by this article.
After discussing phenomena surrounding martial artists’ expressions
Method and articulations of femininity during a conference at which both
authors were present, a joint analysis was later conducted whereby
The data upon which this research is based were taken from two the authors shared datasets with each other, separately coding each
separate qualitative studies which followed similar methods and other’s work using a deductive coding strategy built upon a synthesis
explored similar themes. The data from the first author’s study, which of both authors’ separate (but broadly similar) earlier conclusions.
was part of a larger PhD project, are derived from semi-structured Since this analytical framework had arisen from both datasets prior
interviews with 13 women in the English East Midlands. These to the collaboration, the deductive coding approach enabled ‘working
participants had at least three years of experience in a variety of propositions’ to be jointly validated by ‘returning to the data’ [Jones
different MACS, including kickboxing, muay thai, karate, taekwondo, et al. 2013: 92]. With both authors content that the foundations of
and mixed martial arts (MMA), amongst others. These interviews took each other’s conclusions were empirically sound and the datasets were
place between 2009 and 2011, lasting approximately one hour [see suitably comparable, this article was written to represent the shared
Channon 2012 for more details]. The data from the second author’s findings that emerged from these two separate studies.
study were part of a Master’s thesis, which involved semi-structured
interviews with 14 women who were professional muay thai fighters
and based across the UK, of which five had retired from fighting in the Findings
past three years [see Phipps 2013]. All of these participants were classed
as professionals, as they had received a purse from fight promoters; The data discussed in the following sections reveal the ways in
furthermore, two of the participants had achieved English titles, two which several women involved in competitive combat sports think
had achieved British titles, and ten had achieved World titles as their about, construct, and perform femininity. Our findings reveal a
highest competitive achievements to date. These interviews took place problematisation of the assumed incompatibility of femininity and
in mid-2013, lasting between 30 and 45 minutes. fighting, in spite of the normalised discursive positioning of combative
activities as typically masculine; they suggest that women, as opposed to
In both studies, the researchers’ knowledge of and participation within being/feeling socially compelled to do so, are active agents in choosing
MACS, along with information from contacts in their respective local
gyms/clubs and the use of social networking websites, helped to source
participants for the study, while further recruitment was made possible 4 Readers should note that all interviewees are referred to by pseudonyms for
the sake of anonymity throughout this article.

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to embody, identify with, and enjoy being feminine. They also hint at These positions typified the range of responses given by the women
the potential for such women’s performances of femininity to destabilise in our studies, and while choosing to tackle the question of implied
normative sexual hierarchies rather than to uncritically reproduce them. masculinity in different ways, they were not necessarily at odds with
each other in that they all criticised the notion that women in combat
Being a Fighter and Being Feminine sports were automatically masculinised by their participation. Indeed, all
of those who claimed to have a ‘masculine side’ or to be a ‘tomboy’ also
Many participants in our studies noted that the martial arts they told of their corresponding ‘feminine side’, such that their involvement
participated in were considered by others to be ‘masculine’. This in an apparently masculine sport had not made them, in Suzie’s words,
was particularly the case for the women who practiced full-contact5 ‘abnormal, or butch, or anything like that’.
kickboxing, muay thai, and MMA – so-called ‘hard’ martial arts jointly
characterised by a comparatively higher risk of injury and an inclination Thus, the implication of female masculinity was framed by our
towards competitive fighting rather than self-defence or any other participants in ways which suggested that their self-perceived
training goals [see Mierzwinski and Phipps 2015]. This is perhaps femininity was not correspondingly sacrificed or diminished by
unsurprising given that, among all MACS, these types of disciplines their engagement in competitive fighting. This contrasts somewhat
are highly ‘sportised’ and are considered to most closely approximate with findings from other studies [see Mennesson 2000; Sisjord and
‘real’ fighting, two things popularly imagined as the preserve of Kristiansen 2009; Kavoura et al. 2015]. Nonetheless, that women
men [Matthews 2016]. When asked about what they thought of the enjoyed the sensations and significance of these so-called masculine
‘masculine’ image of these combat sports, some agreed that this label fighting sports, and the changes they had wrought on their bodies, was
was fitting in certain respects and were happy to lay claim to having clearly evidenced by many of our participants:
a ‘masculine side’ themselves. However, most were openly critical of
such gendering, arguing that it implied that women did not belong in I’m more confident. I’m bigger, like, more muscly, and it’s not
combat sports or were somehow masculinised or otherwise positioned like I’m a bodybuilder, but it’s enough that I know I’m stronger,
as ‘abnormal’ for taking part. The following quotes illustrate these and I’m proud of that, definitely. (Jenny)
positions:
I am a bit crazy when it comes to fighting, it’s true … I don’t
Within my group of friends, I am kind of like the tomboy one, know anything that’s as close to how much I love this, like, I
always have been … I have got my femininities about me as just love it! I love being able to do this. (Sylvia)
well, I like to go out and I like to dress up, but when it comes to
training, I don’t mind being perceived as boyish when it comes The thing I liked about [muay thai], it were kind of full-on,
to that. (Suzie) which fit my personality really, I mean on my first session
they let me hit pads and things like that and I thought this is
I guess people might think that about me [being masculine] fantastic, it’s definitely me. (Chloe)
but I wouldn’t say so, because I feel like I’m girly and I just do
martial arts … There’s a lot of girls fighting [in my club], it just These things considered then, it was evident that these women largely
makes it less manly I think. Like, girls are doing it, too, so how did not believe that their enjoyment of what are often considered
can you still call it that? (Sara) quintessentially masculine activities made them any less able to claim
or present a feminine identity. For some, this involved a rejection of
Sometimes you do get those comments – ‘Isn’t that a bit manly?’ the ‘masculine’ label; for others, it revealed the fluidity of gender. Either
– that kind of thing. I just find it’s easier to not bother talking way, it was clear that even involvement in high-level competitive
about it, otherwise I’ll get angry at those people. (Kate) fighting did not preclude women from being, feeling, or identifying as
‘feminine’. As Beth neatly summarised, ‘I wouldn’t say to anyone that
they have to give up being feminine in order to be a good fighter’.

5 ‘Full-contact’ fighting allows opponents to strike without withholding any


degree of force, and is a type of competitive engagement which can often end in injuries
or knockouts. It chiefly contrasts with ‘semi-contact’ sparring, where opponents hit less
forcefully in order to score points rather than incapacitate one-another.

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Choosing and Enjoying Femininity at odds with the (particularly embodied) characteristics required of
fighters. Here, Emily told of her distaste for the ‘bitchy environment’
When asked more specifically about their own sense of femininity,6 the she’d encountered in some clubs, Sara bemoaned image-focused women
interviewees’ responses revealed that being feminine was something who were ‘worried about getting bruises’ and so made poor training
they actively chose, enjoyed, and were proud of. Thus, when questioned partners, and all interviewees argued that the stereotypically genteel,
about any perceived need to ‘stay feminine’ or ‘show their femininity’ passive vision of femininity, summarised by Beth as embodied by
to others, the interviewees’ responses complicated any straightforward ‘Disney movie girls’, wasn’t compatible with ‘serious’ involvement in
suggestion of gender behaviour as a social imposition. While some MACS.
indicated that their feminine performance was oriented towards
others in order to claim the public identity of being a woman, this However, the strongest criticism in this regard was reserved for
was articulated around a more fundamental project of constituting women whose performances of femininity involved overtly sexualising
their own self-identity as women fighters. Illustrative of the deeply themselves, particularly within mixed-sex training environments [see
social nature of gender construction, the relationship between others’ Channon and Jennings 2013]. Beth complained of how one woman
perceptions and the integrity of the self were highlighted [West and she trained with ‘held back more than she normally would’ when
Zimmerman 1987]. Thus, while gender was performed in order to training with a man she was attracted to, ‘because [she didn’t] want
be witnessed, the purpose of this performance remained tied to the to be aggressive in front of a potential boyfriend’ [see Guérandel and
women’s agency, as they aimed to be recognised in the ways that they Mennesson 2007]. Elsewhere, Rachel criticised those she described as
themselves desired. For Helen and Sylvia: ‘groupies’ training at her club for giving a poor impression of other
women to their male training partners:
The more I get into [kickboxing], the more I know myself,
understand and appreciate myself, have more self-confidence Always with the low-cut tops, cleavage falling out, too much
that isn’t just external. It’s about finding out who I really am. makeup on, stuff like that. It’s a bit gross … There are the
And I think that I am a woman, and even though I am in a serious women too and you just have to separate them out
man’s world here, doing this so-called man’s sport, I don’t from the groupies, who are just there to get laid basically …
wanna lose my femininity… I think it’s important [for others] What does it say to the guys? It might make them think we’re
to recognise that I am a woman doing this sport, not to just all just there to get laid.
think that I want to be a man doing it. (Helen)
Therefore, it was apparent that the means and methods of defining and
As much as I love fighting, I still love the sense of being a girl. presenting feminine selves needed to be matched with the requirements
I’m not embarrassed about fighting but I still feel like if I do of being capable and legitimate fighters. For many women, this was
everything like a guy then it’s a bit, like, not right… I don’t articulated around feminine behaviours outside their MACS practice;
want [men] to think, ‘you’re a girl so I’m not going to let you for instance, Holly worked as a beauty therapist, Helen practiced and
join in’, I want them to be as inclusive as possible but still treat taught pole dancing, Andrea had competed in a beauty pageant, and
me as a girl. (Sylvia) nearly all of our interviewees mentioned ‘dressing up and going out’7 as
something they regularly enjoyed doing. However, within their training
In this project of constituting themselves as feminine women or environments, adopting specifically feminine styles and aesthetics
girls, not all aspects of what they described as ‘traditional’ femininity allowed the women to signify their femininity directly in conjunction
were embraced by our interviewees. Returning to the question of with their identity as fighters. Here, wearing their long hair in ‘fighter-
compatibility between being feminine and being a fighter, they were style’ cornrows or braids, adopting feminised but fearsome nicknames
generally critical of apparently feminine behaviours which were directly as fighters, or indeed, wearing pink fighting gear, illustrated the more
overt manifestations of femininity within the combat sports milieu:

6 It should be noted, of course, that such questions were not phrased using the
academic language deployed in this article, and the issue of one’s own femininity often
arose through discussion of ‘the (gendered) image’ of martial arts, or following participants’ 7 Contextually speaking, this implied wearing women’s fashions and makeup,
accounts of the ‘girly’ behaviours of other women, etc. Indirectly approaching this topic and drinking and dancing in pubs and nightclubs – presumably, given the largely
seemed to be the best way to avoid the issue being discussed in overly analytical and heterosexual character of our sample, in the company of men.
abstract ways, focusing instead on participants’ actual behaviours and impressions of self.

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I just want to have a bit of girliness in [my fighting], so I have people should look like or be like, it’s not what the [muay thai]
these hot pink gloves, they’re so cool! … Yeah, I generally dress women are like at all. And I think that makes the sport [seem]
quite sporty but I always try to keep something, just a little softer, more accessible I guess for the general population.
something that makes it a bit feminine. (Sylvia)
Similarly, interviewees often noted that developing greater female
Yeah, some people joke about it, these [pink] gloves I mean, but participation in their sports could be achieved by including what
pink or black or whatever, it still hurts when they hit! (Suzie) were thought to be feminised practices, such as self-defence classes
or ‘fitness-oriented’ sessions, in their clubs’ programs [Channon and
I wear, like, girls’ gym clothes and I have the pink gloves, Matthews 2015b]. It should be noted that many in our samples rejected
lots of girls have that, it’s just a little thing you do to be like, the suggestion that training for fitness or self-defence were their own
I dunno, a bit less mannish … But it’s all good, isn’t it? Pink primary goals, preferring to identify as competitive athletes instead,
gloves still give black eyes, after all! (Keeley) while some were critical of ever advertising MACS to women by way
of emphasising specifically ‘feminine’ practices [see Jennings 2015].
In this sense, several women in our studies embraced feminine However, despite some disagreement, it was nevertheless accepted
aesthetics as signifiers of their identities as women, and their example by the majority of our interviewees that this was an effective way to
provides an interesting perspective from which to consider criticism of initiate women into wider MACS participation:
the ‘feminisation’ of combat sports implied by, for instance, pink boxing
gloves [see Kalman-Lamb 2012] or, perhaps more controversially, the I promote it as self-defence to women, because if you say
use of skirts for competitive boxers’ uniforms [van Ingen and Kovacs ‘martial arts’ they just think of fighting, it’s perceived as
2012; Paradis 2014]. Yet, the notion that stylistic adornments, along violent, you know, punching someone and kicking someone,
with other performative and embodied manifestations of femininity, and they don’t like that. So if you say self-defence it sounds
could actually work for the betterment of women’s position in MACS more like something they might want to do. (Evelyn)
represents the most compelling finding of our studies.
However, several interviewees argued that presenting a feminine
Femininity as Useful identity for MACS, or as individual fighters, was useful for more than
just developing participation. Both within and outside of the context
Rather than viewing their femininity as simply an enjoyable or of their sports, the fact that they were high-level competitive fighters
otherwise positive aspect of their social identity, several of the in addition to being recognisably feminine women carried something
interviewees in both studies highlighted ways in which being feminine of a shock value that could at once challenge received wisdom about
whilst also being a fighter could be a useful way to advance women’s gender normality whilst also having positive consequences for their
interests both within and outside of their sports. Similar to Christy competitive performance:
Halbert’s [1997] observation that women boxers strategically used
femininity to maintain the commercial viability of their sport [see also It’s quite a surprise to find a female who’s a professional fighter
Trimbur 2013], some women argued that retaining an appearance and everything else, I think people have images in their heads
of femininity helped to encourage female membership of their clubs, where you might not be feminine so they’re shocked but
ensuring enough women were attracted to sustain their future generally a lot of people are quite supportive. (Sophie)
development. Many interviewees suggested that their own feminine
appearance and style helped avoid ‘putting off’ newer or younger In general life I can be quite shy and I don’t think I look the
women who might be joining their clubs by undermining intimidating type to do the sport, I don’t really look very muscly or scary or
stereotypes of MACS as activities purely for tough men or overtly anything like that. So I think I’m always underestimated a bit
masculine women. Furthermore, Emily argued that such a ‘softer’, when I go in the ring and fight, and I think that’s an advantage
feminised image could broaden the appeal of certain MACS disciplines really because I maybe shock people when I step through those
to men as well as women: ropes and do what I do! So, [femininity] tends to work in my
favour. (Holly)
I think that girls in the UK have done a better job for [muay
thai] than men have, and I think that’s because of that Of wider significance in this respect was the claim from some of
difference from what the general public think [muay thai] our interviewees that the performance of femininity, with its social

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consequences of maintaining fighters’ public identities as – in many Conclusion


of their own words – ‘normal women’, could destabilise sexist ideals.
Effectively symbolising a re-articulated vision of what constitutes such a Taken together, the findings of our studies reveal how specific
woman, the feminine and powerful fighter became an important symbol articulations of femininity are purposefully chosen by women
for our interviewees. Here, Rachel’s view summarises this sentiment participating in MACS, and deliberately enacted/enjoyed in accordance
well in arguing that non-conformity to a model of becoming either with their own self-authorised sense of identity. Many of our
overtly masculinised or avoiding MACS altogether for the sake of her interviewees used language that framed femininity as something
femininity was effectively helping change attitudes about (all) other desirable and intrinsically valuable; they didn’t want to have to ‘go
women’s capabilities: without’, ‘lose’, or ‘sacrifice’ it to become a fighter. And, with this in
mind, they articulated specific ways in which femininity could be
In fact I think of myself as more of a woman because I see happily accommodated with the demands of MACS participation.
myself doing something for women, instead of just obeying Critical of instances wherein certain aspects of femininity could obstruct
a stereotype … I think it’s feminism, you know, pursuing training, or give a poor impression of women fighters to others, it was
something for ourselves and showing that normal everyday clear that feminine behaviours needed to be carefully negotiated in
women are capable of doing something which a lot of people order to signify both ‘woman’ and ‘fighter’. Furthermore, it was broadly
say we’re not. I think it’s a good thing what we’re doing. noted that such successful gender performances bore value – they could
help develop wider (female) participation in MACS; they might confer
Thus, doing femininity in specifically acceptable ways, which were some competitive advantages in the ring; most of all they carried the
understood as compatible with the embodiment of physical power potential to challenge sexist beliefs about women’s capabilities and
through MACS training and simultaneously taken as a means of destabilise the hierarchal constructs through which sexual difference is
claiming a coherent identity as a woman and a fighter, became a commonly imagined.
means of illustrating, in Keeley’s words, that ‘girls can do this, too’.
Such contextually legitimated versions of appropriate femininity were To us, this illustrates a compelling example of a genuinely alternative
held up as evidence of a wider social value of women’s participation iteration of femininity. The women we spoke to did not experience
(‘it’s feminism’), lending added importance to the accomplishment of femininity as a means of correcting or apologising for their
feminine signifiers among these competitive fighters. encroachment into ‘masculine’ terrain [e.g., Felshin 1974; Krane 2001],
it was not a means of diluting the embodiment of physical power
built through their training; rather, it served to signify to others that
‘normal, everyday women’ can be tough and powerful fighters. Echoing
Kristine De Welde, we agree that – as an exercise in agency which
defies the rigidity of gender binaries framed by the heterosexual matrix
and the restrictive opportunities for identification which these provide
– ‘it was imperative for these women to redefine womanhood and
femininity on their own terms’ [De Welde 2003: 271]. Although laying
claim to being ‘normal’ women carries heteronormative connotations
with respect to the implicit stigmatisation of female masculinity, it
nevertheless indicates a restructuring of the discursive possibilities
enshrined by what ‘normal’ womanhood might otherwise involve. In
other words, while moving within the parameters of normative gender
construction, they began to undo its discursive relationship to women’s
subordination.

In a context of increasing mainstream visibility for women in high-


profile combat sports [e.g., Cain 2105; Hope 2015; Jakubowska et al.
2016], and amidst on-going public debate over the appropriateness of
using normative feminine imagery to promote sport participation to
women [e.g., Sanghani 2014; Fullagar and Francombe-Webb 2015],
we argue that findings such as these stand to make an important

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contribution to the way in which femininity is understood within


martial arts studies. While we do not deny that pressure to conform
to feminine norms is often exerted on athletic women, nor that such
a process can be restrictive or harmful to the development of their
abilities and thus damaging to the gender-subversive potential of
MACS (among other, related activities), we nevertheless argue that, in
other cases, the exact opposite may be true: women can choose to be
feminine, doing so on their own terms and in ways which potentially
work in subversive directions. Thus, we believe that scholarly work
on women’s MACS and gender performance would do well to attend
more closely to the manner in which the performance of alternative
femininities by female fighters might work against the sexual
hierarchies that their more orthodox counterparts are typically thought
to preserve.

We conclude this article with a short comment on the limitations of


the studies upon which it is based. As with all qualitative research, the
subjective nature of the analysis we conducted must be considered, as
it is entirely possible that other scholars might have understood and
interpreted this data in different ways. Although our joint approach to
re-analysing each other’s empirical findings provided the opportunity
to cross-validate ideas, it is nevertheless important to acknowledge
that the conclusions we have reached here are wrapped up in our own
specific theoretical position and not, therefore, representative of all
possible readings of these findings.

Also, our small overall sample size draws the generalizability of our
findings into question, while the characteristics of this sample make
for something of a partial view on contemporary gender construction
given the heterosexuality and whiteness of the participants. With
only four of our sample of 27 consisting of ethnic minority women,
and only one identifying as openly lesbian, our studies are not well-
placed to comment on the impact of sexual and cultural diversity on
the construction of martial artists’ femininities. Indeed, while these
particular minority group women did not offer any notably contrasting
viewpoints within the interviews conducted, the overall body of
findings here might be reconsidered in terms of its latent whiteness
and straightness had a larger and more diverse sample been included
in the research, and/or if we had directly sought to problematize
these intersectional phenomena in our primary research questions.
Therefore, the relationships between whiteness, straightness, and
femininity in the MACS milieu is something that could warrant specific
investigation in future research efforts of this kind, as we have not made
these phenomena explicit objects of analysis in this article. Despite these
limitations, we hope that our research can provide a useful contribution
to colleagues wishing to expand the literature on women, gender, and
martial arts.

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MARTIAL Pink Gloves Still Give Black Eyes
ARTS STUDIES Alex Channon and Catherine Phipps

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martialartsstudies.org 37
CONTRIBUTOR Daniel Mroz is a theatre director, university professor and student of
the martial arts. His recent performances have been presented at the
Canada Dance Festival and the Évènement Zones Théâtrales. The
Dancing Word, his book on how to use the Chinese martial arts in
the practice of contemporary theatre, is published by Brills. He studies
martial arts with Chen Zhonghua and studied acting and directing
with Richard Fowler. He holds a Doctorat en études et pratiques
des arts from the Université du Québec à Montréal. He is Associate
Professor in the Department of Theatre at the University of Ottawa
where he teaches acting and directing.

This paper was first presented as a keynote address at the July 2016
Martial Arts Studies Conference at Cardiff University, U.K.

TAOLU
Credibility and Decipherability in the
Practice of Chinese Martial Movement

DANIEL MROZ

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j.2017.10094 The practice of taolu (tao4lu4, tào lù, 套路), the prearranged
movement patterns of the Chinese martial arts, has been
explained in fantastically diverse ways spanning a range
of interpretations from the essential and functional to the
narrative, theatrical and religious. Rather than trying to find a
KEYWORDs universal reason for the practice of taolu, this paper proposes
to look at the idea of prearranged movement patterns through
Taolu, interpretation, credibility, the lens of credibility and decipherability. These twin concepts,
decipherability, Chinese Martial Arts borrowed from the Great Reform movement in 20th century
theatre practice, helpfully embrace both the criteria by which the
performance of taolu is usually judged and also the deficiencies
in our contemporary understanding of reasons behind this
CITATION palimpsestic training method. As conceptual tools, credibility
and decipherability also offer us insight into how the practice
Mroz, Daniel. 2017. ‘Taolu: of prearranged martial movement patterns is presented and
Credibility and Decipherability interpreted as a personal and phenomenological experience of
in the Practice of Chinese embodied practice. This paper hopes to pragmatically present
Martial Movement’, Martial new perspectives from which the practice of taolu can be
Arts Studies 3, 38-50. understood.
MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

I would like to invite you to take part in a thought experiment with


me. I would like to provisionally remove all but the most pragmatic
definition of taolu (tao4lu4, tào lù, 套路). Yes, they are the prearranged
movement patterns found in the Chinese martial arts; no, we’re not
sure what they are for or how to look at them. I’d like to temporarily
propose that taolu are xuan (xuan2,玄), in the Orthodox Daoist sense,
meaning ‘dark; profoundly mysterious’. This is not a prosaic mystery
that will eventually be solved; it is an ultimate mystery, a feature
of our experience that will remain impenetrable. I hope that if we
consider taolu from this perspective it will relieve us of the preferences,
habits and received wisdom with which we usually understand them.
Likewise, should we seem to actually explain taolu in the course of our
deliberations, their status as xuan will prevent us from succumbing to
the temptation of merely explaining them away.

My reason for provisionally declaring the most visible and characteristic


aspect of Chinese martial arts to be a mystery comes from my own
experience. Since 1993 I’ve practiced several Chinese martial arts,
principally Siu Lum Hung Sing Choy Li Fut kuen and the Practical
Method (or Shiyong Quanfa) of the Chen style of taijiquan. Looking
back over two decades of learning, I see that I take taolu for granted
at every level of my engagement with gongfu. As a student, teacher
and scholar I have unquestioningly behaved as though taolu are the
alembic where the ideal ‘what and how’ of Chinese martial movement
is synthesized, made manifest, refined, presented and refined again.
Figure 1. Author performing Choy Li Fut kuen’s Qi Long Ma movement
Taking taolu for granted might be a perfectly adequate stance for
in Brussels, Belgium in 1995. Photo by Satyanarayanan Nair.
practicing, teaching and theorizing, but realizing my habit, I ask myself:
‘What do I think about when I think about taolu?’

While the practice is ubiquitous there is amazing diversity in its


manifestations and there is very little real consensus as to its purpose.
British fighter Steve Morris expressed his frustration with Chinese
martial arts training in a way that sums up the situation nicely:

Attempting to clearly differentiate within the esoteric


boxing forms of Fujian, let alone those of all of China, what
is combative from that which has its origins in shaman,
Taoist, Hindu/Buddhist magico-religious practices, mudra
(i.e., the depicting of a story, emotion or action), secret society
symbolism, zoomorphic display, Chi Kung gymnastics, the
theatre, aesthetics or simply a fanciful display, would prove
difficult enough for someone raised in the regional cultures in
which these forms originated, let alone for a country boy from
Penley ‘Dingles’, North Wales!
[Morris 2003]

Figure 2: Author performing Chen taijiquan’s You Cha Jiao movement


in Ottawa, Canada in 2009. Photo by Laura Astwood.

martialartsstudies.org 39
MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

While I think Morris is engaging in a little false modesty at the end Canadian actor and director Richard Fowler studied under and then
there, given how intelligent and able he is, he has made a thorough if worked with both Grotowski and Barba before returning to Canada,
informal list of ingredients the imagined combination of which does where I became his student.
indeed suggest baffling complexity. But, in spite of this, we practitioners
continue to entertain opinions – nay wholehearted convictions – about Like the Chinese martial arts, transmission in the Great Reform is based
taolu. How are we thinking about them? on personal apprenticeship and on sustained immersion in an ensemble
or family-like group that practices a daily training. While the aesthetics
To begin to answer I’d like to turn to an important branch of 20th of the Great Reform have diversified considerably over the course of
century theatre practice called The Great Reform. The Great Reform, the 20th century, they are principally characterized by the requirement
or Wielka Reforma, is a term invented by Leon Schiller, a Polish theatre that a theatrical performance be meaningful due to the credibility of the
director working between the two world wars. It refers to the early actions of the performers within a metaphorical staging designed by the
20th century pioneers of theatre who developed modernism and the art director.
of the director. Due to fascism, communism and the world wars, the
continuity of this work was lost to Western Europe, the UK and North In his book, which has the ‘martial arts studies friendly’ title of
America but was preserved in Eastern Europe where it was developed Theatre and Boxing: The Actor Who Flies, Franco Ruffini sets up a
by later generations of directors and creators [Schino 2009: 192, 261]. pragmatic binary derived from the writings of Stanislavsky. We
The most well-known artist associated with the Great Reform is interpret theatrical performances along the two axes of credibility and
Konstantin Stanislavsky (née Alexeyev), the Russian actor and theatre decipherability. Decipherability asks: ‘What does it mean?’ Credibility
director who created numerous approaches to actor training during his asks: ‘Was it performed in a way I respond to?’ Ruffini’s thesis is that,
lifetime and who left an indelible stamp on the aesthetics of both the under the aegis of the Great Reform, acting in the European art theatre
Eastern European and the Anglo-American theatre traditions. of the 20th century switched from emphasizing decipherability to
emphasizing credibility [Ruffini 2014].
My engagement with the Great Reform, like my relationship with
Chinese martial arts, came first as a practitioner. I learned to create I’ll return to the Great Reform later. Right now, I’d like to consider
theatre in one of the many branches of that lineage of artists: a Russian taolu from the pragmatic perspectives of credibility and decipherability.
actor named Yuri Zavadsky was taught by Stanislavsky and worked
with two of his principal students, Vsevolod Meyerhold and Evgeny If we’re not careful when we ask ‘What does it mean?’ and ‘Was it
Vakhtanghov. Zavadsky in turn taught a Polish director named Jerzy performed in a way I respond to?’ then we often wind up evaluating the
Grotowski, who taught an Italian director named Eugenio Barba. authenticity of the material and the competence of the person performing
it. Judgments of authenticity and competence are not my concern here.
Our criteria for authenticity are most often derived from a jingoistic
commitment to the style or styles we know personally and our
evaluation of competence usually depends on the range of practitioners
we’ve been able to observe first hand. My objective in introducing
decipherability and credibility as tools is not to engage in criticism
rendered parochial by the limits of our individual experiences. Rather,
I hope to use these two ideas to examine how we identify and parse the
component elements of taolu.

I propose that parsing taolu to differentiate their component parts


and perceive the relationships between them can be done in two
complementary ways, spatiotemporally and culturally. We can
examine the actual movements as actions, vectors, trajectories and
dynamics. And we can attempt to learn what cultural significance these
movements have held.

Figure 3: Richard Fowler (ca. 1980) in his solo theatre piece


Wait for the Dawn. Photo by Jan Rusz.

40 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

There are numerous examples of spatiotemporal analysis of taolu in The ‘positive’ or xun circle (figure 4 below) when performed with the
modern and contemporary Chinese sources provided by authors such as right hand moves in a clockwise direction. The ‘negative’ or ni circle
Wan Lai Sheng [1927] and Kang Ge Wu [1995]. The specific approach (figure 5 overleaf) when performed with the right hand moves in a
I’d like to focus on today is one that derives the actions of taolu from counter clockwise direction. While this particular movement is very
simple foundational movements. specific to Hong’s Chen style, I feel the positive and negative trajectories
he proposes can be used to describe a much wider swath of movements.
The first exponent to propose an analysis in terms of foundational
movements is Hong Junsheng [1907-1996], a student of Chen Fake Hong is not alone in finding two actions at the centre of his martial
[1887-1957] and himself a master of the Chen style of taijiquan. movement training. Contemporary Taiwanese martial artist Zhou
Following the ideas expressed in Chen Xin’s 1933 manual, The Illustrated Baofu (b. 1951) suggests that all gongfu movements are derived from
Explanations of Chen Family Taijiquan, Hong analyzed the movements two hand trajectories, which he describes as ‘blocking hand’, which
of the two principal taolu of the style and determined that every moves inward, and ‘sweeping hand’, which moves outward [Zhou 2014:
movement was composed of variations on one of two possible circular 20:37]. While he expresses them using different words, he is describing
hand trajectories [see Hong 2006].1 the same basic trajectories as Hong.

1 See also Timothy J. Nulty’s discussion of these circles in his article in this issue
(pages 55-63).


Figure 4: Chen Zhonghua demonstrating the positive circle.
Photos courtesy of Chen Zhonghua.

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MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
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Figure 5: Chen Zhonghua demonstrating the negative circle.


Photos courtesy of Chen Zhonghua.

Taiwanese choreographer Lin Huaimin is the founder of the renowned an example (see 1:00 - 1:03, video 2 opposite) of yun shou found in the
Cloud Gate Dance Theatre. He has created a cosmopolitan synthesis of second Xiao Wu Tao, the short fighting set learned by novice Beijing
North American modern dance that he learned at the Martha Graham Opera students.
school in the late 1960s with traditional Chinese movement forms.
To this end, he has collaborated with gongfu teacher Adam Hsu and Formally and pragmatically, the idea of deriving all Chinese martial
Chen taijiquan teacher Xiong Wei. Lin is even more ambitious than movement from two circular trajectories executed simultaneously,
Hong and Zhou. He believes that the principal characteristic of all sequentially or in syncopation is compelling. I have found it to be an
Chinese movement – dance, theatre and martial arts – is the sequential effective shortcut for learning new taolu and for maintaining old ones.
execution of the two circles described by Hong and Zhou in a pattern
that is temporally desynchronized. I experienced Lin’s ideas and his But, helpful as this is, these are still a posteriori formal analyses. There
fundamental movement training in person in October of 2007 when I remains a vast distance between relatively simple foundational moves
took a master class with Ms. Lee Ching Chun, the co-artistic director of and sophisticated choreographies. We can parse taolu into fundamental
Cloudgate, at the National Arts Centre of Canada in Ottawa, Canada. spatiotemporal units, but can we build them up from such simple
This flower-shaped toroid movement (see video 1 opposite) is the basis beginnings? To accommodate the complexity of taolu I believe we
for all of Lin’s work. need to turn to cultural forms. What did movements made up of
fundamental spatiotemporal units mean to their creators?
Finally, Lu Suosen, a master performer of the martial roles in Beijing
Opera and a teacher at the National Academy of Chinese Theatre Arts Steve Morris’ exasperated list itemizes the cultural activities that I
in Beijing, believes that the movements of his art are derived from the believe are present and represented in taolu: combative movement,
rotation of two desynchronized circles, a movement known as yun theatrical presentation and religious en-action.
shou or cloud Hands. Ms. Shijia Jiang, Lu’s apprentice, demonstrates

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MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

Video 1: Flower Series

Click image to activate


(if viewing in latest
Adobe Acrobat Reader)
or watch online at
https://vimeo.com/193558729

Video 2: Cloud Hands Series

Click image to activate


(if viewing in latest
Adobe Acrobat Reader)
or watch online at
https://vimeo.com/195117574
[1:00-1:03]

martialartsstudies.org 43
MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

Taolu have these characteristics for both intended and circumstantial


reasons. They are first and foremost palimpsestic and speak in a mix of
archaic and contemporary terms. A little familiarity with Daoist ritual
and Chinese theatre, and with the three conflicts that led to the partial
erasure of a culture that could recognize these elements – the Taiping
Rebellion (1850-1864), the Opera Rebellion (1854-1855) and the Boxer
Rebellion (1899-1901) – allows us to imagine an earlier time when the
performance of taolu functioned simultaneously as combative training,
theatrical entertainment and religious acts of self-consecration and
exorcism [Holcombe 1990]. Today, we often lack the interpretive tools
to see the vestiges of these elements present in the taolu we train. While
we’ll never know for sure how taolu were understood prior to the late
19th century, combative, theatrical and religious ideas are formalized in Figure 6: The luoshu magic square.
taolu in concrete ways that complement the spatiotemporal ideas we’ve
just explored. Indeed, chances are if you have learned a taolu, then no
matter the style, it has some of the following features:

An opening, which could be the up-out/up-in/down-out/down-in kai


zhang or opening palms common to the Southern Shaolin styles, or the
slow parallel rise of the arms in Yang or Wu style taijiquan.

Themes and nodes, or movements that are repeated along different


trajectories, such as taijiquan’s yun shou or cloud hands or Choy Li Fut
kuen’s kwa/sao/chaap. These punctuate the different sections or phases
of the taolu.

A diagrammatic stepping pattern that creates a two-dimensional shape


on the floor. These can be derived from religious practice, which was
for example the original context of walking the nine points of the
luoshu (figure 6), which is used as a training tool in the martial art of
baguazhang.

Taolu may also contain theatrical characters. Here General Guan Yu


enters, strokes his beard, rides his horse and sharpens his glaive in Choy
Li Fut’s Guan Dao form. The sequence refers to Guan Yu’s journey of

1000 miles in the tale of the Three Kingdoms where he ‘passed 5 gates
and killed 6 generals’ (過五關斬六將, guò wŭ guān, zhăn liù jiàng). Figure 7: Author demonstrates the shou yin in the Wudang
Presumably, after killing the six generals, he needed to sharpen his Dan Pai taiji. Photo by Laura Astwood.
glaive! In another example, Daoist immortal Lu Dong Bin appears in
the closing movements of the first section of the Wudang Dan Pai Liu
Duan sword form.

As they are in fact deities, the appearances of these theatrical characters


are also religious references. The evocation of deified figures such as Guan
Yu and Lu Dong Bin is considered to have an exorcistic and purifying
effect in Chinese normative religion [Riley 1997].

44 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

Video 3: Guan Dao excerpt

Click image to activate


(if viewing in latest
Adobe Acrobat Reader)
or watch online at
https://vimeo.com/195125152

Further religious references can be found in the form of shou yin or beginnings, endings, themes and variations. Concrete fighting
mudras, such as the closing movement in the Wudang Dan Pai Xuan techniques are introduced, repeated, developed and varied. Religious
Men qigong taijiquan form, Kan Li Ji Ji or ‘Qi Above and Qi Below references appear and theatrical characters are evoked and dismissed.
Mutually Reinforce Each Other’. Here the shou yin for the fiery heart, Conceptual meanings and imaginal2 actions only known to the
which resembles the head of a deer, is placed beneath the open hand performer may also be present.
that resembles the watery moon (figure 7 opposite).
To sum up, I am proposing two axes for considering decipherability in
These examples can easily be perceived ‘from the outside’. Some taolu: spatiotemporal form and cultural form. These axes are pragmatic.
structures, however, are more conceptual. For example, the taolu of We cannot claim absolutely that taolu are composed of pure fighting
Hong Junsheng’s Chen style contain a literary/religious reference. The movements that have been subsequently conditioned by cultural
first set, or Yi Lu, has 81 movements and the second, or Er Lu, has 64, practice or that they are cultural practices that happen to also be useful
which corresponds to the 81 chapters of the Laozi and the 64 chapters for combat training. Exclusive emphasis on either stance jettisons
of the Zhouyi, both classics of ancient Chinese literature. valuable information and the lived experiences of practitioners and risks
explaining away, rather than explaining, the complex phenomenon of
I’m confident that this list can be developed substantially, not just by the taolu.
addition of further elements, but also by the fact that some taolu seem to
be defined by the absence of these elements. For example, while Choy Li Now, on to credibility, which asks: ‘Was it performed in a way I
Fut kuen is characterized by long and theatrical taolu, its contemporary, respond to?’ Attempts to parse what makes a performance of any sort
wing chun kuen, has equally structured and sophisticated taolu that compelling can appear arbitrary, formalist or nebulous. And yet, we
appear to be devoid of religious and theatrical elements – or, at least, have all had the experience of finding a performance credible, even if
they are quite hard to spot in contemporary practice.

The selective presence and absence of all of these elements give taolu 2 The word ‘imaginal’ is a neologism coined by scholar Henri Corbin to describe
a rudimentary narrative form. They have clear markers indicating the visualized and visionary experiences of Islamic mysticism that exist between sensory
experience and discursive thought [Corbin 1977: viii-ix].

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MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
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we each find it credible for different reasons or come to find it credible Viewing these different exercises, Barba felt that, even though the
in different ways. results of training varied from style to style, the performers all sought
a similar goal. They used their trained physicality to create a way of
In 2011, I performed a taolu at the First International Hong Junsheng moving that captured their audience’s attention. Barba theorized that
Taijiquan Seminar and Competition on Daqingshan in Shandong, the principal goal of rigorous training was to cultivate the attribute of
China. I was surprised and pleased to receive a score of 8.6/10 – a gold stage presence, or pre-sense, that which draws us to a performer’s actions
medal – for my efforts. My teacher Chen Zhonghua later explained to before we can attribute meaning to them. In Ruffini’s terms, credibility
me that, although this was the highest score awarded to a foreigner in is presence, which, according to Barba, precedes decipherability.
the entire competition, the parameters on which I had been evaluated Barba has named this level of the performer’s practice Pre-Expressive
were things like the depth of my horse-riding stance, my stability on Behaviour, which he describes in terms of four principles [Barba 1995:
one leg, my kick height, the clarity of the sound I made slapping my foot 9]:
when kicking and the sharpness of my stops. The actual spatiotemporal
parameters of taijiquan, he said, were unknown to the judges, so 1. Principle of Balance – Performers use positions and ways of movement
I hadn’t been graded on them. The judges found my performance that are precarious and require greater effort to maintain than those
credible; my teacher less so. used in daily life. Because they have control of their balance, they can
move in unexpected directions without signaling their intent. And, as
My personal parameters for credibility were further challenged when they can change at any time, we watch them.
I watched the tui shou athletes preparing to compete. Martial arts
competitors in China appear to focus either on the presentation of taolu 2. Principle of Opposition – Opposition can be spatial or temporal.
or on various kinds of standing grappling and kickboxing. Competitive Spatially, lines of tension divide the body and create potential energy.
tui shou is a grappling sport derived from the partner balance training For example, in ma bu, the body above the waist stretches up and below
exercises of taijiquan. Speaking to a few of the competitors, I learned the waist sinks down. Temporally, I can signal left and then move right,
that professional push-hands players in China pick two or three catching the audiences’ attention with a trick – look over there / look
principal throws that they train intensively. Tui shou players rarely over here!
practice taolu, but in order to qualify for competition, they have to
demonstrate one. Imagine my surprise when I observed that they were 3. Principle of Consistent Inconsistency – This refers to the internal
not able to perform taolu credibly at all. They forgot movements, got coherence of the performer’s choices. In the case of a codified system
stuck in repetitive loops and ignored postural requirements. Encased like Chinese theatre, the idiosyncrasies of the form apply to all its
in the structural demands of taolu, they entirely lost their predatory practitioners and recur thematically throughout its repertoire. In less
menace and feline grace. They could not transfer the powerful strictly codified genres, such as cinema acting, clowning, physical
credibility they demonstrated in their wrestling to their taolu. theatre or contemporary dance, the performer’s personal idiosyncrasies,
contextualized for performance, become an expressive vocabulary.
A strong attempt to structurally identify what we are actually
responding to when we attribute credibility to a performance has been 4. Principle of Equivalency – Everyday actions are decomposed and
proposed by theatre director Eugenio Barba. Theatre specialists will restructured in order to make them more visible and visceral than they
doubtless already be familiar with Barba’s ideas; as I mentioned earlier, would be in daily life. To use a prosaic example: In everyday life, I’ll take
Barba, emerging from the Great Reform, is the Italian born director of a sip of water with as little effort as possible. To make the fact that I’m
a Danish theatre company called Odin Teatret, an ensemble he founded drinking water meaningful for an audience, I’ll decompose the action
in 1964 and with which he has directed 28 original performances. He’s into discrete phases to make it more legible [Barba 1995: 34].
also published prolifically on theatre. In 1980, inspired by the rigorous
training of such traditional Asian dance-theatre forms as Indian I have found these principles to be great pedagogical tools for actors,
Kathakali, Japanese Noh, Indonesian Topeng and Chinese Jingju, all of dancers and martial artists-in-training. Balance and opposition are as
which he had seen while on tour around the world, Barba gathered a important to a beginning student assimilating postures and stepping
group of master performers from different traditions for a month-long patterns as they are to an intermediate student practicing fighting
workshop where he asked them to demonstrate and teach one another games with a partner. Personal and stylistic idiosyncrasies and the
the exercises that they had learned as children on the first day of their relationship between them, meanwhile, can be perceived quickly by
apprenticeships. examining consistent inconsistency; the principle of equivalence lets us

46 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Taolu: Credibility and Deciperability
ARTS STUDIES Daniel Mroz

consider how everyday movement is transformed into martial prowess In a video clip available online3, we see my taiji brothers Brennan Toh
and vice versa. Despite their usefulness, however, in my experience, and John Dahms practicing competitive tui shou. Brennan is really
these principles don’t help in understanding why some performers are trying to trip and throw John and John is really trying to stop him. As
more interesting to watch than others; rather, they answer help in John falls, Brennan’s actions are credible in the most fundamental sense
understanding how performers have trained in order to be credible to and the causality of the exchange is clear.
audiences.
In the early 2000s, I began to develop exercises for actors and dancers
The difference between ‘why’ and ‘how’ is a key one for me. As an artist, using partner games from Choy Li Fut and taijiquan. My objective was
I’ve found asking ‘how’ to be more practical than asking ‘why’. How do to maintain the credible causality created by physical contact when not
I acquire a particular skill? How do I practice a particular method? How touching, going from the credibility of a concrete result on a partner to
do I choose between different training methods? How do I express the the more subjective credibility of indirect action across space via non-
fruition of my practice? verbal and verbal communication.

My ongoing question with respect to credibility has to do with causality: Over time, I differentiated our games into two main categories:
How is the immediately credible causality of two taijiquan players avoidance and entanglement. When players are touching, these are
wrestling freely and spontaneously reflected in a set solo choreographic striking (where one avoids being hit) and grappling (where one
sequence? This transfer is germane to both the practice of taolu and welcomes becoming entangled), but as larger metaphors they embrace
to theatre practice, where actors and dancers need to repeat known interpersonal actions both physical and social.
sequences of movement and behaviour night after night all the while
reliably retaining their credibility.

3 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rpwd62RTMJI&t=64s

Figure 8: Author and actor Colleen Durham practicing


an entanglement exercise. Photos by Laura Astwood.

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In the spring of 2009, I was awarded a three-year Research/Creation duet. The performance is named Circe/Landfall and it was based on
Grant by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research the myth of Circe from Homer’s Odyssey. Instead of Odysseus’ men
Council. This grant offered artists working in the university system being transformed into pigs by Circe the witch, in our version, a single
funding for practical artistic research. I used this grant to found my hallucinating, shipwrecked stranger is discovered washed up on the
studio Les Ateliers du corps, which for the first three years was a small beach by a lonely woman. In this example, our Circe talks to herself and
group of emerging artists who met for nine hours a week to learn the her conflicting inner voices played by two performers.
curriculum of performer training I had assembled. Each year in the
spring, we spent four weeks working full-time prior to presenting a
professional dance theatre performance as the outcome of that year’s Conclusion
training and creation activities. The participants in Les Ateliers du Corps
learned Chen style taijiquan, both from me and from Chen Zhonghua My combined experiences of training and teaching martial arts and
on his regular visits to Ottawa. I had a chance to see the effect of theatre leads me to conclude provisionally that credibility in taolu is
training in both orthodox Chen style and the kinds of games I’d been a function of interactivity. When we interact with a parameter, be
developing myself. it another person, a cultural enactment such as a theatrical figure or
religious narrative or a series of impersonal movement variables, our
These games initially lent themselves to creating interesting staging focus is on something outside of ourselves. This gives us the space we
and choreography. The next clip4 is a fragment from Nor the Cavaliers need to interact with the multiple variables taolu conjure.
Who Come with Us – an original performance about the conquest of
Mexico that I created and directed in residence at the National Theatre When we perform and watch taolu, we privilege different kinds of
School of Canada. Here, improvised partner entanglement about interactivity; we might expect taolu to be credible in terms of our
a single wooden staff is used to dramatize the many battles led by existing repertoire of fighting techniques and power generation
Conquistador Hernan Cortez as he fought his way from the coast to the methods. But there are always techniques and methods of which we
Mexica capital, Tenochtitlan. The text he is speaking is a translation are ignorant. We can examine the credibility of taolu with respect to
of the Spanish Requirement of 1513, or Requiremento, a declaration by the cultural information or with respect to our knowledge of fundamental
Spanish monarchy of Spain’s divinely ordained right to take possession human movement. But here, too, there will be gaps in our knowledge.
of the territories of the New World and to subjugate, exploit and, Both taolu and the perceptual apparatus with which we receive them
when necessary, to fight the native inhabitants. The Requiremento was are palimpsestic. To the extent that we interact with different, tacit
read in Spanish to Native Americans to inform them of Spain’s right of world-spaces, so the various world-spaces of the taolu become available
conquest. Those who subsequently resisted conquest were considered to to our perceptions.
harbor evil intentions. We took the title of the performance itself from
this text. Questions that might allow our attributions of credibility to become
more conscious and nuanced would then include: What does the taolu
The effect I had hoped to create by not actually setting the individual suggest we should interact with? How does it accomplish this? How
movements of the fight over the staff was the kind of spontaneity and is the player interpreting those suggestions? We won’t necessarily get
precision shown by the students at the National Academy of Chinese exhaustive answers, but we will come closer to understanding our own
Theatre Arts (NACTA) in Beijing5. They are using set fragments of parameters and the gaps in our experience.
known attacks and ripostes to improvise and mutually decide in the
moment on the content and conclusion of their encounter.

This next fragment is from Circe 6, a performance I created at the


2010 Canada Dance Festival, which is a national festival that takes
place in Ottawa every spring. In this example, two performers set the
results of their improvised entanglement game in order to create a
Acknowledgement

I’d like to thank my teachers, colleagues, collaborators and students – their


4 https://vimeo.com/17352485 [25:55-27: 30]
contributions have been decisive to this presentation. I’d also like to thank
5 https://vimeo.com/195117970 Debbie Shayne and Ted Mancuso of Plum Publications for their help in
6 https://vimeo.com/15460624 [32:57-35:44] tracking down a few obscure books and dates: It’s good to have good friends.

48 Winter 2016
MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES

References
Barba, Eugenio. 1994. The Paper Canoe. London: Routledge.

Corbin, Henry. 1977. Spiritual Body and Celestial Earth, translated by


Nancy Pearson. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Holcombe, Charles. 1990. ‘Theatre of Combat’. The Historian. 52: 3, 411-


431. Blackwell: Hoboken.

Hong, Junsheng. 2006. Chen Style Taijiquan Practical Method – Volume


One: Theory, translated by Chen Zhonghua. Edmonton: Hunyuantaiji
Press.

Kang, Ge Wu. 1995. The Spring and Autumn of Chinese Martial Arts.
Santa Cruz: Plum.

Morris, Steve. 2003. ‘Pedigree’, available at: http://www.oocities.org/


vythe/stevemorris.html

Riley, Jo. 1997. Chinese Theatre and the Actor in Performance. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.

Ruffini, Franco. 2014. Theatre and Boxing: The Actor Who Flies, translated
by Paul Warrington. Denmark: Icarus.

Schino, Mirella. 2009. Alchemists of the Stage, translated by Paul


Warrington. Denmark: Icarus.

Wan, Lai Sheng. 1927. Wushu Hui Zun. Taipei: Lion Books.

Zhou, Baofu. 2014. Hall of Gongfu. Video. Self-Produced. Kungfu Loung.


Taipei.

martialartsstudies.org 49
CONTRIBUTOR Timothy J. Nulty is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.

GONG AND FA IN
CHINESE MARTIAL ARTS
TIMOTHY J. NULTY

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j.2016.10064 The distinction between gong (skill) and fa (technique) is
ubiquitous in Chinese martial arts. Utilizing Maurice Merleau-
Ponty’s notion of ‘embodied intentionality’, I examine this
distinction. I draw specific examples of the kinds of skills under
discussion from a particular style of taijiquan – Hong Chuan
KEYWORDs Chen Shi taijiquan (Master Hong Junsheng’s transmission of
Chen taiji boxing) – and I argue that understanding taijiquan
Phenomenology, embodiment, in terms of embodied intentionality allows us to understand
Merleau-Ponty, taijiquan, skill, important taijiquan concepts such as chansijin, yin, and yang.
technique, martial arts Although in this article I focus on one specific style of martial
art, I argue that the general analysis of the gong-fa distinction
based on embodied intentionality is widely applicable.
CITATION
Nulty, Timothy J. 2017. ‘Gong
and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts’,
Martial Arts Studies 3, 51-64.
MARTIAL Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts
ARTS STUDIES Timothy J. Nulty

Introduction What are Techniques (fa) and


What are Skills (gong)?
In many traditional Chinese martial arts, gong (or skill training) was
reserved for the master’s disciples. Discipleship in Chinese martial Let’s think of techniques (fa) as meaningful bodily movements. The
arts at times has the status of an adoption, where the disciple-master meaning of a movement is normally a combination of defensive and
relationship is identical to that of father and son. This is certainly offensive maneuvers. Various techniques are usually given names that
the case in Master Hong Junsheng’s lineage of Chen style taijiquan,1 indicate the general intention behind the movement or that describe
in which gong training was traditionally reserved for the most loyal the shape of the movement (e.g., Chen style practitioners will be
and trustworthy students. Today, however, it is taught more openly. familiar with names such as ‘white crane spreads wings’, ‘Buddha’s
Common sayings about gong and fa (technique movements) reflect warrior attendant pounds the mortar’, ‘single whip’, etc.). Let’s think of
the perceived value and importance of gong training. These include skills (gong) as bodily abilities which make techniques more effective. If one
sayings such as, ‘If I don’t want to teach a person, then I will teach him person’s use of a technique is more effective than another person’s use
fa but not gong’; ‘If you are too busy to practice both, then practice gong of that technique, other things being equal, we might say that the first
instead of fa’; ‘I’d rather teach ten fa than one gong’; and ‘If you train person performed the technique more skillfully. Generally speaking,
your whole life, but don’t train gong, your efforts are wasted in old age’.2 the difference in application efficacy is a difference in the level of gong.
One martial art is distinguished from another not necessarily by the
Clearly, training that led to the development of gong was held in high techniques but by the skills used to apply the techniques effectively.
regard. But what exactly is gong and why is it so important? Can the
Western philosophical tradition tell us anything about the difference For example, most martial arts, including Western boxing, have a
between gong and fa? Can it explain why gong training is viewed as straight punch. Often the straight punch of one style will appear very
superior to training only fa? similar to the straight punch of another style. However, there can be
great variations in the underlying body mechanics used to deliver the
Utilizing Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s notion of ‘embodied intentionality’, punch. Within a style, practitioners can differ in how well they execute
I examine this distinction. I draw specific examples of the kinds of those body mechanics. These differences both between and within styles
skills under discussion from a particular style of taijiquan – Hong are best thought of as differences in gong. Gong in this sense is often
Chuan Chen Shi taijiquan (Master Hong’s transmission of Chen taiji specific to particular martial arts. The skills that make the techniques
boxing).3 Additionally, applying Merleau-Ponty’s notion of embodied of one style effective might be different from the skills that make the
intentionality affords a clearer understanding of the role of yin and yang techniques of another style effective. Without the development of gong,
in taijiquan practice. The distinction between gong and fa is ubiquitous techniques will either not work at all or will only work on inferior
in Chinese martial arts. Although I focus on one specific style of martial opponents. We need to know more about the difference between gong
art, I believe the general analysis of the gong/fa distinction based on and fa in order to understand in detail why and how skill increases the
embodied intentionality is widely applicable. efficacy of technique.

Of course, there are skills involved in the execution of any technique.


These skills are usually a basic level or foundational level of skills
sometimes called jibengong. These skills include balance, stamina,
1 Master Liu Chengde is one of Master Hong’s senior disciples. The agreement basic coordination, flexibility, etc. These basic skills are common
of lineage presented to Master Liu’s students (and grand-students) during the discipleship in some form or other to almost all martial arts. While these types
ceremony reads in part: ‘This agreement has come to be due to the heartfelt relationship
of foundational skills might be necessary to execute the technique
that is identical to father and son’. Verbal teachings also stress that the relationship
effectively, they are rarely sufficient.
between shifu and disciple is identical to that of father and son.

2 Sayings such as these are common among noted Chen style masters such as It might be helpful to distinguish two general kinds of skills: (1) athletic
Master Feng Zhiqiang [2000] and Master Chen Zhongua [2010] as well as Master Liu. skills and (2) martial skills. Athletic skills are the attributes practitioners
3 This way of representing the name of Hong’s lineage comes from one of his need to demonstrate their martial techniques in isolation, such as the
senior disciples, Master Liu. choreographed training routines quan tao or taolu (‘kata’ in Japanese).4

4 My discussion of taolu is focused exclusively on their value as self-defense


movements. However, taolu have much greater significance in Chinese culture than
being merely a set of self-defense movements. For a more extensive consideration of the
significance of taolu, see the article in this issue by Daniel Mroz [2016].

martialartsstudies.org 51
MARTIAL Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts
ARTS STUDIES Timothy J. Nulty

These skills also contribute, no doubt, to combat effectiveness, but they training which makes the body harder and more resistant to strikes.7
are not sufficient by themselves to reach the higher combat levels of any There is little doubt that strength, speed, and body conditioning are
art. attributes and skills that enhance combat techniques.

For example, contemporary Chinese wushu, with its standardized It is the second sub-category of martial skill that is the focus of this
routines, is impressive to watch because of the speed, flexibility, and article, and the one that I believe is referred to in the common sayings at
gymnastics incorporated into the routines, but it is sometimes criticized the start of this article. It is sometimes said that true martial skill should
by traditional martial artists as lacking martial content (i.e., useful allow the practitioner to defeat a stronger and faster opponent and it
self-defense techniques). These routines are sometimes referred to as should allow the older practitioner to maintain his combat effectiveness
‘hua quan, xiu tui’, or ‘flower fist, brocade leg’. The routines are beautiful against younger assailants. Indeed, it is claimed that this kind of skill
to watch but, according to these critics, do not constitute legitimate or gong training is a necessary condition for martial ability in old age
combat training.5 I take no stance on the accuracy of that criticism in and is captured in the often cited taijiquan expression of ‘four ounces
this article. My point is simply that there exists a conceptual distinction overcoming a thousand pounds’.8 When martial artists talk about
in martial arts discourse about types of skills that is relevant to the avoiding localized strength when generating force (for example, using
distinction between gong and fa. only the arm muscles to punch) and work to develop movements that
coordinate the entire body, they are talking about more refined uses of
Martial skills will be those attributes a practitioner must develop in strength as opposed to brute strength. Refinement is a matter of degree
order to attain a high level of combat effectiveness. These are the skills and different martial artists will manifest abilities with differing degrees
needed to know how to fight and to defend oneself against an attacker. of refinement. I will explore what such differences in refinement
A further distinction is needed at this point, however, insofar as there amount to later in this article.
are different types of combat skills. As an initial attempt to elucidate this
further distinction, let’s say there are both: (2a) brute skills6 and (2b) I should add that the analysis of gong I am about to offer is incomplete,
refined skills. Brute skills are easier to understand. If practitioner A can or will be viewed as incomplete from the perspective of some
move his fist from point x to point y in less time than practitioner B, practitioners of taijiquan. I will avoid entirely, as did Master Hong
then we can say practitioner A has more speed-skill than practitioner B. in his discussion of taijiquan, any discussion of qi, jing , and shen,
Likewise, if practitioner C does lots of push-ups and therefore develops elements which are often regarded as essential to understanding gong
more upper-body strength than practitioner D, we can say practitioner in traditional Chinese martial arts.9 It is beyond the scope of this article
C has more strength-skill than practitioner D. The same can be said for to address adequately the Chinese metaphysics needed to explain
these concepts. Most importantly, martial arts styles which include
these elements tend to agree that correct physical training (including
structural alignment, correct use of force, and proper breathing and
relaxation) are necessary to develop these more esoteric aspects of
the art. My discussion of martial gong will attempt to begin at the
5 The separation between athletic skill and martial skill, according to some beginning.
critics, can be seen in many martial arts schools. Critics claim that students perform the
choreographed routines beautifully and with a high degree of skill, yet when the students
spar, their techniques have no significant relation to the routines. If they have sparring skills
at all, those skills are developed independently of the routines. For example, the sparring 7 We can think of iron palm and iron body training here. The practitioners of
of kung fu practitioners might be indistinguishable from kickboxing. To my knowledge, these skills develop greater striking power because their fists or palms are harder, and their
no compelling data exist which would show the frequency or extent of this phenomenon bodies are less likely to be affected by strikes because of their conditioning. Having a harder
among practitioners of Chinese martial arts. Finding good data is especially challenging fist is not itself a technique but it will make fist techniques more effective.
since self-defense focused martial technique might be quite different than sport martial
8 This expression is mentioned by Master Feng [2000], Master Hong [2006],
art technique common in mixed martial arts (MMA) competitions. Hence, an absence of
Master Chen [2010], and other notable Chen stylists in numerous publications and
traditional martial artists in MMA competitions would not be a sufficient indicator of a
interviews.
general lack of self-defense efficacy. The conceptual distinction between athletic skills and
martial skills is nonetheless valuable as it affords practitioners a chance to examine the 9 It is sometimes said that training should convert jing into qi, and qi into
skills developed in their own practice in relation to martial efficacy. shen, and ultimately shen or spirit merges into emptiness or what is sometimes referred
to as wuji. Wuji is prior to taiji and is said to give birth to taiji and from taiji 10,000 things
6 Clearly brute skills and athletic skills often overlap. Speed and strength are
emerge. There is much to be said about how martial arts training is a form of spiritual
useful in both solo performance and combat.
development, but that would be a topic for another article.

52 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts
ARTS STUDIES Timothy J. Nulty

The Phenomenology of Embodied Skill According to Merleau-Ponty, this discernment is not a matter of the
child having an inner representation, or the result of some process
Merleau-Ponty rejected both empiricist accounts of perception and of calculating distances; rather, this knowing is presented in how the
intellectualist accounts. Taylor Carmen aptly describes these rejected world shows up.
positions: ‘The concept of sensations or qualia as primitive building
blocks of perceptual experience on the one hand and [the] equally The same kind of change in how the world appears to us occurs
emphatic denial that perception is constituted by or reducible to when we learn to parallel park. Through much trial and error, most
thought or judgment on the other’ [Carmen 2005: 51]. Merleau-Ponty city drivers learn to perceive when a parking space is large enough
argues instead that the body has its own kind of intentionality, its own to accommodate their car. Country drivers less familiar with parallel
way of making sense of the environment, which cannot be accounted parking often agonize over whether or not they can fit into the space.
for by either empiricist or intellectualist theories. The two types of drivers differ not only in how the space appears to
them, but also in terms of how the car feels backing into the parking
A phenomenological analysis of perception and behavior reveals that space (i.e., in how well they can execute the task). The city driver feels
the body does not respond to objective external stimuli via sensations when to cut the wheel to slip into the spot without clipping the other
which are isomorphic to those stimuli, nor does it wait to be animated car, while the country driver starts and stops repeatedly while checking
by the mind, but actively enhances its perception of the environment the mirrors or perhaps backing over the curb. We might say the city
leading to a greater refinement in skilled coping. driver feels the parking space through his car, while the country driver
suffers from a kind of perceptual deficiency since he is unable to feel the
Hubert Dreyfus summarizes two of Merleau-Ponty’s concepts that are parking space adequately through his car.
central to my analysis of gong and fa: the concepts of an ‘intentional arc’
and of ‘maximum grip’. The intentional arc names the tight connection It is important to note that, even when we are talking about the same
between the agent and the world; as the agent acquires skills, these parking spot, what solicits the city driver to attempt to park in the
skills are ‘stored’, though not as representations in the mind but rather space and inhibits the country driver from an attempt is how the spot
as more and more refined dispositions to respond to the solicitations of appears to each driver. The objective features of the space, such as its
more and more refined perceptions of the current situation. Maximum dimensions, are insufficient by themselves to explain the behaviors of
grip, meanwhile, names the body’s tendency to respond to these each driver. How the world appears to each driver solicits different
solicitations in such a way as to bring the current situation closer to the courses of action, and those actions in turn affect how the world shows
agent’s sense of an optimal gestalt [Dreyfus 2008: 1]. up to solicit them.

Let’s begin with the intentional arc. It is easy enough to provide Merleau-Ponty uses the examples of a woman with a feather in her hat
examples of this relationship between the embodied agent and his avoiding anything overhead that may break it off and a driver entering
environment. Consider the toddler reaching for the shapes and colors a narrow opening: ‘The hat and the car have ceased to be objects with a
dangling from her mobile, just out of reach. From a seated position, size and volume which is established by comparison with other objects.
the toddler remains frustrated by her inability to reach the object. But They have become potentialities of volume, the demand for a certain
if the toddler stands, then, with a bit more stretching, she will succeed amount of free space’ [Merleau-Ponty 1962: 143].
in touching one of the colorful objects. In doing so, clearly the toddler’s
behavior is intentional: it is about the object. The lived world is not that of the physicist or the geometer; rather, it is
a network of potentialities which encourages or inhibits certain courses
Crucially, this engagement does not leave the toddler’s world as it was of action. Objects have meaning or significance that emerge from our
prior to the grasping attempts. After enough successes and failures engagements with them.
from different positions, objects now appear differently than before.
Objects can now appear to be within reach or out of reach. The child’s If Merleau-Ponty is correct and the embodied agent is related to her
environment has become enriched; formerly undifferentiated elements environment through a network of intentional arcs, then understanding
are now saliently discriminable. Notice too that the child becomes more the agent’s environment necessarily requires an account of the agent’s
efficient at reaching objects because now she can discern when she behaviors; likewise, understanding what the agent is doing requires
needs to move only her arm or whether she needs to move her entire an account of how she experiences her environment – the network of
body in order to be successful.

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MARTIAL Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts
ARTS STUDIES Timothy J. Nulty

significance or solicitations she encounters.10 But what governs this Once again, we see that for Merleau-Ponty our encounter with the
ongoing interaction between the embodied agent and environment? world is essentially normative. The normativity is grounded in the
What provides the general normative structure of the interaction embodied agent’s continuous attempt to reach equilibrium in a given
such that it leads to improved coping and an enrichment of salient situation. The body is aware of deviations from what it finds optimal
environment features? and seeks to relieve that tension. Dreyfus makes frequent use of
Merleau-Ponty’s claim that the body responds to the solicitations of the
Merleau-Ponty’s answer is that the embodied agent aims toward a kind environment without relying on mental representations of the goal. For
of optimal gestalt: ‘Whether a system of motor or perceptual powers, Merleau-Ponty and Dreyfus, motor intentionality is a form of non-
our body is not an object for an “I think” [but] a grouping of lived- representational intentionality. What the organism knows is not stored
through meanings which moves towards its equilibrium’ [Merleau- as representations but in how the world shows up and solicits that
Ponty 1962: 153]. This equilibrium is explained further by Merleau- organism. As Merleau-Ponty explains, ‘it is to allow oneself to respond
Ponty in terms of perceptual clarity and richness, and in terms of our to their call, which is made upon it independently of any representation’
intentional behaviors functioning as expected. [Merleau-Ponty 1962: 139].

For example, we naturally hold objects in our hands at the optimal Merleau-Ponty uses the analogy of a soap bubble to illustrate how no
distance for viewing, and we position our bodies in such a way as to representation of the end state or goal is needed to explain how the
get the best view of distal objects and events. When we reach for the embodied agent moves toward an optimal gestalt. The final spherical
objects that appear within reach while sitting at a table and writing, result does not have a causal role to play in the bubble forming. Rather
we do in fact succeed in grasping them. When going up the stairs in local forces acting on soap film result in the bubble’s production.
the dark, our feet find the stairs where the body expects them to be. Likewise, local solicitations on the embodied agent produce responses
Merleau-Ponty speaks of the body being ‘geared onto the world’: in the agent that result in movement toward the optimum gestalt. As
Dreyfus notes, there is more involved than just a causal relation when
My body is geared onto the world when my perception the agent responds to a solicitation:
presents me with a spectacle as varied and as clearly articulated
as possible, and when my motor intentions, as they unfold, According to Merleau-Ponty, in absorbed coping the body of
receive the responses they expect from the world. This the performer is not just responding to causal forces like a soup
maximum sharpness of perception and action points clearly bubble; it is solicited by the situation to perform a series of
to a perceptual ground, a basis of my life, a general setting in movements that feel appropriate without the agent needing in any
which my body can co-exist with the world. way to present what would count as achieving the goal.
[Merleau-Ponty 1962: 250] [Dreyfus 2002: 415]

And further: We could think of an infant learning to crawl or to reach for objects.
The infant is not cognitively sophisticated enough to represent those
The distance from me to the object is not a size which increases goals to itself, but feedback from its interaction with the environment
or decreases, but a tension which fluctuates around a norm. An reinforces or inhibits some movements instead of others. And,
oblique position of the object in relation to me is not measured importantly, that feedback has intentional content. Dreyfus offers
by the angle which it forms with the plane of my face, but felt the example of a player returning a tennis serve: ‘Indeed I cannot
as a lack of balance, as an unequal distribution of its influence represent how I should turn my racket since I do not know what I do
upon me. when I return the ball’ [Dreyfus 2008: 13]. The tennis player’s body
[Merleau-Ponty 1962: 302] automatically adjusts the racket to meet the oncoming ball at the
optimum angle without the agent representing to herself what that
angle is.
10 A very similar point was made by James Gibson in The Ecological Approach to
Visual Perception: ‘There are no atomic units of the world considered as an environment’ To summarize, there are three elements central to Merleau-Ponty’s
[Gibson 1979: 9]; ‘an affordance cuts across the dichotomy of subjective-objective and helps account of the embodied agent’s relationship with the environment.
us to understand its inadequacy’ [Gibson 1979: 129]. Martin Heidegger’s notion of Dasein First, the embodied agent has some sense of what is optimal in a given
as ‘being-in-the-world’ is also meant to indicate that agent and environment cannot be situation and the agent strives to reach and maintain that optimal
understood in isolation from each other [Heidegger 1996 (1927)].

54 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts
ARTS STUDIES Timothy J. Nulty

relationship with the environment without making use of mental inside a cube not touching any of the sides to get a sense of experiencing
representations; the embodied agent also refines what counts as a the kua and hip movement. In fact, taijiquan instructors in this lineage
good gestalt. Second, the agent becomes more skilled at coping with prioritize training the crotch area.12
aspects of the environment through successful interactions. Third, this
refinement in skill is concurrent with an enrichment of salient aspects Instruction regarding these two circles does not happen primarily
of the environment, i.e., how that environment appears. I now want in a verbal form, and as training progresses, the requirements for
to employ these three elements to say something about the difference correct movement cannot be seen but only felt.13 The reason for the
between gong and fa. lack of verbal directions is quite simple: the novice practitioner lacks a
sufficient understanding of the important areas of the body (such as the
kua and dang) to correctly interpret verbal instructions. For example,
Gong, Fa, and Embodied Skills the direction to ‘turn the waist’ typically results in incorrectly turning
from the top (i.e., the shoulders or chest) or moving the hips in the
The student is initially taught technique as a series of movements. same direction as the waist (i.e., not distinguishing the hips from the
The student might then be expected to increase the fluidity, speed, waist).
and power with which the movements are executed. Indeed, solo
performances of martial techniques are often quite impressive in terms Part of the problem is that the novice practitioner is likely to have a
of their athleticism. very vague or limited conception of their waist. Additionally, because
they have no sense or feel for their kua, the novice will misinterpret
At this level of learning technique, gong training may or may not be their visual perception of what the teacher is doing. In other words,
introduced. It is important to realize that there is more than one way a the novice lacks the training to pick up salient features of their visual
person can move his body into a particular position, and more than one experience, much like the country driver who cannot determine
way a person can use his body to issue force. To the untrained eye, two whether the parking space is large enough for parallel parking. Thus,
people may appear to be performing the same movement since their the student is in danger of copying the external movement of the
torsos, limbs, and overall postures seem to be identical. However, which teacher without grasping the subtle underlying mechanics – in other
parts of the body initiate the movement, and how those parts perform words, training fa without any gong.
the movement to generate force, can be radically different.
The danger of failing to grasp the underlying mechanics by merely
Someone could be taught choreographed routines in which one copying the external movement is mitigated by three instructional
technique is followed by another, without being subject to the training methods: (1) the teacher physically manipulates the student’s body
necessary to develop the understanding of one’s body needed for in ways that more closely approximate correct movement; (2) the
higher-level skill training. In Master Hong’s transmission of Chen teacher allows the student to feel the teacher’s body as the teacher is
taijiquan, gong training initially consists of coordinated bodily moving; and (3) the teacher might prevent certain parts of the student’s
movements called ‘positive and negative circles’.11 One of the most body from moving thereby preventing the student from initiating
important parts of training the positive and negative circles is learning the movement from the wrong part of the body. The teacher might
how to sense or feel what is known as the kua, or what we can think of have the student place their hands on the teacher’s kua as the teacher
as the hip joint. In taijiquan training, there is a requirement to ‘round
the dang’ which refers to a kind of openness of the groin or crotch area,
and which refers more to a quality of and receptivity to movement in 12 Emphasis on the crotch region or dang can be found in Hong [2006]. Master
that area rather than simply a physical structure. Rounding the dang or Liu and Master Chen have also verbally emphasized correct use of the dang as essential to
crotch involves the hip joints, the tailbone, the hip crease and kua, and Hong’s transmission of taijiquan.
also the perineum and buttocks area. There is a feeling of sitting down
13 For example, Master Liu will often have the student stand behind him while
while the practitioner is standing. The hip joint feels as if it is floating
he performs various movements, usually the positive and negative circles or movements
in a contained space, free to rotate. We could imagine a ball floating
from the form. The student’s hands are placed on the back of Master Liu’s hips or in the
kua region so that the student can feel the correct movement. Master Feng states that ‘one
touch can penetrate’, meaning that a simple touch from the teacher is sufficient to impart
11 It is important to note that in Hong’s system of Chen taijiquan all movements understanding in a student who has practiced sufficiently up to a certain point [Feng 2000].
in the routines are variations of positive and negative circles. For further discussion of this, Master Chen also frequently places students’ hands on his body in order to feel proper
see Mroz [2016]. movement and alignment.

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performs the positive and negative circles correctly. The teacher might The knees cannot shift or collapse inward; they simply change their
also perform the movement incorrectly as the student would, in order direction upward or downward as the leg rotates. When the right leg
to illustrate the difference. Thus, the teacher leads the student toward a rotates negatively and the knee points down, the left leg will rotate
better sense of what optimal movement and position feel like. positively and the left knee will point upward. This action of the legs
will cause the waist to turn to the left. Likewise, the opposite action of
With correct training of the positive and negative circles, awareness the legs will cause the waist to turn right. By pushing into the ground
and control of the kua develops. The kua movement becomes with the feet while at the same time rotating the legs in coordination,
coordinated with the movement of other parts of the body. In Hong the torso is made to rotate. The torso does not initiate its own
Chuan Chen Shi taijiquan, that coordination begins to produce a kind of movement or turning.
force known as chansijin, or ‘spiral force’. The various movements of the
routines are now expressions or manifestations of chansijin, and proper Westerners are often more familiar with punches thrown by boxers,
training of the routines becomes another way of training gong. even if only through televised bouts, and are sometimes also familiar
with the admonition given to boxers to avoid throwing ‘arm punches’.
To get a better sense of the basic aspects of chansijin, hold your arm Boxers are taught that the arm muscles are relatively weak, and a
straight out in front of you. Notice that, by rotating the arm, you can stronger force is delivered through the arm when the force is generated
turn your hand palm up or palm down. There are two directions of in the waist and legs. Westerners see boxers pivot on their toes while
rotation. When the palm turns up, consider this a positive rotation; turning their waists. Western striking arts such as boxing advocate a
when the palm turns down, consider this a negative rotation. Now sit more global approach which relies on the entire body when issuing
on the floor with your legs straight out in front of you. You can keep force. Much like a boxer needs to turn his waist to issue a powerful
the entire leg rigid and you can rotate the leg from the hip joint inward, punch, the taijiquan practitioner is training the coordination of
or you can rotate your legs outward. For most people, the hips naturally his legs, waist, and arms to issue force more effectively. Recall our
rotate outward and the feet point outward at 45 degrees when sitting in experiment of rotating your arms positively and negatively. In a similar
that position. Don’t turn from the ankles or knees; turn the leg as one fashion, though not identical, to how a boxer might rotate her arm
unit from the hip joint. When the knee and foot turn out away from while throwing a punch,14 the taijiquan practitioner rotates her arms
the other leg, consider that a positive rotation; when the knee and foot while striking. The rotation of the arms must be coordinated with
rotate in toward the other leg, consider that a negative rotation. Notice the rotation of the waist and the rotation of the legs. The speed and
too that your torso can turn to the left or to the right. Consider the direction of the rotation must be coordinated from the feet through the
former a positive rotation and the latter a negative rotation. hands.

We have three basic ‘units’ of the body which can rotate: the leg unit, Chansijin involves more than just coordinated rotation of the torso and
the waist unit, and the arm unit. This is of course over-simplified but limbs. The points of rotation, such as the hip, shoulders, and elbows
it should get the idea across. As you’re sitting on the floor you can must be in the proper position while rotating, and they must be relaxed.
coordinate rotations of these three units in different ways. You could In other words, the proper bodily structure and alignment must be
have the right arm and right leg perform a positive rotation, or you maintained while the rotations are occurring. As with the rotations,
might have the right arm and left leg both perform a positive rotation. proper body structure and alignment are essential to the transmission
The left leg could rotate negatively and so could the right arm. You of force.
could also turn the waist to the left or right while you perform these
other rotations. As an experiment, stand in front of a wall with your right foot about
two feet from the wall, and your left foot farther back in what is
However, taijiquan is not practiced sitting down; it is practiced standing sometimes called a bow stance, forward stance, or hill climbing stance.
upright. The feet will now be planted on the floor and so cannot turn Place your right hand on the wall about shoulder height and prepare to
in or out as they can when seated. Rotating the legs while standing push into the wall with your right hand powered by your rear left foot.
becomes more challenging because the ankles must allow the legs to Before you start pushing, raise your right shoulder up close to your
rotate without the feet moving. The knees will appear to point upward
slightly or downward slightly instead of simply pointing in or out.
When the knee points upward it is a positive rotation of the leg, and 14 A boxer’s jab involves a negative rotation as the palm of her hand moves
when the knee points downward it is a negative rotation of the leg. from a vertical position by her chin or in front of her face to a horizontal position facing
downward at the point of impact.

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earlobe. Now begin pushing, driving your hand into the wall by pushing optimal body position. Chansijin is not a matter of imagining ‘energy’
hard with the rear left leg. Notice that your shoulder will start to fatigue moving through the body in some sort of spiral pattern. Chansijin is the
quickly and much of the force from your rear foot is lost as you fight result of proper coordination of the entire body.16
to keep your raised shoulder from moving backward. While pushing
with constant force, let your shoulder drop as low as possible (no need The solo practice of the routines helps the practitioner recognize
to force it down). You will feel a greater pressure now in your rear left optimal body positions in relation to their own movements. She can
foot and the right hand. You have established a more direct line of force learn that she has to move her weight to one foot before stepping with
between your foot and your hand. You can also relax your body more the other, or to prevent her hips and knees from shifting instead of
with improved alignment. rotating. She can develop an isolated sense of optimal body position,
but by itself this increased awareness cannot tell her how to find and
Now notice the position of the tip of your elbow. Is it pointed directly maintain an optimal body position in relation to the opponent. The
down toward the floor or is it pointed sideways to some degree? If you practitioner’s increase in skill is only focused on her own body. The
relax the arm and let the tip of the elbow point down naturally, you practitioner learns to cope better with her own bodily movements,
will again find a greater connection to the rear foot than if the elbow is and, as a result, parts of her own body and their positions become more
pointing sideways to any degree. When taijiquan practitioners practice salient. Diligent practice produces in the student awareness of areas
‘loosening the shoulder’ and ‘sinking the elbow’, this allows for greater of the body, such as the kua, that were previously unrecognized and
relaxation and a more efficient transmission of force from the legs. In outside the realm of purposeful control.
more advanced practitioners, the ability to relax and drop the shoulder
is so refined that it appears as if there is one diagonal line from the neck If, as Merleau-Ponty argues, the body is a grouping of lived-through
to the elbow; the squared angle normally present due to the shoulder meanings, then the taijiquan practitioner’s body becomes something
is almost eliminated. This more refined ability further enhances the more because the body has become more meaningful. The body has
transmission of force. become a locus for a whole new network of meanings. Correct taijiquan
training radically transforms one’s sense of embodiment. One becomes
When the positive and negative rotations of the limbs and torso are aware of the hip joint, individual vertebrae, the tailbone, the shoulder
properly coordinated, and the proper alignment and body structure is joint, and other areas of the body. Awareness permeates the body in a
maintained, practitioners will begin to feel this connectivity as diagonal new way, or perhaps we should say the body is aware in a new way.17
lines through the body while rotating. For example, one diagonal line
will extend from the rear left foot to the front right hand while turning The gong training of the positive and negative circles is further refined
right in a right-sided positive circle. The force is transmitted from the and gains new significance as additional skills are developed. It is
foot to the hand through the body in a straight line, and the experience sometimes said in taijiquan practice: ‘Know yourself through practicing
of this straight line of force also has a spiral quality to it; one feels the the routines, then know others through tui shou [push hands]’.18
body rotating on the line. Practice of the routines, which incorporates the gong of the positive
and negative circles, leads to self-knowledge in the form of a radically
Recall the experiment of pushing against the wall. With enough enriched experience of embodiment. How does an enriched sense
practice and awareness, you can feel when your force gets ‘caught’ in of embodiment relate to knowing others as one goal of push hands
the shoulder, or elbow. Force can also get ‘caught’ in the back, the hips, training?
and the knees.15 As you get better at finding the optimal alignment,
you will find that the line of the force will become increasingly direct
(i.e., straight from ground to hand). The goal of the basic training and
routine training is to reduce the places in the body at which force is 16 Chansijin actually involves more than I have just described. For example, the
prevented from traveling directly from the ground to the point at which 45-degree angle plays a central role in this system of taijiquan. It is beyond the scope
the force is issued. The body is learning to recognize and maintain of this article to explain all the structural requirements of this type of taijiquan, but it is
important to note that these are physical requirements, not metaphysical imaginings.

17 Think of writing with your dominant hand compared to your non-dominant


15 You can also experiment with the angle of the tailbone. Curl the tailbone hand. There is greater awareness and control with the dominant hand. Analogously, with
under and push into the wall. Now point the tailbone back by making the buttocks protrude correct taijiquan training, the entire body changes from functioning like the non-dominant
excessively. Now try varying the degree of the tailbone’s angle. You will notice that some hand to functioning like the dominant hand.
positions are much better than others for transmitting force from the legs through the hand.
18 The author has heard both Master Liu and Master Chen explain push hands in
this fashion during verbal explanations of stages of taijiquan practice.

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Without training the circles and the forms correctly, correct push sense where their center of gravity is, where the opponent’s stance is
hands training is impossible and so ting jin is never cultivated. The weak or strong, and how exactly the opponent is applying force. By
proper movement patterns learned through solo training are necessary the same token, the advanced taijiquan practitioner is able to sense
in order to avoid direct confrontations of force with one’s training increasingly subtle variations in how force is applied to their own body.
partners while all the while remaining in continuous contact with
them. Additionally, the sensitivity to the transmission of force through Push hands allows the practitioner to test their body structure and the
one’s own body cultivated through careful solo practice primes one rotation of their limbs and torso to see whether they are able to receive
to be better aware of the transmission of force through the partner’s and issue force properly (i.e., using chansijin). Recall again our wall
body. Ting jin, or literally ‘listening energy’, is the ability to sense subtle pushing experiment. The wall is static; it does not change its direction
changes in the opponent’s force. of resistance. Push hands training allows the practitioner to cope with a
wide range of changing forces being applied to their body. Push hands
Tui shou is the student’s first confrontation with an opponent, albeit a is an ongoing experiment that tests the habits that are being engrained
friendly and quite helpful opponent. Pan shou is taijiquan training with during solo training. It can also become increasingly aggressive,
a partner. One partner applies force to the other person’s body. The with increases in both speed and force. Indeed, there are push hands
force could be applied to any part of the practitioner’s body, though in competitions. However, if practitioners have not developed enough
practice force is typically applied to the arms and torso. The recipient of taijiquan skill, such encounters can easily come to resemble wrestling
that force has to detect and respond to that force in an appropriate way. matches (albeit entirely upright, and often of apparently low or limited
What does ‘appropriate’ mean in this context? quality). Push hands is not the goal, but a means to develop free fighting
or san shou (literally ‘free hand’) ability. As with other types of martial
As an initial attempt at an answer, let’s say the recipient of the force arts, some taijiquan practitioners in Master Hong’s lineage engage in
neither fights the incoming force nor flees from it. The recipient of the free style sparring, attacking each other freely to test the efficacy of their
force must neutralize the incoming force and issue force at the same time. techniques.20
In taijiquan terminology, yin and yang must happen concurrently, not
sequentially. How does the practitioner neutralize force and issue force Master Hong explains the essential characteristic of movement in
at the same time? The answer is by using the chansijin or spiral force this style: ‘We have established that Chen style taijiquan movements
developed in solo practice. Without the enriched sense of embodiment, conform to the unity of opposites’ [Hong 2006: 12]. This ‘unity of
particularly control of the kua, provided by correct solo training, the opposites’ is manifested in multiple aspects of a movement. Using a
practitioner simply would not understand their own body well enough positive circle exercise as an example, we can see the following pairs
to practice push hands correctly.19 Practicing push hands allows the of opposites: empty/solid, open/close, positive/negative rotation,
practitioner to learn how to sense the opponent’s incoming force and and withdraw/issue. The unity of opposites is achieved through the
how to use the appropriate amount of spiraling in response. Some development of spiral force or chansijin.
spirals might be tighter and faster, while other spirals might be larger
and slower. Furthermore, Master Hong states: ‘The myriad of changes are rooted
in one source. Only silk reeling is the foundation [silk reeling is a
The practice of push hands further enriches the practitioner’s sense of reference to chansijin]; each taiji movement is shaped in spirals that
embodiment. The movements of solo practice take on further meaning must be rounded and loose, like a towel repeatedly wrung‘ [Hong 2006:
and become more precise because now they are performed with a sense 28]. Then, later in the same text, we find: ‘Open and close, hardness,
of the opponent’s force and position. As awareness of one’s own body softness; curvature and straight line are coordinated through spirals,
increases with the awareness of the opponent’s body, the practitioner that result in contradictory harmony’ [Hong 2006: 62]. And lastly: ‘The
reaches a stage at which she may even have greater awareness of the method is in the movement of the dang and the knees’ [Hong 2006: 65].
opponent’s body than of her own. Such a taijiquan practitioner can
Thus, for Master Hong, the elements of yin and yang are incorporated
into taijiquan training by the development of chansijin. According to
19 For practitioners with some basic understanding of kua usage, push hands Master Hong’s analysis, movements which do not involve chansijin
can further that understanding. In most cases, however, the presence of a pushing partner are not taijiquan movements, regardless of external appearances.
takes the student’s awareness off their kua and other important elements of body and
its mechanics and causes the student to focus too much on the point of contact with the
opponent. Essentially, the expansion of bodily awareness happens in stages, not all at once. 20 Free fighting or free sparring is mentioned as the stage after push hands
training by Master Feng, Master Chen, and Master Liu.

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Individuals practice taijiquan routines for decades in some cases without closes and rotates positively, the left leg also rotates positively. Hence,
ever having practiced taijiquan. These individuals practice the external we can see that in terms of the coordination of the upper and lower
shape of the routines, and might even be able to use the techniques body same sides coordinate by doing the opposite, and opposite sides
somewhat effectively, but both practice and application will lack coordinate by doing the same.
chansijin and will not qualify as taijiquan. The spiraling of limbs and
torso produce the interplay of yin and yang, or what Master Hong calls Just as within a single arm there are additional pairings of yin and
‘the harmony of opposites’. yang, there are multiple pairings of yin and yang within each leg and
in the relation between the legs as they rotate. When either leg rotates
The movements of the right arm while performing the positive circle negatively, the knee closes and the kua opens. If either leg rotates
exercise involves a variety of harmonious opposites. The right arm has positively, the knee opens and the kua closes. Should one leg’s knee
both revolution, as the hand moves away from the body and returns close and kua open, the opposite happens with the knee and kua of the
to the body in a roughly circular shape, and rotation, either positive or other leg.
negative. When the hand begins the positive circle, it moves upward
and outward from the center of chest to eye level; this is the positive There are many other pairings of yin and yang. For example, there is
(yang) half of the revolution. During the positive half of the revolution, the opposite side coordination between the left kua and right shoulder.
the arm performs a negative (yin) rotation as the palm rotates from When the left kua drops the right shoulder also sinks at the same time.
facing 45 degrees upward at the chest to facing 45 degrees downward Additionally, this sinking of the shoulder also sinks the elbow (yin)
at eye-level with the arm extended (i.e., the palm rotated negatively which raises the hand (yang).
a full 90 degrees). The negative (yin) half of the revolution which
involves the hand returning to the body at elbow level is accompanied Many years of practice are needed to understand and to manifest in
by a positive (yang) rotation of the arm which turns the palm from 45 one’s taijiquan the interplay of yin and yang. As practitioners advance,
degrees downward to its original position at the chest of 45 degrees the meaning of these concepts becomes increasingly sophisticated
upward. because of changes in how they experience their own bodies. One
understands the interplay of yin and yang not because one has a theory,
The positive and negative rotations of the arm throughout the positive but because one’s body is this dynamic relationship.
circle revolution also produce a harmonizing of yin and yang as
expressed in the relationship between the hand and elbow. We find
the elbow withdrawing and sinking (yin) which produces an issuing-
rising (yang) effect of the hand. The opponent feels drawn in by the
yielding yin aspects of the elbow and at the same time feels pushed out
or repelled by the hand.

The positive and negative revolutions and rotations of the right arm
are coordinated in pairings of opposites with each side of the lower
body through the spiraling of the right and left leg. When the right
arm opens outward from the body as the torso turns to the right, the
arm performs a negative rotation. The right leg, being on the same
side of the body, performs the opposite rotation and rotates positively.
When the right arm closes toward the body and rotates positively, the
right leg rotates negatively. Hence, the yin rotation of the right arm
is coordinated with the yang rotation of the right leg, and the yang
rotation of the arm is coordinated with the yin rotation of the leg.

The upper and lower body on opposite sides coordinate by performing


the same rotations. The right arm coordinates with the leg left by
performing the same rotations. As the right arm opens outward and
rotates negatively, the left leg also rotates negatively. As the right arms

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Conclusion The development of chansijin allows the practitioner to receive the


opponent’s force while maintaining an optimal body position. Optimal
Training gong involves the establishment of a variety of intentional body position amounts to balancing the instances of yin and yang. The
arcs designed to enhance combat effectiveness. Those intentional arcs practitioner’s awareness of yin and yang becomes more refined through
are refined along with the agent’s sense of optimal gestalt. Iterations practice. Less experienced practitioners are often defeated in push hands
of these intentional arcs during training exhibit the three components because they cannot adequately perceive and maintain the balance of
presented in Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of embodied yin and yang. In taijiquan this lack of yin/yang balance is sometimes
intentionality. referred to as ‘double-heavy’.22 The practitioner not only harmonizes
the yin and yang of her own movements (for example, in the positive
If the routines (quan tao or taolu) are thought of as catalogues of circle exercise, or the movements of the routine), she harmonizes
techniques, then a practitioner can have all of the information (i.e., her movements with the yin and yang of the opponent’s movements.
all of the techniques) but not be able to see its relevance in a concrete By not fighting the opponent’s force, the taijiquan practitioner is less
situation.21 The practitioner can know many techniques but be unsure vulnerable to a stronger opponent than a defender who confronts the
about when to use them or how to adjust them to variations in the attacker’s force head on. By not fleeing from the opponent’s force,
attack. Relevance is not determined conceptually or even at the level of the taijiquan practitioner remains in contact to sense the opponent’s
conscious awareness in Chen style taijiquan; relevance is determined by intentions and remains in a position to issue force against the attacker.
the listening skills of the practitioner’s body. Yin and yang are essential to the self-defense aspects of taijiquan
because they unite defending and attacking into the same movement
At closer fighting ranges, where the opponents are already close enough and so may provide a significant combat advantage.
to strike or even grapple with each other, it is very difficult to perceive
visually an oncoming attack. The hand is faster than the eye. The Uniting defending and attacking into one movement decreases the
cultivation of ting jin allows the practitioner to sense directly subtle amount of time with which the opponent can respond to the counter-
changes in the opponent’s movements through a highly refined tactile attack. It also makes it more likely the attacker will be caught by
awareness. The sooner the defender can anticipate the opponent’s surprise. Moreover, the assailant’s own attack immediately puts her
attack, the precise characteristics of the opponent’s force, and changes in at a disadvantage since the neutralization of the attack is part of the
the attack, the greater the defender’s advantage. counter-attack of the taijiquan practitioner. Accounts of the abilities of
masters such as Master Chen and Master Hong speak of how opponents
A skilled martial artist may perceive the opponent betray their would seem to almost throw themselves to the ground. The master’s
intentions or telegraph their actions by changes in their body (for skill would not allow the opponent’s force to disturb or reach his center.
instance, where the opponent looks, how they shift their weight, the The master neutralized the incoming force and, at the same time, the
deep breath they may take before attacking, how force is applied to master (using chansijin) would direct the opponent’s force back into
the defender’s body, etc.). The novice martial artist, however, is often him. In such contexts, the attacker becomes the victim of the force of
blind to the available information. Gong training aims to actualize as their own attack.
much of that information as possible. The martial artist who knows
the techniques but lacks gong is forced to make up for this lack of Because the perceived environment, in this case the combat situation,
discrimination by compensating with speed or strength. For example, contains so much more information for the skilled martial artist, the
such a practitioner has to wait for the opponent’s attack to be fully practitioner can be solicited to a wider range of possible responses.
underway and then must try to be faster to avoid the attack and then The enriched sense of the practitioner’s own embodiment further
counter. increases the range of responses, since the body can do more, or in
Merleau-Ponty’s terms, the body has a greater network of meaning.
The skilled practitioner directly perceives a wider range of relevant
techniques and is better able to change to a new technique in response
21 Gilbert Ryle [1946] made a similar claim in his analysis of the distinction
between knowing-how and knowing-that. Ryle argues that understanding the relevance of
a rule, or being able to apply a rule correctly in an appropriate situation, is not a matter of 22 Earlier manuscripts on taijiquan were not clear about the nature of double-
further rules or propositional knowledge but a matter of skill. Merleau-Ponty offers us one heavy or how it was to be avoided in practice and application. Master Hong explains in his
way of understanding what such a non-conceptual skill amounts to through his discussion book that Chen Xin first introduces the concept of double-heavy in his Taijiquan Treatise.
of the intentional arc. See the forward by He Shugan in Hong [2006].

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to the opponent’s counter measures. She feels the range of possibilities does so only minimally, is much less likely to produce effective fighting
much as the city driver feels the parking spot is large enough for parallel and self-defense ability.23
parking. At higher levels, advanced practitioners are not limited to
particular techniques, such as movements from the quan tao, because With such an emphasis on Chen style taijiquan in this article, one
these individuals embody certain skills which can manifest themselves might reasonably wonder about the general applicability of the analysis
in novel ways. One is freed from thinking of a martial art as a set of offered here to other martial arts. While it might be the case that
specific techniques. many martial artists do not have the conceptual distinction between
gong and fa, or concepts directly analogous to that distinction, in the
Differences in martial skill among taijiquan practitioners in Master repertoire of concepts used to think about their art or to describe their
Hong’s lineage depend on the degree to which each person manifests art, nonetheless normative judgments are crucial to all martial arts
the chansijin in their movements. All members in a group of practices. There are ways one ought to practice and ways one ought not
practitioners can know the entire eighty-one movement first routine to practice, and the details of those prescriptive claims are specific to
(yi lu); they can also know how to apply the techniques. The difference each martial art. In relation to combat or self-defense, these judgments
in efficacy of those techniques resides in the level of refinement of the are intended to make the practitioner’s style-specific techniques more
chansijin. A practitioner who relies on brute strength or speed to make effective. Normative claims are motivated by the fact that some ways of
the technique work is a lower level practitioner compared to the person selecting techniques and performing techniques are better (i.e., effective
who relies instead on chansijin. against a wider range of opponents) than other ways of selecting and
performing techniques.
Ultimately, then, martial ability resides not in how many techniques a
person knows, but in how skillfully a single technique is performed. For Understanding how the gong/fa distinction can be generalized requires
practitioners of Master Hong’s transmission of Chen style, to a large us to ask a set of related questions, such as: (1) Why, in relation to this
extent this difference in martial ability amounts to how precisely the particular martial art, are some ways of selecting and performing a
person rotates their joints in coordination, particularly the hip joint. technique better than others? (2) What skills must a practitioner have
Because the rotation of the joints is difficult to see, it often appears in order to actualize these better ways? And this second question can be
that high-level practitioners are not moving at all, yet the opponent further subdivided into: (a) What skills must the practitioner have to
is thrown or struck with great force. The force produced by the determine when to use this technique as opposed to other techniques
coordinated movements resulting in chansijin exceeds localized uses of (what I previously called ‘relevance’) and (b) What skills must the
force, and more grossly coordinated whole-body movements. Power is practitioner have in order to adapt the technique to the specific
a matter of refinement. situation and effectively execute it? These latter two questions are
general questions about gong.24
High-level gong training allows the martial artist to compensate for
an opponent who is stronger and faster. Gong training affords this In most martial arts, anticipating and understanding the angle of attack
ability by: (1) developing an enriched sense of optimal position to is crucial information that can be used to avoid and to respond to an
receive incoming force from the opponent and to issue force against attack. A very fast defender can perhaps succeed despite being limited
the opponent; (2) increasing the number and richness of salient in her anticipatory abilities because her superior speed affords her a
environmental factors relevant to anticipating and understanding shorter response time. She can sometimes even have a delayed response
the opponent’s attack; and (3) refining the practitioner’s ability to
respond to an attack by increasing the range and effectiveness of
possible responses. As the level of gong increases, these three attributes 23 It is important to note that, although the cultivation of chansijin is the basis
manifest with a diminishing amount of conscious involvement by the of martial ability in Hong’s system, it also has tremendous health benefits (e.g., keeping
practitioner. the joints loose and the body supple). It is also useful to consider how the three attributes
are developed differently in different martial arts. For example, the gong essential to the
Although Chen style taijiquan was used to illustrate the distinction development of these three attributes in jiu-jitsu practitioners or wrestlers will be different
between gong and fa, my contention is that martial artists in general than the gong needed to develop these three attributes in kung fu practitioners.
could be well served by examining which aspects of their training 24 Each practitioner can ask this simple question: Why is my teacher better
develop attributes (1)-(3) and to what degree those attributes are at these techniques than I am? The teacher is not better simply because she has more
developed. Training which does not develop those attributes, or which techniques. Generally speaking, having more techniques isn’t what makes each particular
practitioner effective. Is the teacher’s superiority a matter of size, speed, or strength, or is the
superiority the result of something else?

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to her opponent’s attack and still avoid being hit. Contrast such a case contrast with technique acquisition seems to vary from art to art and
with the defender who has both a superior sense of position and a from teacher to teacher. Often students acquire some of the relevant
greater sensitivity to anticipating attacks. The superior sense of position skills by trial and error and without much conscious awareness.
might mean the defender has to cover less distance to avoid the attack Students repeatedly try to get techniques to work on each other and
or merely adjusts her angle to the attacker (e.g., the boxer who slips just over time they start to be more successful without having a clear sense
under the punch or the taijiquan practitioner who slightly turns her as to why. In other cases, students are given specific drills or exercises
waist ) and the greater sensitivity (e.g., recognizing visual cues about the which are not techniques but which develop basic abilities needed to
nature and direction of the attack or feeling the initiation of pressure perform techniques more effectively. The teacher is fully aware that the
applied to the body) affords her more time to make the adjustment, purpose of the drills is the development of specific skills. In still other
which is essential if the defender is slower than the attacker. Higher- instances, techniques are taught and drilled in such a way that students
level anticipatory skills also allow for greater energy conservation. are instructed to pay attention to certain salient features conducive
to skill acquisition. Rather than a more haphazard acquisition of
While anticipating the nature and direction of the attack is a general skill through trial and error, the student is guided to focus on certain
skill, it will be instantiated differently depending on the combat range in elements to enhance the efficacy of training.
which the practitioner operates. In Merleau-Ponty’s terms, training at
different ranges will reveal different types of solicitations in the combat Master Hong provided a clear and thorough account of the fundamental
environment. Mid- to far-range striking arts will rely heavily on visual skill of Chen style taijiquan in terms of chansijin. These kinds of
solicitations to anticipate attacks. Closer range striking arts (such as conceptual resources are not necessarily available in all martial arts.
wing chun or northern praying mantis) will likely rely on arm and hand My hope is that martial artists can enhance their own practice by
sensitivity to feel the opponent’s movements. Grappling arts will rely on researching the skills that underlie the effective use of their techniques.
how the opponent’s weight feels against the entire body. Different types The very fact that martial artists make normative claims about practice
of weapons training may involve distinct skills related to anticipating and evaluative claims about the efficacy of different practitioners shows
attacks as well. The meaning of the combat environment as a network of a basic grasp of the distinction between skill and technique. Once the
solicitations will vary depending on the kind of art studied. underlying skills are identified, attempts can be made to improve the
efficiency with which those skills are developed. From the perspective
Positional awareness not only provides information about what of Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of embodiment, skill development
the opponent can do; it also provides information about what the is a matter of continuously refining the ability to recognize the right
opponent cannot do. This means that positional awareness plays a role sorts of solicitations and then responding appropriately to them. In
in anticipatory success. Of course, positional awareness also provides turn, refinements in response will enrich the solicitations of the combat
the practitioner with information about her movement or technique environment, affording yet a greater range of responses.26
options. An attack, whether empty-handed or with a weapon, initiated
from one location with a specific trajectory and terminus affords some
follow-up movements and prevents others. A skilled martial artist
might wisely move into the space least accessible to their opponent’s
subsequent attack. Indeed, one can control an opponent not only by
immobilizing them but also by only giving them certain movement
options. By using positional awareness, the martial artist can be
one step ahead of their opponents. The specific nature of positional
awareness will depend on the type of martial art. Drills which develop
a student’s ability to recognize likely movement trajectories from
various points of initiation would be one way to begin to develop better
positional awareness.25 26 The analysis I’ve offered lets us say more precisely what constitutes bad
or ineffective training. Ineffective training is training which fails to develop a proper
relationship between solicitations and responses. For example, relying too heavily on
The degree to how purposive or intentional skill development is in
choreographed routines might actually develop an insensitivity to certain solicitations
because practitioners rely on their prior knowledge of what movement comes next rather
than refining their anticipatory awareness. Training two-person routines with overly
25 Mroz [2016] provides an excellent example of positional awareness when he cooperative partners might inhibit both solicitation awareness and response refinement. If
writes of the ways in which multiple movement types – both martial art and non-martial the cooperative partner always performs an attack in such a way as to make the partner’s
art – can be understood in terms of Master Hong’s positive and negative circles. response effective, the partner is never forced to adapt and to refine the response.

62 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Gong and Fa in Chinese Martial Arts
ARTS STUDIES Timothy J. Nulty

References
Carmen, Taylor and Mark B.N. Hanson [eds]. 2005. The Cambridge
Companion to Merleau-Ponty, New York: Cambridge University Press.

Carmen, Taylor. 2005. ‘Sensation, Judgment, and the Phenomenal


Field’, in The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty, 50-73.

Chen, Zhonghua. 2010. ‘Chen Style Practical Method of Grandmaster


Hong Junsheng’, available at: http://practicalmethod.com/2013/03/
chen-style-tajiquan-practical-method-of-grandmaster-hong-junsheng/.

Dreyfus, Hubert. 2002. ‘Refocusing the Question: Can There Be


Skillful Coping Without Propositional Representations or Brain
Representations?’, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1.4, 413-425.
https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021303723047

Dreyfus, Hubert. 2008. ‘A Phenomenology of Skill Acquisition as


the Basis for a Merleau-Pontian Non-Representationalist Cognitive
Science’, available at: http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~hdreyfus/pdf/
MerleauPontySkillCogSci.pdf.

Feng, Zhiqiang. 2000. ‘On Integrating Mind and Body’, T’ai chi Magazine
24.3.

Gibson, J. J. 1979. The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception. Boston:


Houghton Mifflin.

Heidegger, Martin. 1996 [1927]. Being and Time, translated by Joan


Stambaugh, Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

Hong, Junsheng. 2006. Chen Style Taijiquan Practical Method – Volume


One: Theory, translated by Chen Zhonghua. Edmonton: Hunyuantaiji
Press.

Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. 1962. The Phenomenology of Perception,


translated by Colin Smith, London: Routledge.

Mroz, Daniel. 2017. ‘Taolu: Credibility and Decipherability in the


Practice of Chinese Martial Movement’, Martial Arts Studies 3, 38-50.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2017.10094

Ryle, Gilbert. 1946. ‘Knowing How and Knowing That’, Proceedings of


the Aristotelian Society 46.1, 1-16.
https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotelian/46.1.1

Toadvine, Ted and Leonard Lawlor [eds]. 2007. The Merleau-Ponty


Reader. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.

martialartsstudies.org 63
Jared Miracle is author of Now with Kung Fu Grip! How
CONTRIBUTOR Bodybuilders, Soldiers and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial
Arts for America. His research interests include transnational
physical culture, martial arts, popular culture, and folk studies. He
is presently researching a book on the development of the Pokémon
franchise.
You can follow him at www.facebook.com/jaredmiraclewriter and on
Twitter @DocKungFu

Applied Linguistics,
Performance Theory AND
Muhammad Ali’s Japanese FAILURE
JARED MIRACLE

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j.2017.10095 One of the more colorful realizations of the age-old striking
versus grappling rivalry came in 1976, in a fight billed as
boxing versus professional wrestling. Unlike similar matches
throughout history, however, this event featured the
heavyweight world champion, Muhammad Ali, and the most
KEYWORDs popular Japanese professional wrestler of the day, Antonio Inoki.
Investigating this event through the lens of applied linguistic
Boxing, wrestling, Muhammad anthropology reveals much about the contextual social dynamics
Ali, Antonio Inoki, linguistics at play. Sources including newspaper reports, interviews with
witnesses and those involved, and private correspondence are
considered as they unveil the complicated truth behind Ali vs.
Inoki, the fight that marked a turning point in the career of
CITATION history’s most celebrated boxing champion. Analysis reveals
that the event was a public failure because of communication
Miracle, Jared. 2017. ‘Applied breakdown on myriad fronts. Consequently, I argue that the
Linguistics, Performance fight itself should be viewed as a robust form of communication
Theory and Muhammad Ali’s in which the nuances of dialect are at play.
Japanese Failure’ Martial Arts
Studies 3, 65-71.
MARTIAL Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory and
ARTS STUDIES Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

Boxing and wrestling both fall under the category of ‘combative art’, Style
displays of which are public affairs managed and frequented in the
same manner as theater productions. They are therefore subject to The boxer versus wrestler premise is an interesting one as, cursorily,
the same social criteria as other, similar types of performance. This it’s a nonsense competition. To my knowledge, a football versus yoga
being the case, theoretical work in performance studies is crucial to the premise has never been of interest to spectators. The draw of an
understanding of why some contests or performances succeed while inter-sport event seems irrational on its face. Yet, mixed-style fights
others fail. To that end, I examine the case of Ali vs. Inoki, an unusual have seen extraordinary popularity with audiences since at least the
event in the history of both boxing and wrestling that exemplifies early 20th century and are now a mainstay of television in the form of
the ways in which such performances can fail as a result of lapses in mixed martial arts (MMA) organizations like the Ultimate Fighting
communication and assumptions of responsibility. In the interest Championship (UFC). Still, this match was unusual given that it was
of organization, I have separated the key aspects of the combative billed not simply as boxing versus wrestling but, more specifically,
performance into various sections which will complement one another professional wrestling. Professional wrestling differs from all other
and, together, will help in the attempt to understand this historic event. varieties of wrestling insofar as it is a form of theater rather than
athletic competition. For the premise of Ali vs. Inoki to make sense as
a performance, we must turn to the issue of ‘style’. Richard Schechner
Ali vs. Inoki argues that ‘each human group – family, circle of friends, workgroup,
ensemble – develops its own dialect of movement. Artists are
In 1976, Muhammad Ali still held the world heavyweight title, but he particularly adept at constructing variations of basic codes. This is what
was approaching the end of his career. Due to the nature of boxing as a “style” is all about’ [Schechner 1990: 32].
public spectacle, popularity with the audience is of key importance. Ali
was known as a showman, gifted with a ‘mouth that could sell tickets On a more minute level, these dialects of movement contain what
faster than a computerized vending machine’ [Drake 1976a]. His skill Schechner calls ‘bits’ [Schechner 1990: 41]. A bit is one of the smaller
with his words convinced promoters to bring him opponents; his skill parts of a given performance that, by itself, doesn’t necessarily convey
with his hands ensured that said opponents returned home soundly meaning to an audience, but, when fitted together with other bits,
beaten. contributes to the greater whole of the given performance. For an
individual to converse within the context of a style, he must first
That same over-the-top, charming arrogance attracted the attention of undergo a process that Schechner refers to as ‘restored behavior’
Japanese fight fans. In March of 1975, a Japanese professional wrestling [Schechner 1985: 35]. The notion here is to ‘get in touch with,
promoter met Ali at a party. Ali allegedly asked – off-the-cuff, it seems, recover, remember, or even invent these strips of behavior and then
as no reliable English-speaking witnesses have corroborated it – why rebehave according to these strips’ [Schechner 1985: 36]. By unlearning
there were no ‘Oriental fighters’ to challenge him [TV Asahi 2009]. previously held assumptions and integrating a style’s bits into their
The response from Japan came in the form of a challenge by wrestler repertoire, the performer becomes conversant in that style.
Kanji ‘Antonio’ Inoki. Manager and fight promoter Bob Arum, who was
involved with the overseas television distribution of the event, alleges Style is vital to understanding combative performance disciplines like
that ‘the whole thing was supposed to be fixed’ [Hauser 1991: 336]. boxing and wrestling. When two boxers compete, they have a mutual
Reality, however, proved to be stranger than any fiction. agreement. While each fighter is a unique human being, the overall
aesthetic of a boxing match tends to involve predictable elements,
The contest was bizarre. The Japanese competitor spent much of the primarily due to the rules in place. Likewise, professional wrestling
fifteen three-minute rounds on his back kicking the boxer’s legs. It is performances are generally more alike in composition than they are
important to note that, while the event was billed as a match of styles, different. Schechner’s ‘bits’, then, are the smaller pieces from which
in fact ‘the rules [had] been so seriously modified that the contest [was] competitions are created. The jabs, crosses, and hooks that make up
no longer boxing versus wrestling … Ali [could] grapple or punch the a boxing contest and the holds, pins, and locks of a wrestling display
man down [but] Inoki [was] not allowed to leg-dive or tackle’ [Draeger are bits – the smaller units that make up a combative style’s dialect of
1976]. Here, then, was a pair of professional athletic performers movement.
operating outside their standard frames of reference and in accordance
with rules that had been miscommunicated between the two camps.
Ali was expecting a choreographed exhibition; Inoki was looking for a
fight.

martialartsstudies.org 65
MARTIAL Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory and
ARTS STUDIES Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

Frame While a fight is controlled with timed rounds, observed by a referee


and a medical doctor, and stopped the moment a combatant appears
Given that styles are, for our purposes, dialects, it is useful to examine to be in danger of permanent injury, the psychological experience of
what sort of communication is taking place by means of these someone in the midst of a sanctioned fight may be no different from
dialects. In this case, ‘communication’ simply refers to the transfer that of someone engaged in a brawl. However, his behavior remains
of intended information from one party to another.1 With this in in accordance with the rules of professional pugilism or wrestling,
mind, communication can be said to be successful when the intended just as the man watching a 3D movie doesn’t run out of the theater.
information is understood by all parties. Conversely, different Here, it is important to apply another one of Bateson’s concepts: The
perceptions result in a failure to communicate. psychological frame.

While prizefighting and grappling may appear brutal at times, the Bateson suggests that psychological frames are exclusive, inclusive,
purpose of these endeavors has nothing to do with senseless violence. have ‘premises’, and are metacommunicative [Bateson 2000 (1955):
Indeed, if pointless, unadulterated violence were the only reason for 187-188]. The frame, by its nature, excludes that which is not in the
purchasing an event ticket, it would be both easier and more cost- frame. Logically, then, the frame includes only that which is seen within
effective to simply watch the evening news. Even Ali, in the midst of the boundaries of the frame. The term ‘premise’ indicates that the
disparaging his Japanese opponent, felt it necessary to correct one of his frame ‘tells the viewer that he is not to use the same sort of thinking in
handlers, who told Ali to ‘kill him’: ‘No, I don’t believe in killing. I only interpreting the picture that he might use in interpreting the wallpaper
want to annihilate him’ [Drake 1976b]. outside the frame’ [Bateson 2000 (1955): 187-188]. Last, the frame
is metacommunicative in that the frame itself is important when
What, then, is the purpose of such rough play? Gregory Bateson holds interpreting the image within the frame [Bateson 2000 (1955): 188].
that actions themselves, in play, can stand for something altogether
different from the more intense actions they might represent in other While psychological framing happens in all contexts at all times, it
contexts. When, in his example, animals are playing and they nip one is helpful to examine a few ways in which the concept operates with
another, that nip is representative of a bite. An actual bite would cause regards to combative performance. The athletes, as people, function via
a different and serious interaction, so the nip is used instead. Further, their ‘performer’ frames within the ring. This is the primary level on
the nip doesn’t indicate that a fight is occurring, but rather that the which Ali and Inoki differ. In a typical boxing contest, one attempts to
situation at hand is play [Bateson 2000 (1955): 180]. strike the opponent more times, or at least with greater force, than one
is struck. It is preferable for one, as both a performer and an athlete, to
When applying this logic to a prizefight, it is important to consider knock one’s opponent to the ground. Not only is the act of downing the
Ali’s insistence that he doesn’t believe in killing. Clearly, the idea of other competitor exciting to an audience, in modern professional rules
a fight, with rules and a referee, is not the same thing in his mind as one need only floor one’s opponent three times in a single round to
uncontrolled violence between people, which I will refer to as a ‘brawl’. achieve victory by ‘technical knockout’. Professional wrestlers, however,
In the case of a brawl, play ceases to be a concern and one should most are charged with working cooperatively to entertain fans. They aren’t
certainly fear for one’s life. So, one difference between a fight and a permitted to strike with closed fists. Perhaps most pertinent to the
brawl rests in the ultimate likelihood of death. Bateson notes that a man current issue, their objective is not to batter the opponent as in boxing.
watching a 3D movie in which a spear is thrown directly at him can be Even within the same ring, the boxer and the wrestler experience
consciously aware that no physical harm will come to him, ‘but these different psychological frames.
images … really evoke that terror which would have been evoked by a
real spear’ [Bateson 2000 (1955): 183]. We can think of a performance in terms of what Schechner calls the
‘whole performance sequence’ [Schechner 1990: 43]. This includes
all the preparation beforehand, the performance proper, and the
experience thereafter. This, he says, qualifies the performance as a kind
1 Gregory Bateson acknowledges that even animals communicate via play of ritual identical to what Schechner calls ‘restored behavior’ [Schechner
‘engaged in an interactive sequence of which the unit actions or signals were similar to but 1990: 43]. This process of restored behavior – unlearning and then
not the same as those of combat. It was evident … that the sequence as a whole was not putting the bits together – is composed of parallel but different frames
combat, and evident to the human observer that to the participant monkeys this was “not by the boxer and the wrestler. The boxer spends his time training,
combat”’ [Bateson 2000 (1955): 179]. watching videos of his opponent, and generating a strategy to defeat the

66 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory and
ARTS STUDIES Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

combatant across the ring. The wrestler also trains, but in coordination (or boxing and wrestling) will, inevitably, not understand each other.
with his partner, who assumes the role of enemy combatant only for a By altering the rules, as legendary martial arts studies pioneer Donn
brief time and in an explicitly performative context. Draeger notes, the event ceases to be the sum of its components and, in
fact, bears little resemblance to them. Added to which, there is another
In Ali vs. Inoki, the roles were strangely reversed. The Ali team believed level of miscommunication. Not only were the two performers speaking
that the event was to be an exhibition in which the two men would not different languages (both literally and figuratively), the rules employed
genuinely try to damage each other. The manager/promoter Bob Arum on the evening of the fight eliminated large portions of their individual
later testified that ‘what happened was, some Japanese guys came to styles’ potential meanings.
Herbert [Ali’s business manager] with the deal … and the whole thing
was supposed to be fixed’ [Hauser 1991: 336]. In an interview for a TV The context provided to the participants in Ali vs. Inoki was one
Asahi special about the fight, however, Inoki’s interpreter for the event, with which neither side was familiar. Consequently, the match was
Ken Tajima, recalled that ‘Ali asked me when the rehearsal [would be]. ‘insufferably boring. For fifteen rounds, Inoki crab-walked around the
Mr. Inoki and I had thought from the beginning that it was a real fight. ring, horizontal to the canvas, kicking at Ali’s legs. That was the fight.
[I thought] he knew that, too. I said, “There’s no rehearsal”. He asked, Ali threw six punches’ [Hauser 1991: 337]. Even within the professional
“Isn’t it an exhibition?” I think the Ali side was startled’ [TV Asahi 2009, wrestling context, Inoki’s tactic was highly unusual. This occurred
my translation]. because the context provided (that is, the special rules of the match)
precluded the possibility of traditional wrestling holds and takedowns.

Groups Hymes goes on to say that ‘members of a group have conceptions


and expectations as to the distribution of speech functions among
The exchange between Ali and Tajima is indicative of how far down situations, and insofar as several functions are co-present, it is a matter
miscommunication went before, during, and after this event and it is of expectations as to relative hierarchy’ [Hymes 1962: 38]. Because
the key to understanding why the public reaction to the event was so situations dictate both potential speech functions and potential
negative. In particular, this verbal interaction represents what Dell meanings with a group, and because different groups may approach
Hymes – employing Bateson’s psychological frames – describes as the same situation as part of unrelated frames, the expectations that the
‘an expressive aspect to the cognitive style of an individual or group’ members of one group have of another when their frames overlap in
[Hymes 1962: 20]. Ali spoke as he thought, as did Tajima, but their the physical world may not match at all.
modes of thinking were contradictory, so communication failed. This is
one side of the problem that occurred inside the ring on the evening of Ali vs. Inoki dealt with three groups, each of which perceived the
the fight. situation as part of a different frame. The Ali team, specializing in
boxing, didn’t treat the fight as being of any real danger. Inoki’s group,
For the present purposes, we can consider a style (either boxing or experienced in professional wrestling, prepared themselves for a
wrestling) to be equivalent to a linguistic form. We have already legitimate match. The audience, too, must be considered as the primary
established that styles are composed of bits which, put together, form reason for any professional athletic contest to take place. Without a
the basis of a mode of communication. Like the monkeys that Bateson paying audience, little cause exists to perform at all. Ali asserted on
observed in play, the mode of communication need not be verbal to be television in May of 1976 that ‘people expect these things of me …
understood. Hymes offers an elegant and succinct explanation: it’s interesting. People want to know what would a boxer do with a
wrestler. What’s going to happen if Ali gets his arm twisted?’ [Hauser
The use of a linguistic form identifies a range of meanings. A context 1991: 336].
can support a range of meanings. When a form is used in a context,
it eliminates the meaning possible to that context other than those The title at stake was, of course, not Ali’s heavyweight belt, but rather
that form can signal; the context eliminates from consideration the one invented for the contest, the ‘World Martial Arts Championship’
meanings possible to the form other than those that context can [Nixon 1976]. While the frames in which the combatants functioned
support. The effective meaning depends upon the interaction of the differentiated between boxing and wrestling, the target audience for
two. [Hymes 1962: 19] the event understood both styles to fall under a single, larger frame
called ‘martial arts’, thereby providing the chance to promote such an
When considering a style as a linguistic form, it becomes apparent that abnormal contest. It was the broadcast audience’s frame that must be
two people speaking languages as different as Japanese and English taken into account in order to understand why Ali vs. Inoki took place
at all.

martialartsstudies.org 67
MARTIAL Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory and
ARTS STUDIES Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

Performance Bauman suggests that ‘the relative dominance of [a] performance … will
depend on the degree to which the performer assumes responsibility
Despite the confusion across cultures, language barriers, and styles, to an audience for a display of communicative skill and effectiveness as
everyone involved, including the audience, agreed that the match against other communicative functions’ [Bauman 1992: 44]. That Ali
was less-than-ideal. Arum referred to it as ‘the nightmare to end all neglected to ‘assume responsibility’ in his fight with Young explains
nightmares, and the best thing would have been not to do it at all’ why the champion received such negative criticism. We must note, too,
[Hauser 1991: 337]. Stars and Stripes reporter Kent Nixon quipped that that Young, with a more active strategy, might have made the display
‘the worst thing that can be said about the Ali-Inoki event is that it a success, but also slacked in his responsibility. It isn’t enough, then, to
started. The best thing that can be said about it is that it ended’ [Nixon simply outdo one’s opponent; the combative performer must display
1976]. And Draeger commented that ‘the whole thing was disgusting’ communicative competence.
[Draeger 1976].
Competence is primarily displayed to the audience, but by what means
It seems eminently straightforward that the outcome of a fight, whether does the audience validate the actions of the performers? Bauman
boxing or wrestling, is binary. That is, one participant will win and says: ‘All performance, like all communication, is situated, enacted,
the other will lose. The possibility also exists, although much less and rendered meaningful within socially defined situational contexts’
common, that a fight may be called a draw (neither opponent wins) or [Bauman 1992: 46]. Society deems it acceptable that a performance is
a ‘no contest’ (some unforeseen factor delegitimizes a contest, such as a taking place, and so it does. Not only does it occur, but the parameters
natural disaster or an accidental injury). In the case of Ali vs. Inoki, the of the event are defined by the society – in effect, by the audience.
fight was ruled a draw by referee Gene LeBell [Nixon 1976]. By not having an established context for an event like Ali vs. Inoki,
the audience was taking a greater risk than usual by allowing the
Not all fights that end in a draw are regarded so poorly by the public, performance to take place. The failure was chiefly the fault of the
nor are all fights in which one party wins considered a success. Two performers to successfully navigate the situation, but the audience,
fights prior to Ali vs. Inoki, the champion faced a relatively unknown which actively took part in the event by patronizing it, also failed to
challenger named Jimmy Young. Ali didn’t take the fight seriously and some extent due to the fighters’ decisions.
came to the ring out of shape and much heavier than he’d appeared in
any other fight up to that point [Hauser 1991: 333]. Hauser’s description
of the event is telling: Speculation
Young, who might have won with a more aggressive battle plan, was The ring is where the bulk of the failure happened. Alfred Schutz offers
a largely passive figure. On six occasions when Ali had him cornered, an explanation on the personal level as to the mechanics behind the
the challenger literally stuck his head outside the ropes, forcing a halt in two performers’ mutual failure. He describes a hypothetical scenario in
the action. The result, wrote Mark Kram, was ‘some of the worst and which a musician is given a sonata to sight read [Schutz 1964: 167-168].
most numbing rounds in heavyweight history’. Ali won a unanimous The musician, unfamiliar with the particulars of the piece at hand,
decision, but as a showman he’d failed. Even Angelo Dundee, who was must rely on previous experience to play the song, which ‘becomes
legendary for looking at the bright side of things, acknowledged that the scheme of reference for his interpretation of its particularity.
Ali’s performance had been ‘the worst of his career’. [Hauser 1991: 333] This scheme of reference determines, in a general way, the player’s
anticipations of what he may or may not find in the composition before
Richard Bauman’s ideas of performance and responsibility are helpful at him’ [Schutz 1964: 168].
this juncture. His concept of performance ‘calls forth special attention to
and heightened awareness of the act of communication and gives license This example is especially pertinent to the subject at hand because Ali
to the audience to regard it and the performer with special intensity. and Inoki, both the highest-level practitioners in their respective styles,
Performance makes one communicatively accountable’ [Bauman had experiences from which to draw assumptions. These experiences,
1992: 44]. Because we have already established that a style of fighting as with the musician, include similar-yet-different cases, such as an
is a means of communication, this description of performance holds opponent of a similar body type or a referee with a similar disposition.
important implications for the athletes performing a fight. Beyond More abstractly, though, each performer has an image of how the other
simply brawling, a fighter must show his skill in communicating to the does or might behave. This, it seems, is as much at the root of Ali and
audience. Inoki’s failed performance as anything.

68 Winter 2016
MARTIAL Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory and
ARTS STUDIES Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

Schutz’ pianist is preoccupied with the thinking of the piece’s composer, “combatants” [for] their lousy performance’ [Draeger 1976], it can
with the ‘grasping of the composer’s musical thought … which comfortably be said that, in the public eye, the performance did not go
become[s] “thematic” for [the pianist’s] ongoing activity’ of re-creation over well.
[Schutz 1964: 169]. While the action in the fight ring, in both boxing
and wrestling, is improvisational in nature and generally lacks an While several factors led to this failure, the core issues centered on
erstwhile absent choreographer, the notion of thematic activity, like a the fighters’ contrasting approaches to the event and the audience’s
shadow cast over the performer’s efforts, is still highly applicable. perception. The audience and the performers represented three
different psychological frames, all of which encompassed the same
During the above-mentioned television interview, Ali speculated: ‘I’m event. Based on statements by Ali, it seems that the public (at least, the
betting I can hit him before he can grab me. With my dancing and public who patronized the event in question) included both boxing and
moving, I can’t see him getting close enough to hit me without me wrestling in the same frame, which we can label ‘combat sports’. This
hitting him. This man is a wrestler. He’s not used to taking hard shots enabled the promoters to market such an event of mixed disciplines.
to the head’ [Hauser 1991: 336]. Although his statements were intended
to promote the fight (which, at that point, he still believed would be Ali, an experienced competitor, perceived the frame of professional
choreographed), they were also clearly intended to highlight how a wrestling as ‘not real’ and appears to have planned accordingly. Inoki,
fighter would actually approach such a situation. a professional wrestler, also had a frame of understanding, but it
focused on Ali and the notion that boxing is more ‘real’ than his own
The question of what the other performer would do also influenced the area of expertise. I propose that the framing tool serves to explain the
rules that were outlined for the fight. Draeger mentions that ‘the main confusion between the two performers when coupled with Schutz’
concern was to not injure Ali, causing Inoki to complain that by the explanation of thematic activity. Because the two performers practiced
rules and this concern there was damn little that he could do to make it different styles (composed of related though notably different bits) they
look good’ [Draeger 1976]. The rule prohibiting Inoki from performing had to rely on previous experience for an image of what to expect from
any standard wrestling takedowns seems to have been thought up the other competitor, and therefore how to respond.
with the goal of displaying Ali’s skill while making Inoki appear inept.
Seemingly, the grappler’s only option was to trade blows with the Due to the obscure rules applied prior to the event, Inoki was incapable
heavyweight boxing champion of the world – a notion that he likely of behaving as a wrestler might be expected to behave. Rather, he
found distasteful. circumvented the rules intended to make him trade blows with Ali by
assuming a horizontal position and kicking the boxer’s legs. Because
Prior to the fight, a public display of the participants’ skill took place neither fighter had a reference of prior experience from which to draw,
in which Inoki and several other professional wrestlers demonstrated and because their respective styles lacked any modes of communication
various types of kicks. It was clear that Inoki intended to neutralize his for such an arrangement, very little action took place.
opponent’s advantage by targeting the only remaining exploitable area:
leg strikes. Ali, upon seeing the tactic’s undoubted effectiveness, became Given that Inoki’s goal was to win the match and Ali’s was to avoid
outraged and called for further rules to be put in place which prohibited injury, neither performer took responsibility for the success of the
‘kicks from a standing position’ [TV Asahi, 2009, my translation]. performance. They also each failed in these respective aims, with Ali on
Staged or not, Ali did not want to risk serious injury from an unplanned the receiving end of lasting damage to his legs and Inoki falling short in
hard strike. Inoki’s only recourse was the obscure attack of kicking from his aim to defeat the heavyweight champion. In Bauman’s model success
a prone position, which, in conjunction with Ali’s unwillingness to hinges on ‘a display of communicative skill and effectiveness’ [Bauman
wrestle, caused the performance to fail. 1992: 44]. Because physical communication in a combative dialect
(either boxing or wrestling) calls for competent technique, which was
not displayed by either participant, the performance was a failure.
Failure Finally, although one may argue that this conflict eventually resulted in
a positive outcome (i.e., the combatants becoming friends), the value of
Bauman states that performance ‘assigns to an audience the the performative event was in the moment immediately before, during,
responsibility of evaluating the relative skill and effectiveness of the and after the fight. Far-flung outcomes notwithstanding, the present
performer’s accomplishment’ [Bauman 1992: 44]. Based on reactions model considers the event to have been a failure.
from Stars and Stripes, members of Ali’s entourage, and the claim by
Draeger that the arena janitorial staff at the vaunted Budokan needed
‘almost a full day to clean up the garbage that was hurled at the two

martialartsstudies.org 69
MARTIAL Applied Linguistics, Performance Theory and
ARTS STUDIES Muhammad Ali’s Japanese Failure
Jared Miracle

References
Bateson, Gregory. 2000 [1955]. ‘A Theory of Play and Fantasy’, in Steps
Toward an Ecology of Mind, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 177-
194.

Bauman, Richard. 1992. ‘Performance’, in Folklore, Cultural Performance,


and Popular Entertainment, edited by Richard Bauman, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 41-49.

Draeger, Donn F. 1963-1974. ‘Letters’. Texas A&M University, College


Station, TX: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Robert W. Smith
Martial Arts Collection.

Drake, Hal. 1976a. ‘Ali “Whups” It Up in Tokyo’, Stars and Stripes,


available at: http://www.stripes.com/news/from-the-s-s-archives-ali-
whups-it-up-in-tokyo-1.19701

Drake, Hal. 1976b. ‘Foes Meet at Lunch, Ali Taunts Big Bird’, Stars
and Stripes, available at: http://www.stripes.com/news/from-the-s-s-
archives-foes-meet-at-lunch-ali-ant-taunts-big-bird-1.19706

Hauser, Thomas. 1991. Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times. New York:
Simon and Schuster.

Hymes, Dell. 1962. ‘The Ethnography of Speaking’, in Anthropology and


Human Behavior, edited by Thomas Gladwin and William C. Sturtevant,
Washington, DC: The Anthropology Society of Washington, 13-53.

Nixon, Kent. 1976. ‘Action in Shey Shows ‘em How’, Stars and Stripes,
available at: http://www.stripes.com/news/from-the-s-s-archives-
action-in-shea-shows-em-how-1.19707

Schechner, Richard. 1985. ‘Restoration of Behavior’, in Between Theater


and Anthropology, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 35-
116.

Schechner, Richard. 1990. ‘Magnitudes of Performance’, in By Means of


Performance: Intercultural Studies of Theatre and Ritual, edited by Richard
Schechner and Willa Appel, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
19-49.

Schutz, Alfred. 1964. ‘Making Music Together: A Study in Social


Relationships’, in Collected Papers II: Studies in Social Theory, The Hague:
Martinus Nijhoff, 159-178.

TV Asahi 50th Anniversary Special. 2009. TV. Legendary TV Asahi Sports


Contests (Terebi Asahi ga Tsutaeta Densetsu no Supotsu Meishoubun). Tokyo,
Japan: TV Asahi. Translated by Jared Miracle.

70 Winter 2016
CONTRIBUTOR Wayne K. T. Wong is a joint PhD student at the Department of
Comparative Literature at The University of Hong Kong and the Film
Studies Department at King’s College London. His research interests
include martial arts cinema, action cinema, and digital culture. He is
currently researching the transformation of kung fu cinema amid the
hegemonic presence of Chinese cinema and Hollywood.
This essay was presented at the 2016 Martial Arts and Society
Conference in Cologne, Germany.

Synthesizing Zhenshi
(Authenticity) and
Shizhan (Combativity)
Reinventing Chinese Kung Fu in Donnie Yen’s Ip Man series (2008-2015)

WAYNE WONG

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j. 2017.10096 This article argues that Donnie Yen’s Ip Man series (2008-2015)
synthesizes two predominant unarmed, hand-to-hand combat
traditions of Hong Kong martial arts cinema – what I call
zhenshi (真實; authenticity) and shizhan (實戰; combativity),
represented by the series of kung fu films featuring Kwan
KEYWORDs Tak-hing as the legendary Wong Fei-hung and the martial arts
action films of Bruce Lee respectively. Despite kung fu cinema’s
shizhan, zhenshi, wen-wu, claim to ‘realism’ since its conception in the 1949, there is a
kung fu cinema, martial arts strong suppression of wu (武; the martial) in the genre’s action
action, authenticity, action aesthetics due to the elevation of wen (文; the literary and the
aesthetics. artistic) in traditional Chinese culture. By exposing the inherent
contradictions within kung fu cinema and incorporating of
CITATION combative action aesthetics derived from Bruce Lee’s martial
arts philosophy and wing chun principles – what I call kuai (
Wong, Wayne. 2017. ‘Synthesizing 快; speed), hen (狠; brutality), and zhun (準; precision), the
Zhenshi (Authenticity) and Shizan series presents new possibilities of wu and offers a more
(Combativity): Reinventing Chinese comprehensive understanding of Chinese kung fu.
Kung Fu in Donnie Yen’s Ip Man
Series (2008 - 2015)’, Martial Arts
Studies 3, 72-89.
MARTIAL Synthesizing Zhenshi and Shizan
ARTS STUDIES Wayne Wong

Ip Man / 葉問 [2008-2015] is a series of films starring Donnie Yen complexity,4 there are primarily two subgenres: wuxia, which refers to
based on the life of world famous wing chun grandmaster Ip Man martial arts films that center on ‘a cult of the sword’, and kung fu, which
[1893-1972].1 Part of his fame comes from the fact that he is the refers to martial arts films that emphasize ‘the art of fist-fighting’ [Teo
celebrated shifu (師傅; master) of Bruce Lee. As Paul Bowman pointedly 2009: 4].
argues, ‘both Ip Man and wing chun are now world famous solely
because the most famous student was Bruce Lee’ [Bowman 2013: In this article, the intrinsic and complex linkage between kung fu and
179]. Granted, Lee played a huge role in thrusting the style and its authenticity/realism/the ‘real’ will be examined in detail. Although
grandmaster into the limelight (the series has certainly capitalized on the term kung fu has been used to encompass all kinds of unarmed
Lee since the first Ip Man film). The success of the series, however, is combat [Sek 1980: 32; Bordwell 2011: 27; Desser 2000: 463; Hunt
due to more than Lee’s posthumous influence. 2003: 21; Teo 2009: 81], this article will focus more specifically on
Southern Chinese kung fu styles, Confucian humanism, and Cantonese
This article argues that Donnie Yen’s Ip Man series synthesizes two culture. These are the three pillars constituting traditional kung fu
predominant unarmed, hand-to-hand combat traditions of Hong Kong cinema since KwanTak-hing’s Wong Fei-hung films (1949-1981). To
martial arts cinema. The first tradition I call zhenshi (真實; authenticity) designate martial arts films not sharing the above three characteristics,
and it is exemplified by the mid-20th century films featuring the a third subgenre which I will refer to as martial arts action needs to
legendary Wong Fei-hung as played by Kwan Tak-hing. The second be formulated. While ‘martial arts action’ is often used as a generic
tradition I call shizhan (實戰; combativity)2 and it is exemplified by term indicating ‘any type of motion picture containing martial arts’
the films of Bruce Lee. Despite kung fu cinema’s claims to ‘realism’, [Teo 2009: 2], in this article, it is used to indicate films in the shizhan
historically there has been a strong suppression of wu (武; the martial) tradition, a crucial concept that I will elaborate in detail.
in the genre’s action aesthetics due to the elevation of wen (文; the
literary and the artistic) in traditional Chinese culture. By exposing Under this new classification, Bruce Lee’s films in the early 1970s
the inherent contradictions within traditional kung fu cinema and the should be placed outside the lineage of kung fu cinema proper. Although
incorporation of combative action aesthetics derived from Bruce Lee’s the early Wong Fei-hung films and Bruce Lee films are conspicuously
martial arts philosophy and wing chun principles – what I call kuai (快; at variance in terms of their themes and action aesthetics [Teo 2009:
speed), hen (狠; brutality), and zhun (準; precision) – Yen’s Ip Man films 75; Bordwell 2011: 32], a clear distinction between the two has never
rejuvenate the combative dimension of Chinese kung fu and advocate a been made. It is not my intention to suggest that Kwan and Lee share
well-balanced reconciliation of the wen-wu dyad through the character nothing, as Kwan may be considered a ‘precursor’ to Lee’s emergence
of Ip Man. in the 1970s [Teo 2009: 75]. However, it is crucial to separate the two
in order to address the often-ignored nuances/differences within the
Before proceeding to discussion of the Ip Man films, however, it is unarmed combat tradition of Hong Kong martial arts cinema.
worth mentioning that, as a genre, Hong Kong martial arts cinema is
not monolithic; rather, it is incredibly diverse in terms of its themes Despite their common emphasis on ‘realism’, a convoluted term that
and its action aesthetics.3 Despite the terminological ambiguity and I will elucidate later, there are key differences between zhenshi and
shizhan. The shizhan tradition is derived from Bruce Lee’s martial arts
philosophy. Jeet Kune Do (JKD), or the Way of the Intercepting Fist,5
1 Wing chun, as a part of the nanpai (南派; The Southern School) Chinese privileges practicality over intricacy, efficiency over complexity, quick
martial arts circulating in Southern China after the burning down of the Shaolin temple in fights over extended dance-like performances [Li 2001: 527; Anderson
the Qing Dynasty, is said to originate from Yim Wing Chun (嚴詠春), a female student of Ng 2009: 192]. As this relates to genre, the shizhan paradigm can often be
Mui (五枚), a Buddhist Nun.

2 In his theorization of Chinese film theory, Victor Fan uses the term bizhen
(approaching reality) to describe the notion that ‘cinema, in its state of imperfection, is a 4 Especially in early studies of martial arts cinema, there was no clear distinction
potentiality that can approach reality but never fully actualize it’ [Fan 2015: 9]. While bizhen between wuxia, kung fu, and Hong Kong martial arts cinema [Lau 1980: 3; Sek 1980: 29;
is insightful in the context of Shanghai cinema in the 1930s, zhenshi and shizhan are Hong Kong Film Archive 1999: 9]. In a more recent study, Stephen Teo considers the kung fu
specifically developed for Hong Kong martial arts cinema, which addresses the divergent film ‘as a part of the tradition of wuxia’ (Teo: 2009: 6]. For further debate, see Hunt [2003: 4],
yet interconnected genres of kung fu and martial arts action. Li [2001: 530], and Teo [2009: 4-5].

3 Action aesthetics here refers to different representational strategies of 5 Jeet Kune Do is a concept of fighting that ‘utilizes all ways and is bound by
choreographing/filming/editing martial arts performances, such as David Bordwell’s ideas none and, likewise, uses any techniques or means which serve its end’ [Lee 1975: 12]. A
of ‘expressive amplification’, the ‘pause-burst-pause pattern’, and the ‘glimpse’, etc. [Bordwell perfect example of Lee’s philosophy is the fight scene between Lee and Robert Baker in Fist
2000a, 2000b, 2001, 2011]. For a more elaborate discussion of action aesthetics, see of Fury / 精武門 (1972) in which Lee bites Baker’s leg as a way to escape from an arm lock.
Barrowman [2014].

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MARTIAL Synthesizing Zhenshi and Shizan
ARTS STUDIES Wayne Wong

identified in martial arts action films, in particular Bruce Lee’s films and cinema according to the Confucian code. Conversely, the emphasis
Donnie Yen’s Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) trilogy [Killzone / 殺破狼 on zhan in Lee’s films does not necessarily signify the truthful or the
(2005), Flash Point / 導火線 (2007), and Special I.D. / 特殊身份 (2013)].6 virtuous.

The zhenshi tradition, as mentioned before, is archivally, Rather than adopting existing terms such as authenticity and realism,
philosophically, and regionally specific. Originating from the Wong zhenshi and shizhan can better address different dimensions of wu in
Fei-hung films, it highlights unarmed, authentic hand-to-hand combat the context of Hong Kong martial arts cinema. It should be noted that
and ‘realist’ representations of traditional Chinese martial arts [Chiao both paradigms, similar to Hunt’s notion of authenticity, are guiding
1981: 33; Teo 2009: 71; Bordwell 2000a: 203]. The concept of ‘realism’, principles delineating different components of ‘the real’ and should not
unfortunately, carries with it tremendous theoretical baggage linked to be used interchangeably with kung fu and martial arts action genres
Western film theory, particularly the writings of André Bazin. It would (i.e., ‘zhenshi films’ or ‘shizhan films’) [Hunt 2003: 21].
require a different article to articulate its complex application to martial
arts cinema [Barrowman 2014]. In the context of kung fu cinema, By synthesizing the two traditions, the Ip Man series makes three
however, ‘realism’ can be understood as the genre’s need to differentiate contributions to the development of the kung fu genre. First, it
itself from ‘the fantastic and stage-derived elements of earlier martial challenges the enduring stereotype that Chinese kung fu is ‘chop-socky’
arts films’ [Sek 1980: 28] such as shenguai wuxia (神怪武俠; strange and [Teo 1997: 110; Fore 1997: 241; Desser 2000: 40; Yau 2001: 11; Yu
bizarre wuxia films with gods and spirits) [Teo 2009: 71]. 2015: 21]. Based on the straight-line and center-line principles, wing
chun is represented as a swift, robust, and practical martial art in the
In the Chinese language, both zhenshi and shizhan highlight the series. The series addresses the combative dimension of Chinese kung
concept of shi [實, as in ‘shi’-zhan and zhen-‘shi’]. It literally means fu, which has long been suppressed by the zhongwen qingwu (重文輕
concreteness and solidity. These are the vital qualities differentiating 武; place greater value on wen than wu) stigma in traditional Chinese
kung fu and martial arts action films from the abstract, fantastical wuxia culture [Louie and Edwards 1994: 145]. I will elaborate on this later in
cinema. The key difference between the two is that zhenshi highlights the first section.
the notion of zhen (真; authenticity/reality), thus stressing faithful
representation of kung fu, as opposed to its fantastical counterpart. Second, it problematizes conventional definitions of kung fu cinema
Shizhan, on the contrary, accentuates the idea of zhan (戰; combat/ exemplified by Bruce Lee.8 Followed by the ‘kung fu craze’ in the 1970s,
war), hence prioritizing practicality and lethalness in real combat.7 it has been taken for granted that Bruce Lee is synonymous with the
term ‘kung fu’ [Louie 2002: 146]. However, a closer examination of
In addition, given traditional kung fu cinema’s connection with his films and his philosophy reveals incongruities between Lee and his
Confucianism [Sek 1980: 29], zhen has a humanistic connotation. predecessors.
In the daxue (大學; The Great Learning) chapter of liji (禮記; The
Classic of Rites), seeking what is truthful through gewu (格物; careful Third, it elucidates the complexity of Leon Hunt’s tripartite framework
investigation of things) is a means to mingde (明德; illustration of of ‘authenticity’, which includes the archival (real technique), the
virtue). Transcending the external forms of martial arts, the ultimate cinematic (unmediated performance), and the corporeal (physical risk)
intent of pursuing zhen is to develop virtuosity. In other words, [Hunt 2003: 29]. While Hunt’s framework has been frequently deployed
practicality has not been the primary concern of traditional kung fu in analyses of Hong Kong martial arts cinema, specific issues of kung
fu cinema and martial arts action cinema have not been adequately
addressed. The zhenshi and shizhan paradigms add specificity and
6 As a conglomeration of different martial arts styles, MMA incorporates clarity to the unarmed, hand-to-hand combat tradition for which the
virtually all forms of striking, wrestling, and submission grappling and allows practitioners notion of authenticity fails to account.
to utilize almost every single part of their body to attack their opponent.

7 Kyle Barrowman developed the concept of ‘combative realism’ for the purpose
of ‘assessing the degree of realism … in a given cinematic fight scene’. According to
Barrowman, whether a fight scene appears ‘real’ depends on more than merely the presence 8 In his pioneering study of Hong Kong martial arts films, Lau Shing-hon notes
of ‘really existing martial arts’ or ‘the bodily presence of actual combatants’; it also depends that the term ‘kung fu films’ came into ‘general use’ in the 1970s, ‘with the appearance of
on, among other things, the particular historical context of the film/story, the skills of the Bruce Lee’s unarmed combat films, and it spread as the films themselves were distributed
particular characters, and the situational variables of the particular scene [Barrowman around the world’ [Lau 1980: 3].
2014].

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ARTS STUDIES Wayne Wong

Despite Lee’s incorporation of wing chun principles into his martial Third, the distinctive Cantonese flavor of kung fu cinema is almost
arts philosophy in JKD, his films seek to deviate from, rather than to totally absent (e.g. lion-dancing, Chinese New Year customs,
reproduce, traditional kung fu cinema. Although the scope of this article vernacular language). For instance, the setting of Fist of Fury is in the
does not allow me to examine the differences between Lee’s films and early republican period of Shanghai where the city was colonized by
the earlier Wong Fei-hung films in great detail, three major points Western powers. The Big Boss / 唐山大兄 (1971) and The Way of the
deserve attention. Dragon / 猛龍過江 (1972), meanwhile, deal with diasporic Chinese and
their alienating experiences in foreign lands. Although Lee is mainly
First, traditional Chinese martial arts are basically absent in Lee’s films. characterized as a martial artist from Hong Kong (with the exception of
As Lee candidly expresses: ‘I’ve lost faith in the Chinese classical arts Fist of Fury), there is no explicit connection to Southern Chinese culture
– though I still call mine Chinese – because, basically, all styles are a or customs in his films (except for a few shots showing Lee conversing
product of “land swimming”, even the wing chun school. So my line of with some Shaolin monks in the beginning of Enter the Dragon). Lee’s
training is more toward efficient street-fighting with everything goes’ films are more international in scope and Guangdong culture does not
[Lee quoted in Logan 1995: 11]. Although he learnt wing chun from Ip receive the same attention as it does in the Wong Fei-hung films.
Man, Lee was highly critical of martial arts orthodoxy and his own art
of JKD represented a radical challenge to it.9 This differentiation is significant as kung fu cinema, insofar as the
term ‘kung fu’ refers to unarmed combat, has been considered a unified
Second, although Lee’s films contain the ‘characteristics of loyalty, genre.13 However, it is crucial to acknowledge that not all unarmed
righteousness, and mateship’ [Louie 2002: 145],10 which bear some martial arts represented on the screen can be categorized as ‘kung fu’ if
resemblance to traditional kung fu films, there are notable differences it is defined as a geographically, culturally, and philosophically specific
between them. As I will further elucidate in the discussion of the notion style. Although the term kung fu (功夫) in the Cantonese vernacular
of hen, Lee’s aggressiveness, brutality, and sexuality differentiate him can refer to the general accumulation of skill [Teo 2009: 4], which
from the scholarly persona of traditional kung fu masters, such as certainly includes different martial arts styles, a more specific definition
Kwan’s (as well as Jet Li’s) Wong Fei-hung and Donnie Yen’s Ip Man, is needed to make it academically useful.
who are chiefly tranquil, tolerant, and pedagogical. Although Lee has
been ‘recast as a philosopher and teacher’, his scholarly presence is less Contrary to Bruce Lee’s subtle internationalization of kung fu in his
explicit when compared with Wong Fei-hung.11 In fact, his multiple films, Ip Man demonstrates a strong emphasis on combativity while
‘affairs’ in real life are plainly contradictory to Confucian values such as maintaining a concrete link to the Chinese tradition. On the one hand,
loyalty and righteousness [Louie 2002: 148].12 by featuring wing chun as an archival kung fu system in Foshan (a
town in Guangdong province) and characterizing Ip Man as a scholarly
and parental figure, the series preserves the zhenshi tradition. On the
9 When he taught wing chun in the U.S., he greatly reduced the number of wing other hand, the practicality and efficiency of wing chun in the series is
chun sticking hand techniques to ‘less than ten’ moves and told his students that ‘all the
redolent of the shizhan tradition.
lines that wing chun mentioned were not necessary and that violations of them could be
used effectively against the wing chun style’ [Glover 1976: 56].
Although Jet Li’s Fearless / 霍元甲 [2006] largely incorporates the
10 In Fist of Fury, for example, Lee demonstrates the Confucian notion of shizhan paradigm into its action aesthetics, it is less focused on the
xiao (孝; fidelity) when he mourns and sets out to avenge his master, Huo Yuanjia. This Southern tradition or nanpai (南派). As a Northern master, Huo
demonstrates his respect for the traditional hierarchy. However, Lee in his later films is more Yuanjia (Jet Li) demonstrates extensive knowledge of weaponry and
subversive and possesses a more defiant attitude towards authority and fatherly figures [see
acrobatic movements, both of which are characteristic of beipai
Bordwell 2011: 32].
(北派; the Northern school) [Cao 1996: 271-273]. The difference
11 In Enter the Dragon / 龍爭虎鬥 (1973), Lee is portrayed as a Shaolin martial between nanpai and beipai will be further examined in the section
artist who excels in both wu and wen. This is most evident in the beginning of the film where I explicate the theatrical linkage of kung fu cinema. Despite the
when he articulates the philosophy of JKD with his master. Even though this is an explicit overall increase in combativity, the film’s accentuation of spectacular
reference to his fighting philosophy, it is different from the teaching of martial virtue in
traditional kung fu cinema, which I will explain later in the article.

12 Actors who successfully portray traditional kung fu masters usually have 13 Kung fu cinema is conventionally used to encompass Kwan Tak-hing’s Wong
positive star personas. From Kwan Tak-hing to Jet Li to Donnie Yen, they all embody certain Fei-hung series in the 1950s and 1960s, Bruce Lee’s JKD martial arts action films in the
dimensions of martial virtues in real life. Yen, for example, presents himself as a caring 1970s, Jackie Chan’s comedic kung fu action films in the 1980s, Jet Li’s ‘wire-fu’ films in the
husband and father through social media in a fashion that is strikingly similar to his Ip Man 1990s, and Donnie Yen’s Ip Man series in the 2000s.
character.

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MARTIAL Synthesizing Zhenshi and Shizan
ARTS STUDIES Wayne Wong

movements connects it with the New Wave martial arts cinema of the For as many interesting elements as there are to discuss in relation to
1990s and such films as Once Upon a Time in China / 黃飛雄 [1991]. the many Ip Man films that have been made to this point, this article
focuses on the films starring Donnie Yen. When compared with,
Addressing the Southern tradition, I have selected the Ip Man series Dennis To (The Legend is Born: Ip Man), Anthony Wong (Ip Man: The
rather than Fearless as the focus.14 The intention of this article is not to Final Fight), and Tony Leung (The Grandmaster), Yen best encapsulates
promote a conservative, orthodox concept of kung fu cinema. Rather, the idea of shizhan due to his diverse martial arts background.16 While
it is to posit that, by understanding the internal differences within the traditional kung fu stars and authentic martial arts performances are
unarmed combat tradition between zhenshi and shizhan, one can better present in other Ip Man films, such as Sammo Hung (as Chan Wah-
understand and analyze the latest development of kung fu cinema. shun, the first master of Ip Man) and Yuen Biao (as Ng Chung-so,
the second master of Ip Man) in The Legend is Born, they bear closer
So far there have been six Ip Man biopics made. In addition to the resemblance to the zhenshi tradition.17
Donnie Yen films, there have also been Herman Yau’s two films,
The Legend is Born: Ip Man / 葉問前傳 [2010] and Ip Man: The Final As mentioned earlier, Yen’s early filmography in the late 1980s follows
Fight / 葉問: 終極一戰 [2013], as well as Wong Kar-wai’s film, The the shizhan tradition. He is known as ‘a favorite of genre purists for
Grandmaster / 一代宗師 [2012].15 These films cover different periods no-nonsense martial arts skills’ and a critic of ‘the “old school” of martial
of Ip’s life, which can basically be divided into three parts: luxurious arts filmmaking that spends a lot of time and money on choreographing
days in Foshan before the Second World War, difficult times during the movements’ [Stokes and Hoover 1999: 134-135]. Despite his training in
Japanese invasion in the 1940s, and relatively steady life as a wing chun traditional Chinese kung fu,18 Yen is not keen on showcasing complex
master in Hong Kong after the 1950s. wushu forms and styles [Chan 2006: 157]. In terms of his filmography,
Yen’s introduction of MMA into his choreography since the mid-
Although there are other kung fu films featuring wing chun in the 2000s was a milestone in the industry. As demonstrated in films such
genre – most notably Shaolin Martial Arts / 洪拳與詠春 [1974], as Killzone and Flash Point, Yen carries on Bruce Lee’s shizhan vision.19
Warriors Two / 贊先生與找錢華[1978], The Prodigal Son / 敗家仔 Truly, these films have constructed Yen’s shizhan star persona, which in
[1981], and Wing Chun / 詠春 [1994], which I will discuss later in
this article – Ip as a key figure in the development of wing chun was
not previously emphasized. Rather, the focus in these films was on 16 Admittedly influenced by Bruce Lee [Lau 2013: 157], in addition to traditional
Ip’s masters and grandmasters such as Chan Wah-shun, Ng Chung- kung fu training, Yen was also coached in other non-Chinese martial arts disciplines
so, Leung Chan, and Yim Wing-chun. Additionally, the wing chun including, among others, taekwondo (6th Dan), karate, judo, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, muay thai,
in these earlier films is blended with other styles and ‘only survive[s] wrestling, kickboxing, and boxing [Stannard 2014; Donnie Yen Offical 2016].
in fragments’ [Hunt 2003: 35]. As Hunt astutely points out, ‘Hung [in 17 In 2010, Donnie Yen was criticized by the producers and actors of Ip Man: The
Warriors Two] never lets wing chun orthodoxy get in the way of his Legend is Born for his ‘inauthentic’ representation of wing chun as part of their marketing
performers’ talents – Casanova Wong’s taekwondo kicking [or] his campaign [Apple Daily 2010]. This ‘lack’ of authenticity is evidence of Yen’s unique synthesis
own flips and somersaults’ [Hunt 2003: 35]. Lastly, previous wing chun of zhenshi and shizhan, as well as evidence of the difficulties in apprehending the nature of
films highlighted the zhenshi tradition more than the shizhan tradition. his synthesis.
Influenced by the popularity of kung fu comedy in the late 1970s [Sek
18 From his birth Yen received traditional martial arts training from his mother,
1980: 33-34], they feature slapstick fight scenes which counteract Bow-sim Mark (麥寶嬋), who was a renowned taijiquan grandmaster [Stokes and Hoover
combativity. 1999: 134]. Following in the footsteps of Jet Li, Yen was sent by his father to the Beijing
Wushu Academy at 15 [Stokes and Hoover 1999: 135]. He is the first non-PRC Chinese to be
admitted to the Beijing Wushu Academy [Stannard 2014].

19 These films aim at maximizing the shizhan impact of the fight scenes. In
14 There are other films that link kung fu with the shizhan tradition, such as Man
Killzone, for example, there is a scene where Donnie Yen and Wu Jing fight without a
of Tai Chi / 太極俠 [2013] and Kung Fu Killers / 一個人的武林 [2014]. These films
preset choreographed sequence. Yen reveals in an interview, ‘[it is] more of a freestyle,
deserve closer examination than can be provided in this article, but it is worth mentioning
realistic fighting … I’m gonna come at you like, say, 20 to 30 moves … and I want you to do
that both films feature traditional Chinese martial arts techniques while at the same time
something in return and attack me’. When Wu heard of the idea, he exclaimed, ‘That’s almost
demonstrating a high degree of combativity.
like real fighting’ [Yen 2013].
15 It is reported that a seventh Ip Man film (the fourth in Donnie Yen’s Ip Man
series) is coming in 2017 with Yen reprising his role [Donnie Yen Official].

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turn contributes to the combativity of the Ip Man series. However, these the multidisciplinary techniques of martial arts action films. Also, while
dimensions require a separate discussion.20 the shizhan tradition can be identified in other martial arts action films
in Hong Kong (as well as in Hollywood), the primary goal of this article
Apart from Yen’s stardom, another key area constituting the shizhan is to explore how the Ip Man series merges the zhenshi and shizhan
dimension of the series is the narrative. Wing chun is consistently traditions, offering a new vision of wu in kung fu cinema.
portrayed as a practical style. In addition to the conventional nanpai
vs. beipai conflict,21 which Ip Man intends to transcend,22 wing chun is The next section of this article will examine key frameworks of kung
compared with styles known for their practicality, such as Muay Thai fu cinema and discuss how wu has been suppressed in the zhenshi
and Western boxing in Ip Man 3, as a strategy to reinforce the shizhan tradition. Then the concepts of kuai, hen, and zhun will be introduced
image of the art.23 Furthermore, the protagonist’s pragmatism in alongside Bruce Lee’s JKD philosophy and the principles of wing chun
teaching and practicing wing chun is also highlighted in Ip Man, when in order to address the shizhan dimension of kung fu cinema.
he instructs his students to stop reciting slogans and start learning how
to hit their target.
Problematizing Wu in the Zhenshi Tradition
For a complete analysis of the series’ synthesis of the zhenshi and Wen-Wu, Authenticity, and Expressive Amplification
shizhan traditions, it is important to consider not only the action
aesthetics but also the narrative and Yen’s stardom. In terms of Kung fu cinema is built on ‘the spirit of realism’ [Sek 1980: 28].
genre, the primary concern here is kung fu cinema, but not wuxia or However, the connections between the concepts of the ‘real’ and the
martial arts action. Undoubtedly, there are xia (俠) elements in the ‘martial’, or wu, deserve further scrutiny. First, the concept of wu is
series, which denotes ‘chivalry, gallantry, qualities of knighthood, and an ‘ambiguous’ concept. Kam Louie and Louise Edwards define it ‘as
heroism’ [Teo 2009: 2]. Yet its emphasis on Southern kung fu styles a concept which embodies the power of military strength but also the
differentiates the series from the swordplay tradition of wuxia films and wisdom to know when and when not to deploy this strength’ [Louie
and Edwards 1994: 142].24 The ideal figure of wu masculinity is Guang
Yu, a major character in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms [1522].
20 Studies of Yen have focused on his early filmography in the 1980s and 1990s
Louie later applies the term to Bruce Lee and his films as a way to
[Stokes and Hoover 1999: 134-138], imitation of Bruce Lee [Li 2001: 526], and transnational
demonstrate how wu has been ‘transformed [by] Western (Hollywood)
stardom in Hollywood [Hunt 2003: 179; Lo 2005: 132; Gateward 2009: 52]. In most cases,
constructions of masculinity’ [Louie 2002: 141]. Although wu can
Yen’s name is only briefly mentioned as an additional example alongside stars like Jackie
Chan and Jet Li, as he was not considered a prominent martial arts star before the Ip
be applied to all kinds of martial arts films, it is crucial not to neglect
Man series. There has been increasing attention on Yen in recent studies of stardom. For the uniqueness of different subgenres. First, wu in Kwan Tak-hing’s
examples, see [Hunt 2014] and [Funnell 2013]. kung fu cinema is more restrictive than that of Bruce Lee’s martial arts
action films. Second, concerning action aesthetics, wu has disparate
21 In Ip Man 2, for example, when Ip is challenged by other masters in Hong Kong
representational strategies in different subgenres, which I will explicate
on a round table, he simply walks and jumps up there without any acrobatic movements.
later in the essay.
This creates a stark contrast with Northern masters who get on the table with specular
somersaults.
With Hong Kong’s unique political situation after 1949, Sek Kei
22 In Ip Man, when Jin Shanzhao, the Northern master, announces that the points out that Hong Kong filmmaking in the 1950s ‘retained close
Northern fist is defeated by the Southern one, Ip immediately replies, ‘It’s not the matter
links with traditional Chinese culture’; in particular, kung fu cinema
of the fist; it’s a matter of the person’. This statement has two levels of meaning. First, Ip
‘promulgate[s] the traditional Chinese martial arts, together with
wants Jin to humbly accept his defeat and not find a pretext for it. He understands that Jin
is not a representative of the Northern Fist, nor does Ip represent the south. Second, the
a distinctively Chinese philosophy’ [Sek 1980: 28]. In other words,
Southern-Northern division is not important to Ip. What he values is how a person practices the virtuous dimensions of wu ­– the concept of wude (武德; martial
his martial arts, be it Southern kung fu or Northern wushu. virtue)25 – are transferred to the cinematic representation of kung fu.

23 It is worth noting that the selection of non-Chinese martial arts disciplines is


pertinent to the level of combativity. The selected disciplines have often been portrayed in
24 Specifically, it embodies the ‘seven virtues’, which are: ‘Suppressed violence,
the martial arts genre as the opposite of kung fu in their forms and application. Western
gathered in arms, protected what was great, established merit, gave peace to the people,
boxing is associated with physical prowess, masculinity, and efficiency, which is the opposite
harmonized the masses and propagated wealth’ [Louise and Edwards 1994: 142].
of the kung fu represented in cinema (e.g. weak, feminine, and ornamental). On the other
hand, Muay Thai has a connotation of brutality due to its lethal knee and elbow techniques. 25 Wude ‘epitomize[s]… the traditional Confucian virtues’ including li (禮;
This image has been reinforced by the rise of Southeast Asian martial arts action films such Propriety), yi (義; Righteousness), ren (忍; perseverance), shu (恕; forgiveness), renai (仁
as the Ong Bak series [2003-2010] and The Raid series [2011-2014]. 愛; charitable love), and heping (和平; peace) [Yu 1980: 83].

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Although kung fu cinema is meant to be set apart from the fantastical wen,26 which is considered ‘the masculine ideal’ [Louie and Edwards
wuxia and to emphasize instead ‘real’ fighting techniques, conflict is 1994: 141-142]. However, the wu dimension in the Wong Fei-hung
not resolved through the brutal killing or open humiliation of one’s films has largely been restrained and displaced inasmuch as zhongwen
opponent. It is not about martial prowess or winning street fights. At qingwu (‘place greater value on wen than wu’) is the prevalent ideology
a deeper level, it accentuates philosophical and moral enlightenment in Chinese culture [Louie and Edwards 1994: 145]. In other words,
through repetitive kung fu learning/practice [Sek 1980: 28]. the concept of wu in Wong Fei-hung’s kung fu cinema (the zhenshi
traditon) is different from that in Bruce Lee’s martial arts action cinema
As suggested by the Cantonese vernacular, the term ‘kung fu’ refers to (the shizhan traditon) in which the former is more restrictive in
an accumulation of skills through a long process [Teo 2009: 4]. It is not demonstrating martial prowess and physical strength.
a shortcut that guarantees immediate results, but a persistent journey
that a practitioner undertakes to expand their physical and mental limits Apart from the traditional stigma, the shift from the martial to the
while becoming a more ’cultured’ person. In other words, kung fu not metaphysical is also a result of the decreasing usefulness of kung fu in
only inherently suppresses wu by highlighting the didactic dimension, modernity. Viewing the ‘kung fu imaginary’ in Hong Kong cinemas as a
it also features the promotion of wen as a strategy to further mitigate ‘self-dismantling operation that denies its own effectiveness in modern
the emphasis of wu in kung fu cinema [Lau 1980: 3; Louie and Edwards life’ [Li 2001: 515], Siu-leung Li argues that kung fu shifts its focus from
1994: 145]. the martial to the art [Li 2001: 523]. This ‘artistic turn’ not only satisfies
the demand of wen scholars and the suppression of wu, but it can
Wen refers to ‘genteel, refined qualities that were associated with the also be considered as an approach to justify the teaching and learning
literary and artistic pursuits of classical scholars’ [Louie and Edwards of kung fu in the modern era where artillery predominantly replaces
1994: 141-142]. When translated to kung fu cinema, it constructs martial arts as the most effective way of killing.
the literati persona of traditional kung fu masters. Contrary to Lee’s
bold display of his kung fu body, a traditional kung fu master is more Second, wu in the zhenshi tradition is problematized by the slippery
conservative in attire. These characters often wear plain changshan (長 notion of authenticity/realism, which has been the core of the study
衫; long gown), covering the body, as a way to demonstrate modesty of kung fu cinema since the Wong Fei-hung series [Sek 1980: 28; Teo
and humility (as opposed to Guang Yu’s wu warrior appearance). 2009: 70; Bordwell 2011: 129-130].27 In this, a number of frameworks
have been formulated in the past four decades. In 1980, for instance,
The ideal wen role model is Confucius [Louie and Edwards 1994: 142]. Tony Rayns argued that ‘it is imperative to show protagonists full-
Such a persona is literally transplanted into the original archetype length if their movements are to constitute the dynamics of the [martial
of the kung fu master, from Wong Fei-hung and Huo Yuanjia to Ip arts performance]’ [Rayns 1980: 112]. Rayns’s idea of ‘full-length
Man. Along with poetry and calligraphy, the ‘literary pursuit’ of kung movements’ has become the basis for later scholars’ emphasis on the
fu masters is reflected in their martial arts philosophy – the teaching importance of long takes. Two decades later, Siu-leung Li proposed that
of wude. As Louie states, ‘although manifestations of power such as authenticity is the central motif differentiating martial arts from other
physical size, martial skills and sheer brutality are indicators of wu genres in Hong Kong cinema, which:
masculinity, in themselves they are not sufficient to make the “real”
yingxiong’ [Louie 2002: 29]. A ‘real’ kung fu yingxiong (英雄; hero)
should be able to teach wude through his kung fu.
26 It should also be noted that wu and wen are not mutually exclusive. As Louie
Although Confucian humanism is present in Louie’s original astutely points out, Confucius was ‘a proponent of archery and charioteering and encouraged
formulation of wu [Louie and Edwards 1994: 142], the fostering of the development of these wu arts in his students’ education’ [Louie and Edwards 1994: 143].
wen constructs the scholarly presence of a kung fu master and further Thus, the issue is one of degree.
restricts the wu dimension of kung fu cinema. Undoubtedly, Wong 27 Apart from martial arts performance, the notion of ‘authenticity’ can also
Fei-hung is a pioneering kung fu hero that attempts to merge wu with be approached from the perspective of identity [Hunt 2003: 22]. This reading focuses on
the ideological and political connotations of kung fu cinema [Lo 2005: 81; Abbas 2006:
83]. The use of long takes and full-body framing in Bruce Lee’s films, for example, is read
as a triumph of Western ‘realism’ over ‘Oriental fantasies’ [Chiao 1981: 33]. This kind of
allegorical reading of kung fu cinema is particularly common in the late 1990s when Hong
Kong was influenced by its reunification with China.

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relies to a great extent on ‘accurate and faithful’ Furthermore, Hunt’s notion of archival authenticity is more applicable
representations of the ‘authentic’ performance of kung fu itself to kung fu cinema than to other subgenres, such as martial arts action.
on screen, and on the extent to which dangerous stunts in In Bruce Lee’s films and in Jackie Chan’s crime thrillers, such as the
kung fu-action films are to be performed real with no cheating Police Story series / 警察故事 [1985-2013], the represented martial
camera work.  arts techniques are often multidisciplinary. Although there has been
[Li 2001: 522] a revival of archival authenticity since the 2000s in martial arts action
films such as Muay Thai in Ong Bak [2002] and MMA in Killzone
In addition, of course, there is also Hunt’s aforementioned tripartite [2005], the pursuit of archival authenticity has been kung fu cinema’s
scheme of authenticity. However, the notion of authenticity in kung primary obsession for more than half a century.28 In other words, the
fu cinema has been questioned by scholars. Stephen Teo questions idea of ‘authenticity’ is a relative concept that is historically, culturally
the epistemological validity of the term. He asserts that the idea and genre specific, which I will further elaborate along with the notion
of ‘real kung fu’ is only a fantasy – a ‘representation […] involving of hen.
different forms of resemblance and performance and a high degree
of choreography’ [Teo 2009: 70]. He also contends that the illusion Second, while traditional filmmaking methods that guarantee ‘cinematic
is not solely created by filmmakers, as moviegoers are ‘complicit in authenticity’ in kung fu cinema such as the use of long takes are present
their expectation that what they are seeing is real’ [Teo 2009: 70]. in the Ip Man series [Hunt 2003: 35], it has a different emphasis. Rather
Gina Marchetti, on the other hand, questions the idea of ‘pure style’ than featuring extended and highly complex fight sequences, often
in martial arts cinema [Marchetti 2014: 1]; she pointedly argues that combined with manipulation of surrounding objects in the mise-en-
the so-called ‘kung fu’ of Bruce Lee is a mixture of Japanese/Korean scène, fight sequences and action choreography in the Ip Man series are
kicking techniques and Western boxing footwork rather than a faithful more direct and lethal in the context of kung fu cinema. In other words,
representation of wing chun or of any other Southern Chinese martial the long take itself should not be the focus; rather, what is included in
arts schools [Marchetti 2014: 2]. Her critique demands a clearer the long take is crucial in the formulation of the shizhan paradigm.
definition of different unarmed combat traditions – zhenshi and shizhan
– within Hong Kong martial arts cinema. In short, the ambiguity and Third, the Ip Man series has a different approach towards ‘corporeal
complexity of authenticity/realism have been the center of the debate authenticity’ [Hunt 2003: 39-41]. It is worth noting that the examples
for more than two decades. Hunt uses in his formulation are not from the kung fu films of the 1950s
(e.g. Kwan Tak-hing) or the 1970s (e.g. Lau Kar-leung and Yuen Woo-
Rather than rejecting ‘real kung fu’ as a cinematic illusion at the outset, ping). They are mostly the martial arts action films of Jackie Chan and
it is more constructive to explore the relationship between authentic Sammo Hung in the 1980s. This begs the question of what corporeal
kung fu performance and its representations on screen. authenticity means in kung fu cinema where there is less emphasis on
dangerous action replays and outtakes, and more on hand-to-hand
As the latest reinvention of kung fu cinema, the Ip Man series combat. It is crucial to clarify the specific ways that the kung fu genre
problematizes existing frameworks insofar as the shizhan dimension of constructs corporeal authenticity when compared with martial arts
kung fu performance is not sufficiently addressed. First, while all real action films in general. As I will explain in the next section, corporeal
kung fu techniques are archivally authentic [Hunt 2003: 29], they are authenticity is a specific concept depending on the needs of different
not equally efficient in demonstrating combativity. There is a martial martial arts styles and a new framework is required to account for the Ip
hierarchy in kung fu cinema (and in martial arts cinema at large) Man series’ engagement with the shizhan paradigm.
structured by the practicality of the styles represented. Techniques with
higher combative values often receive more attention in the genre. The last aspect that problematizes wu in the zhenshi tradition is the idea
In Lau Kar-leung (Liu Chia-Liang)’s works in the 1970s, for example, of ‘expressive amplification’ in its cinematic representation of kung fu
external hard styles (e.g. Shaolin) are more frequently and positively [Bordwell 2001: 75]. While the various notions of authenticity above
represented than internal soft styles (e.g. taijiquan). Moreover, priority
is also given to Southern styles with clear, straightforward attacks rather
than to Northern styles with symbolic and ornamental forms. This 28 Although there are plenty of films featuring different non-Chinese martial arts
nanpai vs. beipai discourse is present in Ip Man 2, where it is arranged styles in the 1970s, such as Muay Thai in Feng Huang’s The Tournament / 中泰拳擊生死
for Ip Man to fight with Northern masters from bagua zhang (八卦; 戰 [1974] and Western boxing in Zhang Che’s Duel of Fist / 拳擊 [1971], the represented
eight trigram palm) and tanglang quan (螳螂; praying mantis fist). styles are a fusion of kung fu, boxing, karate, and taekwondo. Contrary to Lau Kar-leung’s
kung fu films, archival authenticity in these works is questionable [Hunt 2003: 35].

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advocate real-time performance with minimal technological mediation, Furthermore, Bordwell’s framework is partly derived from the
David Bordwell takes a different approach and investigates how the theatrical/operatic traditions, including Eisenstein’s theories on
cinematic apparatus plays a significant role in Hong Kong action theatrical performance as well as elements from jingju (京劇; Peking
cinema. Hunt’s idea of ‘transparent mediation’ [2003: 35], therefore, Opera) [Bordwell 2001: 73]. He traces Hong Kong action cinema’s
should not be understood in absolute terms, as martial arts cinema is emphasis on the ‘graceful body’ to the soviet films of the 1920s, which
never ‘transparent’ from the beginning and involves ‘re-presentation’ of were derived from the ‘gymnastics of popular theatre’, emphasizing the
real-time performance. ‘recoil’ and ‘expressivity’ of acting [2000b: 78]. Similarly, the rhythmic
‘pause-burst-pause’ pattern is partly derived from the operatic ideas
Hong Kong action cinema tends to ‘expressively amplify’ body of chang zuo nian da (唱作念打; Singing, Acting, Recitation, and
movements with clarity and creates a strong sense of ‘visceral Acrobatics).
arousal’ among viewers [Bordwell 2001: 75, 90]. In other words, the
authenticity in kung fu cinema is not merely an objective recording of As I will elaborate further, two tendencies can be noticed in the zhenshi
real-time performance, but also involves a high degree of mediation tradition – huge, fast movement such as continuous somersaults (later
or intervention. The key issue is how authenticity can be constructed aided by undercranking in New Wave martial arts films) and clear,
through the cinematic apparatus. rhythmic movements (exemplified by Lau’s works in the 1970s). These
are methods that aid the audience’s comprehension and apprehension
Coining the term ‘expressive amplification’ as the underlying ‘energy’ of the performance in a theatre. The framework’s intrinsic and intimate
of Hong Kong action cinema, Bordwell identifies several key film connection to the notions and practices of Chinese opera, however, is
techniques that concretely amplify actions. These include the ‘pause- inherently contradictory to the shizhan tradition. The use of acrobatic
burst-pause’ pattern, rapid zoom, overlapping/repetitive editing, and techniques and rhythmic movements is more performative than
the audio effects of fighting [2001: 80]. In brief, action aesthetics in the combative. Accordingly, Bordwell’s framework becomes inadequate for
zhenshi paradigm are generally based on the interactive collaboration the Ip Man series, as it not only embodies the theatrical and operatic, but
between Hunt’s formulation of authenticity and Bordwell’s notion of also the practical and the combative.
expressive amplification.
To further examine the relationship between theatricality and shizhan,
Although expressive amplification is useful in dissecting Hong Kong it is crucial to consider the dialogical relationship of jingju and beipai.
action aesthetics in general, it remains imperative that the specificity According to Lau Kar-leung, beipai is characterized by operatic
of different martial arts subgenres in Hong Kong cinema be addressed. elements, such as showcasing somersaults and leaps in ‘dramatic lion
Rather than a unified whole, wuxia in the 1960s (e.g. King Hu, Zheng dancing, a staple of folk ritual used to celebrate the Lunar New Year,
Che), kung fu in the 1970s (e.g. Bruce Lee, Lau Kar-leung, and Yuen bless new enterprises, and keep martial arts students in top shape
Woo-ping), and crime thrillers (e.g. Jackie Chan and John Woo) all without engaging in actual combat’ [2009: 77-78]. Although this
have different conventions, developments, and aesthetic concerns. affiliation to operatic and performative arts can also be interpreted as
The notion of authenticity, as previously discussed, is especially crucial the genre’s inherent pursuit of the wen ideals, which highlights both
to kung fu cinema, in which unmediated performance of real kung fu ‘literary achievement’ and ‘artistic grace’ [Louie 2002: 17], the use of
technique is the top priority. expressive movements largely downplays the combative side of kung fu
performance.
Wuxia cinema, by contrast, gives more room for imagination and
highlights fantastical actions aided by somersaults and trampoline This is not to say that beipai has no place in the shizhan tradition. In fact,
work [Teo 2009: 71]. For example, Bordwell argues that King Hu Northern masters are invaluable assets for spectacular movements such
reconfigures wuxia actions in ‘imperfect’ ways that make them as ‘trampoline jumps and aerial somersaults’ [Sek 1980: 35], which are
‘partially indiscernible’. This includes changing ‘the opacities of the employed in Bruce lee’s films. Especially after the death of Bruce Lee,
setting’, playing with ‘the bounding frame’, and incorporating ‘the beipai started to gain prominence as kung fu cinema was seeking to
over-informative long shots, the disorienting whip-pans, and the reinvent itself by combining ‘Northern opera techniques and acrobatics’
elliptical cutting’ [2000b: 119]. In other words, the ‘degree’ of expressive with nanpai Southern kung fu styles [Sek 1980: 34]. This clarifies that
amplification varies in different martial arts genres. Using the the relationship between nanpai and beipai, zhenshi and shizhan, in
monolithic idea of ‘expressive amplification’ to encompass all cases is martial arts cinema is not mutually exclusive, but a matter of degree.
over-generalizing and omits the specificity of different subgenres.

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The search for inspiration from within operatic traditions has had a Once Upon a Time in China / 黃飛雄 [1991].29 This is not to mention the
huge impact to the development of the genre. Since the late 1970s, Yuen incorporation and digitalization of kung fu by Hollywood from the late
Woo-ping further reinvented the genre by experimenting with kung 1990s onward through blockbusters such as The Matrix [1999]. In brief,
fu comedy, as exemplified by Drunken Master / 醉拳 [1978], which is Hong Kong martial arts cinema’s emphasis on cinematic theatricality
characterized by ‘slapstick’ and ‘the amalgamation of flowery kung-fu and technological mediation in the past few decades have limited the
tricks’ [Sek 1980: 35]. When compared with the early Wong Fei-hung possibility of exploring the shizhan dimension of traditional Chinese
series and Lau’s kung fu films featuring Shaolin styles, Yuen’s kung fu kung fu [Hunt 2003: 24].
comedy has a higher degree of artificiality and theatricality, involving
the complex use of props/weapons, acrobatic movements, dramatic To address the combative dimension of kung fu cinema, the Ip Man
facial expressions, etc. series highlights three crucial dimensions of the shizhan tradition –
kuai, hen, and zhun. As I will further unpack, these three concepts can
Although Lau’s nanpai kung fu films are considered the opposite of best elucidate the connection between the principles of wing chun and
beipai due to his emphasis on authentic representations of Southern Bruce Lee’s martial arts philosophy, hence consolidating the synthesis
kung fu styles, such as those derivative of Shaolin martial arts in The between zhenshi and shizhan in the Ip Man series. Moreover, these three
36th Chamber of Shaolin / 少林三十六房 [1978], he does not share the notions are key criteria in the Cantonese vernacular reflecting the idea
same shizhan ideals with martial arts stars such as Bruce Lee and Donnie of ‘pragmatism’.
Yen. First, despite his substantial knowledge of Hung Gar (a prominent
Southern style), Lau was greatly influenced by the operatic tradition Similar to the word ‘kung fu’, which refers to accumulation of skills in
after his father’s chorographic work in Kwan Tak-hing’s Wong Fei- everyday language, kuai, hen, zhun are a well-known tripartite scheme
hung films [72]. This is not to disparage Hung Gar as an impractical describing ‘practicality’ and ‘efficiency’ in Hong Kong. Commonly used
style. Rather, it is to observe that operatic and performative contexts in the Guangdong regions, these terms are evoked when one intends to
that gave birth to martial arts cinema have significantly influenced its highlight the execution of skills in a highly pragmatic manner. While
cinematic representations. they have been commonly used to describe the combativity of martial
arts techniques within Chinese-language journalism and publications
Even though Lau’s films are known for their ‘authenticity’ (especially [Mak 2015: 146; Chen and Mai 2010: 31], systematic analysis of each of
the archival aspect) [Hunt 2003: 29], they are theatrically expressive and these concepts in relation to Hong Kong martial arts cinema has not yet
highly rhythmic in terms of choreography (i.e. the pause-burst-pause emerged. As I will demonstrate in the following paragraphs, wing chun
pattern). Furthermore, Lau clearly aims to preserve the region’s martial is exemplary for manifesting the above concepts, due to its preference
arts heritage and traditions. Many of these traditions are performative for simplicity and efficiency.
in nature, such as lion-dancing. Another example is the five animal
styles – dragon, snake, tiger, leopard and white crane – derived from It is worth noting that the notions of kuai, hen, and zhun are not
Hung Gar, which are symbolically expressive. Therefore, despite the mutually exclusive. In fact, one element often plays a key role in the
genre’s stress on authenticity in general, expressivity and theatricality execution of the other(s). For example, zhun (precision) supplements
play a central role in traditional kung fu cinema, from Kwan Tak-hing, kuai (speed) in the sense that the pure pursuit of speed is futile. In the
Lau Kar-leung to Yuen Woo-ping. words of Barry Allen, it is ‘mainly a matter of being able to perform
complicated serial movements in one beat, one uninterrupted,
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the shizhan paradigm remained interpenetrating measure, whose time is neither fast nor slow but right’
marginal due to the emergence of Hong Kong New Wave cinema and [Allen 2015: 100, emphasis in the original]. To take down an opponent
the increasing reliance on technological mediation, such as explicit uses efficiently, the strike needs to be brutal, but also swift and accurate. The
of undercranking and wirework. Films reflecting the shizhan ideals notions of kuai, hen, and zhun supplement each other in practice.
such as Donnie Yen’s Tiger Cage / 特警屠龍 series [1988-1989], and
In the Line of Duty / 皇家師姐4: 直擊證人 [1989] were overshadowed
by New Wave kung fu films such as Iron Monkey / 鐵馬騮 [1993] and

29 The beginning of Yen’s career was distanced from the shizhan paradigm that
accentuates practicality and combativity. His debut in Drunken Tai Chi / 笑太極 [1984] is
an imitation of Jackie Chan’s kung fu comedy.

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Kuai 快 Although conventional strategies of amplification such as constructive


Redefining the Speed of editing and slow motion have often been employed, there is little or
no undercranking of action that makes Ip’s hand movements visually
Kung Fu Performance faster on screen. Admittedly, earlier wing chun films in the 1970s,
The concept of kuai highlights the crucial role that speed plays in such as Shaolin Martial Arts and Warriors Two, place less emphasis
combat. As Bruce Lee writes in the Tao of Jeet Kune Do: ‘A good on undercranking. Influenced by the performative tradition, their
technique includes quick changes, great variety and speed’ [Lee 1975: movements are more rhythmic and clear-cut. This creates a stark
3]. This is emphasized in Ip Man 3 when Frank (Mike Tyson) alludes contrast with the Ip Man series’ emphasis on real-time, high speed
to a Chinese motto regarding real combat – ‘Wai Faai Bat Po’ (唯快不 movements in fight sequences.
破; only speed is invincible). The fight between Ip and Frank is set up
to discover ‘whose fists are the fastest’, those of wing chun or those of Additionally, the notion of kuai can also be complemented by wing
boxing. chun’s continuous yet subtle movements. Rather than showing clear-
cut, one-by-one movement, like Hung Gar, wing chun is flexible,
This pursuit of speed is essential for real combat and has been variable, and highly complex in attack and defense [Chow and Spangler
exemplified by Bruce Lee himself. Lee’s punches were around 50 1982: 59]. In addition to continuity, the action choreography also
milliseconds, compared to the 0.15 seconds of an average martial arts accentuates the style’s subtlety and refrains from showcasing spectacular
practitioner [Glover 1976: 54]. His movements were so fast that they movements, such as Jet Li’s ‘shadowless kick’ that appeared in Once
can only be seen by ‘viewing the film one frame at a time’ [92]. In fact, Upon a Time in China. As Bruce Lee argued: ‘Except in rare cases, all
speed is not merely about increasing the difficulty of blocking. As power movements should be made as small as possible, that is with the least
equals force times speed, the damage a punch or a kick inflicts also deviation of the hand necessary to induce the opponent to react’ [Lee
depends on its velocity [57]. ‘A powerful athlete is not a strong athlete,’ 1975: 196]. Huge and clear-cut movements are technically inefficient as
Lee argued, ‘but one who can exert his strength quickly’ [1975: 46]. they would easily expose one’s weakness in combat situations.

What makes wing chun stand out in nanpai is its particular emphasis on Furthermore, the series’ emphasis of kuai advocates a consistency
speed. The technique highlights directness in punching and takes the between martial arts style and choreography, as well as between the
shortest travelling distance in attack [Glover 1976: 53; Ip, Lu, and Pang principles of a style and its cinematic representation. The former is
2009: 50-51]. When compared with conventional boxing techniques relatively easy to follow, albeit not all kung fu cinema would take it
such as the hook, cross, and uppercut, wing chun’s straight punch from seriously. For example, Jet Li’s signature kung fu stance in Once Upon
the central line of the body has a shorter travelling path, and hence a a Time in China bears greater resemblance to taijiquan than Hung Gar.
quicker delivery. In other words, the rapid hand movements on screen In the case of wing chun, its representation relies on the intricacy of
is not solely a result of cinematic effect, but reflective of the style’s choreography and the performance of highly complex, continuous hand
principles. According to Stephen Teo, wing chun is so ‘short and abrupt’ movements. In a sense, there is an argument here that martial arts styles
that it ‘take[s] advantage of the tight, narrow streets and alleyways of should not merely serves as a signifier of difference in choreography
Guangzhou where the martial art originated’ [2009: 79]. (i.e. differentiating one style/film from another); instead, different
styles require different representational strategies (e.g. fast and complex
Moreover, speed in the martial arts genre is often mediated to enhance choreography for wing chun, birds-eye view for the circular movement
the impact of a performance. However, it is pivotal to preserve the of bagua).30 In this regard, the success of the Ip Man series is that it
real speed of martial arts performance in the shizhan paradigm. While showcases a traditional style that is inherently connected to speed and
undercranking was commonly used in the 1980s and 1990s to increase hence to combativity.
the speed (hence apparent power) of body movements, it is not
explicitly employed in the fight sequences of the Ip Man series. In brief, speed is the key motif enhancing the combativity of the Ip
Man series. This emphasis on speed is embodied in the dexterity and
Earlier kung fu films featuring the same style, such as The Prodigal Son intricacy of wing chun forms and attack patterns.
and Wing Chun, replaced real-time fight scenes with undercranked
motion at hyperspeed. By contrast, the Ip Man series aims to increase
the real-time speed of the performance, so as to emphasize physical skill.
30 Barrowman’s discussion of ‘martial suture’ with reference to the films of Steven
For instance, at the start of Ip Man, Donnie Yen performs 13 moves in 3
Seagal is a relevant example here. He argues that the specificity of grappling techniques
seconds (in only two shots) during his fight with Jin Shanzhao.
demands a new kind of action aesthetics [Barrowman 2014].

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Hen 狠 the lethality of kung fu techniques. Rather, it seeks to promote moral


Renegotiating the Martial Limits enlightenment. In light of this, the Ip Man series also attempts to
combine the combative dimension with the philosophical aspect of
of Kung Fu Cinema Chinese kung fu [Louie and Edwards 1994: 135]. While Wong Fei-
The concept of hen (brutality) refers to a fighter’s ability to ‘give all he hung has been considered an archetype of this ideal merger, there are
has, all the time’ [Lee 1975: 69].31 In real combat, hen can be understood certain limitations to his martial capabilities. An audience would never
as the use of the most brutal and lethal techniques, often combined see Wong Fei-hung demonstrate brutal and lethal kung fu techniques,
with strong force/power to create ‘devastating attacks’ [Lee 1975: 69]. even in the name of the most just cause. Ip Man, by contrast, attempts
Cinematically, this idea is manifested through the lethality of wing chun to merge the seemingly irreconcilable.
in the series, where fight scenes are ‘gritty and brutal, keeping special
effects to a minimum’ [Judkins and Nielson 2015: 4]. Yet, at the same time, Ip is consistently portrayed as a traditional kung
fu master, demonstrating wude. In Ip Man, when Master Liu, the
Before analyzing the series’ fight scenes, the concept of brutality Southern Chinese martial artist, comes to Ip’s mansion and demands
requires further scrutiny. It is a relative concept that needs to be read biwu (比武; a kung fu duel), Ip invites him to have dinner with his
in the right context. When Wu Pang made The Story of Wong Fei-hung: family and then arranges a ‘closed-door match’ so that Master Liu’s
Part I /黃飛鴻正傳上集之鞭風滅燭 [1949], it was considered to reputation would not be tarnished by his defeat. This code continues to
be the most ‘realistic’ and ‘authentic’ representation of martial arts to be featured in Ip Man 3 when Ip Man teaches Bruce Lee (Chan Kwok-
date, as the film was contrasted with the fantastical shenguai wuxia of kwan) the importance of humility by opening the door as a gesture of
the 1920s [Teo 2009: 72]. Similarly, the ‘new-style’ Mandarin wuxia in acceptance (rather than rejection) or when he fights Cheung Tin-chi in
the 1960s and 1970s could be considered more ‘real’ and ‘brutal’ than his school without the presence of students and journalists. In the latter
its Cantonese counterpart in that specific context. Examples include case, even Ip’s wife, Cheung Wing-sing, has to wait outside during
Zhang Che’s yanggang (陽剛; staunch masculinity) and Mandarin wuxia the duel. The only two witnesses of the duel are Ip and Cheung’s sons,
films such as The Assassin / 大刺客 [1967] and Vengeance / 報仇 [1970], who are secretly watching from behind a staircase. They learn from
which are known for their ‘spectacles of bloodletting and physical their fathers the importance of wude in biwu, which is the core of the
mutilation’ [Yip 2014: 86]. zhenshi traditon.

Just as ‘realism’ is a relative concept [Barrowman 2014], there is no This is in sharp contrast with Jin Shanzhao in Ip Man, the Northern
one single universal standard of ‘brutality’ applicable to all martial Chinese martial artist, who seeks to publicly humiliate other masters
arts genres and contexts. Wuxia, kung fu, and martial arts action have in front of their students. Violating the code of humility, he challenges
different standards, understandings, and interpretations of violence. So kung fu masters in Foshan as a way to make a name for himself. He
the tension between theatricality and practicality, zhenshi and shizhan, brutally smashes the forehead of a Dragon Fist master and uses the back
authenticity and combativity, needs to be carefully examined. of his sword to crush the head of a Choi Lee Fat master. In both cases,
there is an explicit display of blood and injuries.
The brutality of the Ip Man series, therefore should be read against
other kung fu films (rather than wuxia and martial arts action) featuring In traditional kung fu cinema, there is an implicit understanding that
traditional masters and Southern styles, produced from 1949 to the the martial dimension of kung fu needs to be suppressed and that the
2000s. The closest point of comparison is Wong Fei-hung and Hung techniques used in combat should be not lethal. This is because the
Gar, from Kwan Tak-hing (The Story of Wong Fei-hung), Jackie Chan exhibition of violence contradicts the genre’s inherent connection to
(Drunken Master), to Jet Li (Once Upon a Time in China). wude, or Confucian humanism. This differentiates the genre from Bruce
Lee’s martial arts action films and Zhang Che’s gory wuxia films. The
As explained earlier, while kung fu cinema has highlighted concrete purpose of wu is not to physically harm other kung fu masters, but to
hand-to-hand combat since its conception, its goal is not to illustrate compete based on the code of honor and respect. Jin’s violation of wude
vicariously enhances Ip Man’s persona as a respectful master following
Confucian codes of conduct.
31 In Cantonese, the term can also refer to determination or firmness. To fully
capture its meaning, it can be translated as ‘brutal resolution’. When a person is described as Against this backdrop, it is important to note that Ip is not reserved
being hen, it means that she demonstrates a strong will to achieve her goal, even through in using lethal techniques in combat situations. In Ip Man, he requests
ruthless means. For the sake of simplicity and concision, I will use ‘brutality’ instead.

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to challenge ten karate black belt masters in a dojo after witnessing aestheticized violence through intellectual montage.
the brutal murder of an honorable Chinese kung fu master. As a place
containing Bruce Lee’s ‘spectre’ [Bowman 2013: 171], the dojo reminds Granted, the narrative of Ip Man plays a key role in Ip’s expansion of
viewers of Lee’s brutal battles with Japanese martial artists in Fist of wu or ‘violation’ of wude. Apart from demonstrating the practicality
Fury / 精武門 [1972]. Following Lee’s nationalistic legacy, Ip not only of wing chun technique through violence, Ip’s witnessing of a cold-
reproduces the classic scene, but he actually escalates Lee’s ferocity to blooded murder and the necessity of employing effective strikes in
another level. Instead of squawking in fury, the silent Ip unleashes his a ‘one vs. ten duel’ helps to justify the lethality of his attacks. While
rage through brutal techniques: arm and hip dislocations, stamping similar nationalistic narratives are not uncommon in previous kung fu
on necks, breaking spines, punching throats, and smashing heads, etc. films, such as Once Upon a Time in China, the deployment of wu is still
To amplify the impact of the strikes, the audience can clearly hear the very restricted. In that film, after Wong Fei-hung (Jet Li) witnesses the
sound of cracking bones and joints. The visual horror of a dislocated hip tragic death of Master Yim, who was shot down by American soldiers,
joint is shown in a frontal full-body medium shot. he finishes off the captain, who ordered the killing, by ‘firing’ a bullet
from his fingers (in a highly mythicized manner). In comparison, the
In terms of action aesthetics, these ruthless representations offer a amplification of violence associates Ip Man with the shizhan paradigm
stark contrast to the harmonious tradition of the Wong Fei-hung of Bruce Lee more than the zhenshi paradigm of Wong Fei-hung (both
films, where there was ‘a noticeable absence of physical violence on Kwan Tak-hing and Jet Li).
the narrative surface’ [Garcia 1980: 129]. Despite his demonstration of
real techniques, Wong places more emphasis on Confucian humanism Although brutal scenes can be found in previous wing chun films, such
rather than on the effectiveness of his kung fu. But when Ip fights the as the endings of Warriors Two and The Prodigal Son, there are subtle
last karateka in the dojo, he holds his head and keeps punching the differences. In these films, there is a deviation from the traditional
forehead and nose until he dies. Even with the ‘just’ cause of avenging master persona. Fei Chun (Sammo Hung) and The Cashier (Casanova
his comrade, this kind of brutality is rare in the history of kung fu Wong) in Warriors Two, as well as Leung Chang (Yuen Biao) in The
cinema, in which the code of wude is the moral imperative. A traditional Prodigal Son are portrayed as insurgent, impulsive, and immature
kung fu master should not be overwhelmed by rage and must always adolescents, which in turn justify the films’ demonstration of graphic
demonstrate restraint in combat. violence.

Moreover, the notion of hen is not simply represented by visual gore, Commenting on Bruce Lee’s problematic and contradictory identity
but also by aestheticized violence in the form of intellectual montage. as a kung fu master, Cheng Yu points out that ‘physical strength and
In the last fight scene of Ip Man, Ip keeps punching Miura (Hiroyuki violence gave [Lee] a separate code ethics’ [Yu 1984: 25]. In other
Ikeuchi) against a light post on stage and basically turns him into a wing words, the protagonists in previous wing chun and martial arts action
chun wooden dummy. On the one hand, it is a violent scene because films require some distance from the traditional grandmaster persona.
Miura at that point is already beyond his ability to fight back and his Ip Man is a rare case in that he is capable of demonstrating lethal
white uniform is increasingly soaked with his own blood. However, combat techniques while maintaining the literati aura.
rather than showing mercy or ceasing the attack at the ‘right moment’,
Ip keeps punching Miura until the back of his head smashes into the Simply put, the Ip Man series proposes that a traditional kung fu master,
light post behind him and causes a concussion, which kills him on the despite his scholarly presence, is also capable of brutal execution. As
spot. discussed in detail, this accentuation of hen needs to be read in the
context of kung fu cinema where there is a denigration of wu (martial
At the same time, the screen is juxtaposed with flashbacks of Ip, valour) and an accentuation of wen (cultural-attainment) [Louie 2002:
in slow motion, practicing wing chun on a wooden dummy in an 4]. Compared with Wong Fei-hung and Bruce Lee, Ip is a character
empty wing chun school. This montage is an aesthetic juxtaposition presenting a well-balanced view of authenticity and combativity, zhenshi
of violence and quotidian training. The tranquility and solitude of Ip and shizhan, wen and wu. Hence he is becoming a key figure in the
in an empty school, as well as his elegant wing chun movements, are development of Hong Kong martial arts cinema.
juxtaposed with Miura’s agonizing, bloody face. The seemingly basic,
routine wing chun forms are now imbued with a sense of ferocity and
cruelty. Transcending mechanical amplification (e.g. close-up) and gory
visuals of the injuries, the Ip Man series also stresses conceptual and

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Zhun 準 However, the Ip Man series turns this stereotype upside down and
Recasting the Performative highlights the shizhan dimension of Chinese kung fu. Rather than
showcasing fancy, ornamental techniques to extend the spectacle,
as the Pragmatic
Ip seeks to end every fight as soon as possible by deploying lethal
Although the literal translation of zhun is precision, its implication is to techniques. Of the ten karateka Ip fights in Ip Man, he knocks out three
end a fight as quickly as possible by hitting the right targets at the right in two seconds, one in three seconds, five in four seconds, and one in
time. Bruce Lee stresses the importance of zhun in an interview, five seconds.

In kung fu, it always involves a very fast motion… It’s what we As argued, what differentiates the shizhan approach from the traditional
meant by simplicity, same thing in striking and everything. It zhenshi one is that fight choreography needs to be simple yet effective.
has to be based on a very minimum motion, so that everything One way to achieve this is to reduce the time spent on individual
would be directly expressed. One motion, and he’s gone… opponents in mass fight scenes. This can be achieved by the deployment
[Hong Kong Film Archive 1999: 46] of critical strikes combining kuai (speed), hen (brutality), and zhun
(precision). Since wing chun does not involve large movement anyway,
In other words, every attack needs to be precise and effective. Rather this increase in speed and repetition of punches is the style’s unique
than prolonging a fight, a better strategy is to create ‘devastating attacks’ method of demonstrating impact and power.32
through accurate movements and end the fight in a split second [Lee
1975: 69]. As mentioned before, the notions of kuai, hen, and zhun The idea of zhun can be understood at the micro as well as at the macro
often combine to deliver the best result. Cinematically, the concept is level. Not only does the series have more incisive fight choreography,
translated as the deployment of brief and concise action choreography, the fight scenes are also significantly shorter than in previous wing
manifesting the significance of efficiency in real combat. chun films. Except for the boxing match in Ip Man 2, other featured
fights in the series are all around two minutes, such as Ip Man versus
Despite the popularity of Bruce Lee’s shizhan martial arts action films the ten karate masters (one minute 28 seconds) Ip Man versus Miura
in the early 1970s, the kung fu genre soon turned to comedic kung fu (two minutes 17 seconds), Hung Chun-nam (Sammo Hung – two
action after Lee’s death. This was exemplified by the works of Yuen minutes 15 seconds), and versus the Muay Thai assassin (two minutes
Woo-ping, Jackie Chan, and Sammo Hung. Imitating the movements nine seconds). By comparison, the ending of Warriors Two is composed
of ‘animals, outlaws, heroes, assassins, immortals, and deities’, kung fu of a series of fights whose total time is approximately 25 minutes.
has been perceived as ‘ornamental’ and not ‘functional’ in real combat Even in terms of single fight scenes, previous wing chun films are also
[Farrer 2011: 221]. Southern kung fu techniques such as the five animal longer in comparison. The final confrontations of The Prodigal Son and
styles of Hung Gar are highly stylized in form. Contrary to western Wing Chun are five minutes five seconds and four minutes ten seconds
martial arts, Chinese kung fu does not ‘solely function for combative respectively.
training’ [2011: 221]. It is also part of the performative tradition in
rituals and festive celebrations. In Ip Man 3, the duel between Ip and Frank (Mike Tyson) has been
promoted as the spotlight of the film, overshadowing the last fight
Aaron D. Anderson argues that Jackie Chan’s kung fu performances scene with Cheung Tin-chi (Max Zhang). When Frank sets the time of
should not be considered ‘representations of actual physical violence, his fight with Ip as three minutes, it highlights the notion of efficiency.
but rather as danced spectacles’ [2009: 192]. Drawing inspirations The fight sequence arguably becomes a miniature of real combat. But it
from Charlie Chaplin, Chan himself describes his fighting philosophy is worth noting that at exactly three minutes, the fight is the length of a
as dance-like. ‘I want to show audiences fighting is an art,’ he stresses, standard round in boxing.
‘It’s not like, “I want to kill you”. It’s an art’ [Chan 1998]. While Chan’s
unique choreography style has aesthetic and artistic value due to This synchronization of cinematic time and real time is unusual in the
his creative interaction with the environment (i.e. another instance genre. Not only can the scene differentiate from the usual extensive
that transfigures wu into wen), it inevitably undermines its perceived fight scenes common in traditional kung fu cinema, but it can also
combativity. With Chan’s popularity in Euro-American markets, reduce the discrepancy between the cinematic and the ‘real’. Surely,
his complicated dance-like choreography and elaborate fight scenes
reinforce the stereotype that Chinese kung fu is more performative than
practical.
32 Although the variability and continuity of wing chun punches can be
interpreted as ineffective, it is used only sparsely and can be read as a strategy to enhance
the brutality (hen) of the technique (e.g. the dojo scene in Ip Man).

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three minutes is a long time in a real fight, which may usually last only films as he was between 2010 and 2015. Furthermore, with the rise of
seconds, particularly perhaps between two well-trained martial artists the series’ popularity in China, there may also be increasing difficulty in
[Barrowman 2014]. But in the context of kung fu cinema, three minutes demonstrating shizhan due to tighter censorship.
is short, especially when the fight is the featured event of the film.
Conversely, there is an increasing emphasis on trickery and mise-en-
In sum, zhun (precision) is a crucial dimension in shizhan aesthetics. scène manipulation in the series (e.g. the table fight scene in Ip Man 2
Even for the film’s marque event, the guiding principle is to end the and the shipyard fight scene in Ip Man 3), bearing closer resemblance
fight as soon as possible. Granted, the length of the fight scene is not to kung fu films of the zhenshi tradition. Although there are individual
the sole element demonstrating the notion of zhun. What makes the Ip fight scenes demonstrating the shizhan aesthetics (e.g. with Mike Tyson
Man series different from previous wing chun films is the brevity and and the Thai assassin in Ip Man 3), the majority of fight scenes reflect a
effectiveness of fight sequences through precise action choreography. higher degree of staginess and theatricality.

This paradigmatic shift essentially echoes the idea of Bruce Lee’s cun Particularly in Ip Man 3, the final fight scene with Cheung Tin-chi is
jin (寸勁; one-inch punch) – short but incisive, brief but powerful, typical of Yuen’s choreographical work – sophisticated use of weapons
hence redefining the formulation and meaning of the kung fu spectacle. (e.g. pole and swords), multiple shooting angles (e.g. birds-eye, 360
Known as changqiao fali (長橋發力; releasing power through an degrees revolving shot), and constant interaction with the environment
extended arm) in wing chun [Ip, Lu, and Pang 2009: 50], the technique (e.g. staircase, columns). In addition, the fight scene features a
is featured in the last fight of the whole series in Ip Man 3. It is a considerable number of close-ups (e.g. clashes of the swords, facial
powerful summary of the series’ synthesis of the zhenshi and shizhan expressions), which also undermine its shizhan value. This is because
tradition. while these close-ups enhance the expressivity of the action, they also
increase the scene’s theatricality.
Nevertheless, it should be noted that there are different degrees of
shizhan among the three films. Ip Man places more emphasis on the As the choreographer of Wong Kar-wai’s The Grandmaster, Yuen may
shizhan tradition, while the Ip Man 2 and Ip Man 3 elevate the zhenshi have incorporated Wong’s aesthetics in Ip Man 3. However, this merge
tradition. One major difference between the three films is the degree creates an uncanny outcome that fails to maintain the series’ uniqueness
of hen in the fight scene. The lethal techniques used in the dojo scene as a synthesis of the zhenshi and shizhan tradition. By the same token, it
in Ip Man is not repeated in later films, in which the emphasis is placed also fails to reproduce Wong’s art-house kung fu aesthetics.
on Ip’s grandmaster image, martial virtue, and concern for his family.
Also, with the introduction of Sammo Hung as a key character in Ip Further examination of the films’ differences would require a separate
Man 2 and Yuen Woo-ping as the choreographer in Ip Man 3, there is an discussion. But, in brief, the Ip Man series’ synthesis of the zhenshi and
increasing reliance on the zhenshi tradition in the sense that theatricality shizhan traditions might be said to be achieved on a macro level more
and trickery play a more prominent role in the action choreography. than a micro one.

In a personal interview with a member of the production crew, I Overall, the Ip Man series has incorporated action aesthetics
was told by one of the fight choreographers that different wing chun highlighting the notions of kuai, hen, and zhun, which are characteristic
consultant teams are used in the series.33 In Ip Man, the team consisted of Bruce Lee’s shizhan ideals as well as wing chun’s principles and
of wing chun practitioners who have mixed martial arts (MMA) philosophy. First, the use of real speed (rather than undercranking) in
knowledge and are adept in merging shizhan techniques into wing martial arts performance is crucial in preserving the texture of actual
chun. In Ip Man 2 and Ip Man 3 more traditional teams were used. While combat. Importantly, this emphasis on speed is inherently associated
Sammo Hung is the named choreographer in Ip Man, his primary with wing chun’s center-line principle and variability, thus reasserting
task was to communicate with the consultants and coordinate the the often-ignored link between martial arts style and the corresponding
cinematography according to their suggestions. action aesthetics (i.e. that the latter should be an embodiment of the
former). Second, the brutality of the series’ fight scenes (especially
With the shift to more traditional consultation teams, there has been a in Ip Man) addresses the suppression of wu (the martial) within kung
decrease of combativity in later films. I was also informed that another fu cinema. Contrary to Wong Fei-hung, Ip Man demonstrates the
major reason for the difference in choreography styles was that they combativity and lethality of wing chun while maintaining his status as
had more time to design the action in Ip Man, as Donnie Yen was still a a traditional kung fu master. Third, the precision and efficiency of fight
lesser star in 2008 and not as pressed with the production of different choreography in the series shifts the genre’s focus from the elaboration
of kung fu forms through extended fight scenes to their combative
application in the blink of an eye.
33 Interview with fight choreographer, December 2, 2016.

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Conclusion
Synthesizing Zhenshi and Shizhan / wen-wu
in Kung Fu Cinema
Despite kung fu cinema’s attempt to merge wen-wu and create ‘the
masculine ideal’, there has been a strong suppression of the martial
dimension in the action aesthetics and an emphasis on theatricality and
expressivity due to the elevation of wen (the literary and the artistic)
and the denigration of wu (the martial) in Chinese culture. This is not
to suggest that martial prowess should efface the virtuous or theatrical
dimensions of the genre. Rather, the intention of this article is to expose
the incongruity and complexity of wu as a key concept in Chinese
masculinity as well as in kung fu cinema.

By synthesizing the zhenshi (authenticity) tradition of the Wong


Fei-hung series with the shizhan (combativity) tradition of Bruce Lee,
which embodies the notions of kuai (speed), hen (brutality), and zhun
(precision), the Ip Man series presents new possibilities of wu and
offers a more comprehensive understanding of Chinese kung fu. This
redefinition of wen-wu not only reinvents kung fu cinema, but it also
renegotiates the status and meaning of traditional kung fu practice –
where kung fu should no longer be chopsocky, fragile, and ornamental,
but solemn, practical, and efficient.

Last but not least, the series problematizes the idea of Bruce Lee’s
internationalization of the ‘traditional art’ and reinstitutes the specificity
of Southern Chinese martial arts in kung fu cinema. Known as the
master who inspired Bruce Lee, Ip Man is the perfect figure to rectify
and reorient the development of kung fu cinema by synthesizing
the two predominant modes of cinematic martial arts and the two
paradigms of Chinese masculinities. After four decades of wandering
following the death of Lee, kung fu cinema no longer needs to live
under his shadow. Ip Man is the first, and probably the last, master that
can embody Lee while upholding the value of traditional Chinese kung
fu. The two seemingly irreconcilable masters, along with authenticity
and combativity, wen and wu, the traditional and the modern, the
inspirer and the inspired, have become one.

Acknowledgement
I am grateful to Luke White, Leon Hunt, and Kyle Barrowman for their
invaluable comments on earlier versions of the article. I also thank the journal
editors, Paul Bowman and Benjamin N. Judkins, for their generous advice.

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88 Winter 2016
CONTRIBUTOR Dr Alexander Hay is Lecturer of Digital Journalism at Southampton
Solent University, and comes from an eclectic humanities background,
covering everything from sea monsters to music journalism and reader
response theory. His martial arts experience is similarly varied, and
he is presently studying boxing, while retaining an on-going interest
in Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA). His research interests
include the history of journalism and online media and how they
intersect with a wide range of other topics and disciplines.

NEWS OF THE DUELS


ReSTORATION DUELLING CULTURE AND THE EARLY MODERN PRESS

ALEXANDER HAY

DOI ABSTRACT
10.18573/j. 2017.10097 The period between 1660 and 1670 was an eventful one for both
Britain and its martial arts. 1660 saw the Restoration, where
the Stuart dynasty was returned to power under Charles II and
the post-Civil War Commonwealth swept away. For all the
optimism at Charles’ coronation, however, his kingdom was ill
KEYWORDs at ease. Such uneasy times were also significant for the press.
It is what the press (and other sources from this period) reveal
Restoration, newsbooks, about duelling practice at the time, martial arts in general, and
reporting, duels, violence, the changing nature of violence that is the focus of this article.
firearms As the insurrections, riots and various acts of violence taking
place both in Britain and abroad demonstrate, the 1660s were
certainly a violent time. But, as the newspaper coverage also
CITATION demonstrates, the nature of violence itself was changing. This
continued a trend, dating back to the Civil War, where close
Hay, Alexander. 2017. ‘News quarter fighting skills had begun to give way to the relative
of the Duels: Restoration ease and convenience of firearms. British violence found itself,
Duelling Culture and the Early ironically, in as much a state of flux as the rest of the country.
Modern Press’, Martial Arts
Studies 3, 90-102.
MARTIAL News of the Duels
ARTS STUDIES Alexander Hay

Introduction An Uneasy City


The period between 1660 and 1670 was an eventful one for both To understand how the Restoration press covered violence at the time,
Britain and its martial arts. 1660 saw the Restoration, where the Stuart however, it must be placed into context. The first such context was
dynasty was returned to power under Charles II and the post-Civil London – the city where most news was produced both before and after
War Commonwealth swept away. For all the optimism at Charles’ the 1662 licensing act was passed into law [Griffiths 2006: 14]. This was
coronation, however, his kingdom was ill at ease. Dissent, and the a city ill at ease with itself. On the one hand, it was certainly one of the
further threat of yet more insurrection, was a reality both king and biggest cities in Europe and the largest in Britain. While nationwide
country had to face. In the next 10 years, war, plague, the Great population growth stagnated, London’s population increased. By 1666,
Fire of London and ongoing conflicts over politics and religion all it had risen to 460,000 [Creighton 2013: 660], while, between the 1660-
demonstrated the vulnerability of a society where the horrors of the 1670 period, even taking into account the Plague and Great Fire, overall
English Civil War were still within living memory. Haunted by the it underwent a net increase of 80,000 [Harris 1987: 11].2 It was a centre
1649 Regicide of Charles I and the legacy of the Civil War and the for the printing industry, to the extent that its practise largely informed
Commonwealth, Charles II’s new kingdom faced anxieties that lingered what printing activity there was in the provinces [Harris 1996: 9].
long after his apparently triumphant return [Jenkinson 2010: 22-23]. Meanwhile the vogue for coffee houses had first taken root in London
One clear shift had certainly taken place: While the Royalists brought before spreading across the rest of the country. These provided not only
back their aristocracy, this old order now competed with a rising middle a forum for discussion but also a place where newspaper and newsletter
class and powerful men whose influence came from wealth rather than content could be freely disseminated over drinks and discussion
lineage. The birth of a society more like our own than what had come [Somerville 1996: 58].
before had begun [Seidel 1972: 433].
The city itself, despite the Plague and the Great Fire, was a fertile
Such uneasy times were also significant for the press, which, by the ground for early news media and a growing intelligentsia, of sorts.
middle of the 1660s, had become to all intents and purposes a branch of While male literacy nationwide was around 30% and female literacy
the state. The news could certainly still inform and remained popular, around 10%, in London it was over 70% for men and up to 20%
but it served only to keep the public as informed as the government saw for women [Raymond 1996: 241]. London also had excellent news
fit. This contradictory approach, as we shall see, led to an often strange distribution networks; newspapers and newsbooks could easily be
way of reporting the news – to the extent that foreign newspapers bought off the street [Raymond 1996: 238], often with women serving
often had more British coverage than the British papers themselves as the well-remunerated sellers [O’Malley 1986: 31]. A nascent form
[Pettegree 2014: 239]. Yet they also had surprising levels of success and of the Royal Mail meant that distribution of news from London to the
even engagement with readers. In terms of what they both reveal and provinces was ever more easy and accessible, if not entirely secure, as
conceal, these newspapers demonstrate a great deal about British society government interception and distribution of mail at this time went
during the Restoration, its preconceptions and its place in the world.1 hand in hand [Brayshay 2016: 64-65].

It is what they (and other sources from this period) reveal about From a martial arts perspective, London also had much to offer. In
duelling practice at the time, martial arts in general, and the changing between a general passion for violent blood sports, public floggings and
nature of violence, that is the focus of this article. As the insurrections, hangings [Picard 2004: 212], Londoners could also avail themselves of
riots and various acts of violence taking place both in Britain and fencing matches (as opposed to duels), boxing and wrestling [Picard
abroad demonstrate, the 1660s were certainly a violent time. But, as the 2004: 210]. The ‘Trained Bandes’ served as a loyal if not always effective
newspaper coverage also demonstrates, the nature of violence itself was local militia, while demobbed soldiers and sailors were both a social
changing. This continued a trend, dating back to the Civil War, where problem, given their propensity to riot [Bucholz and Ward 2012: 278],
close quarter fighting skills had begun to give way to the relative ease and a demonstration that fighting prowess throughout London was not
and convenience of firearms. British violence found itself, ironically, in hard to find [Seaward 1991: 31].
as much a state of flux as the rest of the country.
Yet London was haunted as well as titillated by such violence, fitting
for a capital city still haunted by the English Civil Wars. Old lingering

1 The research required for this article was made possible by the Burney
Newspaper Collection and Early English Books Online. 2 It would reach 575,000 by 1700 [Schwarz 2003: 126].

90 Winter 2016
MARTIAL News of the Duels
ARTS STUDIES Alexander Hay

roundhead sympathies remained, as did antipathy towards the restored himself denounced them as ‘a few weak and feeble men’ whose tendency
aristocracy [Seidel 1972: 442]. A deep fear of the mob and its vulgar, to go home before dawn gave criminals ample time to wreak havoc in
revolutionary tendencies was also at the back of many well-to-do their absence [Beattie 2001: 174]. In their defence, constables often had
Londoners’ minds. The masses were held in both fear and contempt to live amongst the people they sought to police and were often victims,
[Seidel 1972: 430-431]. Civil unrest in the wake of the plague outbreak sometimes fatally so, of angry crowds [Shoemaker 1991: 241].
of 1665, the devastation of the Great Fire of London and the disastrous
scuttling of the fleet at Medway in 1667 at the hands of the Dutch As a result, London was also a place where crime was a common
all showed a city in a fragile state and at odds with itself [De Krey occurrence. Crime in the city naturally spread out into neighbouring
2005: 95]. Fear of French or Catholic plots as well as out-and-out areas, such as Surrey [Beattie 1974: 51], where highwaymen and
race riots were common events during this time. The 1661 armed robbers prospered [Picard 2004: 233]. What kept crime under control,
uprising by Venner and his fellow ‘Fifth-Monarchist’ compatriots also ironically, was a divided criminal underworld and fierce competition for
demonstrated that insurrection, of the kind many still remembered only the proceeds of crime [McMullan 1981-1982: 320]. Meanwhile, at least
too well during the 1640s, was still a possibility [Greeves 1986: 50-57]. until the Great Fire swept much of the old city away, its many rat runs,
Yet any threat it may have posed was minor compared to the harshness ‘pennyrent’ flophouses and alleys gave rise to a series of shanty towns
of the government’s response or the weight of coverage the uprising and no-go areas where crime both prospered and radiated outwards
received in the press, as will be discussed later. [McMullan 1981-1982: 314]. Whether this translated into an epidemic
of violent crime is, in a sense, irrelevant as it was the perception that it
Then there were the ever-present crowds of Londoners, who would was endemic which loomed large in the public consciousness, and at all
gladly deal out rough justice towards suspected criminals as well as levels of society [Beattie 2001: 46].
free others from prison or the stocks if they were deemed innocent or
unjustly treated [Harris 1990: 24]. Indeed, a certain level of rowdiness Certainly, tolerance or even enjoyment of violence was considered
was even celebrated, especially amongst young men, as it was seen perfectly acceptable. The gruesome public execution of regicide Hugh
to show a kind of manly virtue. This was openly tolerated during Peters in 1660 was a case in point, as was the gleeful press coverage
the yearly festivals of misrule, which had overtly violent and even thereof [Parliamentary Intelligencer, 15 October 1660-22 October
misogynistic rituals [Turner 2002: 61]. Crowds could also often be 1660]. Death itself was dealt with in such a matter-of-fact way as to
summoned by the beating of a drum or similar instrument, hinting at an verge on the comical. For example, a 1663 advert in the Mercurius
almost paramilitary flavour to their actions [Harris 1990: 25]. Publicus inquires about the identity of a skeletonised corpse, possibly
murdered, and ‘lately found buried in a Back-Yard’ in Chelmsford, but
London’s volatile, often poor and frustrated population of apprentices with a certain lack of urgency [Mercurius Publicus, 2 April 1663-9 April
were another problem. Ranging from the sons of paupers to the surplus 1663].
scions of the nobility, they were, needless to say, an ongoing source of
unrest [Seidel 1972: 442]. A notorious example came in the form of Plague, unrest and the Great Fire demonstrated London’s capacity for
the 1668 Messenger Riots, when a combined force of apprentices and chaos, but day-to-day life in the city was seldom easy either. Living
sailors destroyed brothels, attacked prisons holding their compatriots standards had stagnated in London, despite its booming economic and
and were finally quelled only through military intervention and population growth during this period [Boulton 2000: 475]. Inflation
subsequent trials for high treason [Harris 1990: 82]. Well organised and a dependence on goods being imported into the city from the rest of
along military lines, down to ‘regiments’ being lead by ‘captains’, these the country left many Londoners poorer and at the mercy of rising rents
rioters demonstrated that London was a tinderbox where the traumas and declining fortunes, especially in the wake of the Great Fire [De
of the Civil Wars remained underneath the surface alongside old Krey 2005: 94]. That disaster, alongside plague, war and insurrection,
militarised habits passed on from father or grandfather to rowdy and took their toll. London itself remained riven with unease and mistrust,
pugnacious son or grandson. and by 1670 these divisions had still not resolved themselves. For many
Londoners, newspapers and newsbooks, read in private or out aloud in
The ability of the city to police itself was often called into question too. coffee shops, were a welcome distraction from a turbulent decade.
‘Constables’ were members of the public pressed into service, often
without pay, and open to varying levels of corruption or intimidation
[Beattie 2001: 172], their effectiveness uneven and varying from ward
to ward [Beattie 2001: 183]. The issue reached such a point that Charles

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The Press work ever was [Pettegree 2014: 239]. Indeed, as well as providing a
sanitised and unthreatening product to sate the country’s insatiable
What sort of press emerged from this milieu? As it happens, the end appetite for news [Pettegree 2014: 239], it employed several spies on its
result was a mix of official paranoia and anxiety, and yet a mixture staff and regularly smeared opponents with propaganda [Ward 2005:
of contrasts, much like London itself. News at this time came in four 239].
forms – newsbooks, newspapers, newsletters and informal gazettes
[Sommerville 1996: 60; Atherton 1999: 40]. Newsbooks, which narrated Yet despite its blandness and obvious side-stepping of domestic
the news in a fashion more akin to a prose-based narrative, were in any controversy, the Gazette was nonetheless immensely popular [Atherton
case in decline. What I term ‘informal gazettes’ were not newspapers 1999: 125], its editorial staff only too aware that an unpopular paper
in the strictest sense, but still a kind of periodical journalism in the would not have sold so many copies. Within the very tight confines
way that they reported recent events, such as the Bills of Mortality in which it operated, therefore, the Gazette had nonetheless very
[Sommerville 1996: 66]. Meanwhile, Philosophical Transactions, a high standards of accuracy, information and fact-checking [Pettegree
regular summary of discussions between members of the recently 2014: 239]. It was, when allowed to be, a very informative if very brief
formed (in 1662) Royal Society of London for the Promotion of Natural newspaper. Printed on both sides of a single broadsheet, in the Dutch
Knowledge, helped disseminate scientific debate and knowledge and fashion [Pettegree 2014: 238] the Gazette also broke away from the
was the predecessor of the modern academic journal [Sommerville conventions of the newsbook in a direction far more recognisable by
1996: 80]. newspaper readers today.

However, the primary focus of this article will be newspapers, as these It also had, perhaps despite the best efforts of its editors, a surprisingly
were the most common mass-marketed (by 17th century standards) close relationship with its readers. While it vowed not to take
news media of the period. From 1666 onwards, the only legal advertisements at its launch [Rosenfeld 1936: 124], the newspaper did
newspaper in the country was The London Gazette, published by the nonetheless feature ‘Loyal Addresses’ from readers – in effect, an early
government. Yet press control had already been asserted in 1662 by form of the letters page – where personal views could be expressed,
the Licensing Act, which reduced the number of news outlets to two albeit with an inevitable degree of editorial oversight and, of course, a
newsbooks – The Intelligencer and The Newes – published by Roger favourable view of the King [Sutherland 1986: 172]. As Sommerville
L’Estrange, a former pamphleteer turned government propagandist, has noted [1986: 73], there are interesting parallels between the London
official censor and press baron. L’Estrange echoed the alarm felt by his Gazette and ‘official’ Soviet news organs such as Pravda and Izvestia – all
paymasters towards the masses, though he saw news media as both were closely controlled, censorious and partial publications, yet readers
a threat to the social order but also as an ideal way to establish the still communicated with them through letters and feedback, using them
government’s good name [Ward 2005: 126]. as a means of getting the attention of the authorities as well as a source
of news [Sutherland 1986: 74].
Thus, L’Estrange established the convention for the times, where
foreign news took precedence over domestic events – so as not to Perhaps no surer example of this can be seen than how the London
encourage any local restiveness – and to defend to the hilt a Royalist Gazette responded to the Great Fire of 1666. As Wall has noted, its
worldview with perhaps more vigour than was required [Clark 1994: response to the disaster, while at first delivered with its usual reserve,
24-25]. L’Estrange was not, however, a particularly good journalist; quickly shifted to actively reporting reconstruction of the city and
he failed to cover the plague outbreaks in London in much detail featuring advertisements – for the first time – that supported it [Wall
[Sutherland 1986: 45] and was generally inept [Sommerville 1996: 1998: 63-64]. In so doing, the paper began to reflect more than ever the
63] in terms of copy-editing and reporting [Pettegree 2014, 238]. His views and experiences of its readers [Wall 1998: 66] and to provide a
newsbooks were replaced by The Oxford Gazette, latterly the London public voice hitherto considered unthinkable [Wall 1998: 10]. Similarly,
Gazette,3 now run directly from the offices of the Secretaries of State the numerous stories, and later adverts [O’Malley 1986: 40], in the
under Joseph Williamson, from 1666 onwards. Gazette covering providential events and prodigies not only reflected
the religious beliefs of its readers but also their need for confirmation
The end result, while more competent and better written, was also as of this fact [O’Malley 1986: 36, 42]. How, then, did this contradictory,
strictly controlled and faintly pessimistic of its readers as L’Estrange’s nuanced and often surprising newspaper, and others, cover duels?
Fittingly, the answer is both contrary and yet curiously revealing.

3 Renamed after its move from Oxford to the capital after the decline of the
Great Plague.

92 Winter 2016
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Duelling in the News In other words, the State considered duelling to be as much of a threat
to the stability of the regime as the writings of dissidents, all symptoms
Certainly, duelling did take place in London during the period. At this of a moral degeneracy it was determined to stamp out.
point, at least, the duel remained an urban phenomenon [Shoemaker
2002: 537]. They could nonetheless still be surprisingly violent, despite This did not stop duelling happening. Indeed, even the London Gazette
the start of a slow decline in duels overall. A 1668 duel, between the could not resist reporting on the travails of the Duke of Buckingham
then Duke of Buckingham and Lord Shrewsbury also featured two and the aftermath of Lord Morley-and-Monteagle’s killing of Henry
other men per duellist, with the resulting melee resulting in injuries for Hastings [Sommerville 1996: 68]. Similarly, popular culture still
all and two deaths [Shoemaker 2002: 537]. Duelling was also very much romanticised duelling, as one 1670 song’s lyrics demonstrate:
still a pastime of the wealthy, gentry and nobles [Shoemaker 2002:
544], and was often cause for pleas to the King for ‘special pardon’, as And I will place you on a Stage,
even the elite of Restoration London could be tried and found guilty To fight a Duel you must ingage,
of manslaughter and murder [Shoemaker 2002: 288]. Needless to say, And from all Wounds you shall be clear,
the government took a very dim view of its would-be political leaders You’ll gin the Prize you need not fear.
and military officers killing each other. While issuing insults in and [Anon 1670]
of themselves were not crimes, if they were intended to commence a
duel, this became an arrestable offence [Shoemaker 1991: 29]. Examples Meanwhile, as Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, declared
could be and were made, as was the case with Sir Thomas Coventry, in a 1664 letter, ‘Gallant Valiant Gentlemen in the day of Battel or
who found himself imprisoned in the Tower of London [Picard 2004: Duel’ were equally valid [Cavendish 1664: 143]. Yet there was also
237]. considerable opposition to the practice, and not just from the King. In
1660, the Royalist churchman Richard Allestree argued in his book The
Yet most significantly, the then still independent press itself reported Gentleman’s Calling:
the official government line. In 1660, the Mercurius Publicus published
the following Royal Proclamation: And upon this hostility and opposition against Heaven it is,
that all the private Quarrels and Combats on Earth are (as on
His Majesty … having formerly in a Declaration published their foundation) superstructured; so that to initiate a Duelist,
at Brussels November 23 1658, manifested his dislike of his first Challenge must be directed against God himself.
impious and unlawful Duels, strictly command all his subjects [Allestree 1660: 141]
whatever, that they do not by themselves or any others, either
by Message, Word, Writing, or other ways or means, challenge, Allestree then goes on to make his point even more explicit:
or cause to be challenged, any person or persons to in Duel, nor
to carry, accept, or conceal any challenge, nor actually to fight For to a Christian, ’tis certain the irreligion of Fighting a Duel
or be a second to any therein. would be the most infamous thing, and even to a sober Heathen
[Mercurius Publicus, 9 August 1660–16 August 1660] the folly of it would be so too ... Yet this so pitiful despicable
thing is it, which so terrifies and amazes them; And how shall
The proclamation went on to add that any defiance of this would we define Cowardise, if this be not it?
see the duellist barred from public office and the Court in general, in [Allestree 1660: 145]
addition to legal prosecution in the usual sense. How serious was the
Crown in this regard? Another report on the proclamation, this time in Allestree’s writing reflects his times, where the fear of violence was
the Parliamentary Intelligencer, puts the interdict into context: all too evident. Secondly, the sheer vehemence of Allestree’s rhetoric
and his couching it in theology suggests he was reflecting a widespread
On Monday August 13, several Proclaimations were given view, at least amongst his fellow churchmen. Allestree was certainly
by his Majesty Against fighting of Duels: For calling in and not alone in his criticism either. Religious and establishment criticism
suppressing Books of John Milton and John Goodwin, and for continued into the next century [Shoemaker 2002: 539]. Yet Allestre
publishing a former Proclamation of the 30th of May, entitled also demonstrates how the controversy had split the establishment.
A Proclaimation against Vicious, Debauch’d, an Allestree, loyal to the King during the Commonwealth and later
[Parliamentary Intelligencer, 13 August 1660-20 August 1660] Provost of Eton College, was certainly no fringe figure. Yet neither was

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Cavendish, nor many of the duellists themselves. This was just another The death of the ‘ablest Ingineers’ is portrayed as a tragedy; the morality
of many conflicts and dilemmas faced by Restoration Britain at the time. of the duel itself is avoided. Once again, the foreignness of the duel
allows for an altogether more tolerant approach.
As for how the London Gazette reported duels: for the most part, it
struck a precarious balance between an official disapproval of duelling It is worth noting that something is missing here, however. That is,
and readers’ vicarious fascination with it. This is evident, as mentioned, for the most part, the details of the duels are not discussed, and we
in coverage of those rare domestic duels that made it into the paper. Yet are not given much information about how they were fought. This
the Gazette found an altogether more pragmatic and uncontroversial is unlikely to be down to censoriousness or squeamishness on the
way of sating this appetite that played to its strengths in intelligence part of the Gazette. It was more than willing to discuss, for example,
gathering; duels in the Gazette, as a rule, always took place abroad: details of painful punishments, such as those visited upon four young
Scottish criminals in 1665, publicly flogged, branded and deported for
The Prince della Recca Filomarino having been lately killed in assaulting a clergyman [Intelligencer Published for the Satisfaction and
a Duel, the Dukes of Mataloni; Pipoli and St. Geogio, who were Information of the People, 25 December 1665; Issue 8].
engaged therein having been committed to the Fort of Gaeta
are since removed to Castel Nuova where they are using their Instead, a more likely explanation is that readers did not as a rule need
endeavours an employing their Ingerget for their Liberties. to be reminded what a duel was. It was an established if not acceptable
[London Gazette, 21 October 1667-24 October 1667, Issue 202] facet of life, particularly in London, and readers would have needed
no introduction to fencing or swords. Yet the reality of the duel could
This has everything a good duel story needs – death, drama, celebrity/ only be reported in the abstract. Readers knew what a duel involved,
nobility and a hypocritical though no doubt well-received moral. Best but the implied consensus seems to have been that the duels happening
of all, from the Gazette’s perspective, its foreignness not only means it on British soil were not to be discussed, at least in official publications.
can report the story in the first place but also that further moralising Compare and contrast with Samuel Pepys’ diary entry in January 1668,
can take place. A reader perusing the Gazette in their local coffee shop where the injuries dealt by the duel he describes, between the Duke
could get their duelling fix whilst at the same time feeling superior to of Buckingham, a rival and their seconds are discussed with blunt
decadent foreigners. Another example of this demonstrates similar openness [Peltonen 2003: 204]. As Pepys concludes, with some sarcasm:
themes and undertones:
This will make the world think that the King hath good
Naples, Novemb. 15. The Vice Roy has sent the Officer de la counsellors about him, when the Duke of Buckingham, the
Vicaire into the Provinces of Leve and Barr, to guard the Duke greatest man about him, is a fellow of no more sobriety than to
of Martina, the Count de Connerfano, the Prince de Carfi, the fight about a mistress.
Duke de Noja, and other Noble-Men, who were arrested upon [Pepys 1668]
the death of the Duke delle Noci, who as we hear, some time
since was killed in a Duel by the said Duke de Martina. No such detail, or comment, could ever be countenanced by the
[Oxford Gazette, 21 December 1665-25 December 1665, Issue 12] Gazette. Pepys is unfair when he describes the newspaper and its editor
as having ‘pleased me to have it demonstrated, that a purser without
This approach also meant that the deaths of Britons abroad through professed cheating is a professed loser, twice as much as he gets’. By
duelling could be reported, any bad example set being remedied by the definition, the Gazette was writing for a mass audience and with strict
fact that this took place outside the country: limits on how it could go about this, unlike Pepys and his private diary.
Nonetheless, what is not said about duels is as revealing as what is. In
Three of our Men of War are come home to be repaired, and addition, reporting foreign duels with such regularity suggests a clear
will suddenly be refitted and returned to the Armata; From audience for such content.
Candia we are informed of the death of two of our ablest
Ingineers, of whom one was killed in a Deull, the other by a In that sense, therefore, newspaper coverage of duelling in this era is
Musquet shot, as he was observing the fortifications of Candia. both revealing and yet ambiguous. Revealing, in that it demonstrates a
[London Gazette, 6 December 1666-10 December 1666, Issue 111] clear interest in duels, at least amongst readers of the Gazette, and the
elaborate ways in which the newspaper met those needs whilst staying
within the boundaries of propriety. Yet, it is ambiguous in that the

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duels themselves are left undeveloped. The reader is invited to provide English Civil War saw the ratio of musket first match and then exceed
the rest of the details with their Restoration-era imaginations and pikes [Atkin 2004: 15-16; Latzko 1993: 470-484]. By 1660, firearms
points of reference that are not so self-evident to a reader in the early were increasingly dominant weapons.
21st Century. From the perspective of martial arts history, these sources
are useful in that they document incidences of duelling and how society This is not to say that pikes or swords vanished into the aether there
responded to them, in conjunction with other primary evidence, such and then. In 1659, a Lieutenant Colonel of the London militia, William
as letters, official documents and testimonies. Yet they are in and of Kiffin, co-authored a letter complaining at the treatment meted
themselves simple outlines where a more detailed picture is needed. out to both him and other officers after they were accused of being
Anabaptists by a pamphlet. After the allegations were made, the houses
of the accused officers were searched and, as Kiffin observes, alongside
Twilight of the Swords drums, firearms and swords, fifteen pikes are seized [Kiffin 1659].

There is, however, one exception to this pattern. Published in 1662, What the content of Kiffin and his compatriots’ rather eclectic arsenals
before the Gazette’s more censorious approach, a news story in the demonstrate, however, was that the progression from ‘pike and shotte’
Mercurius Publicus covered a particularly fierce duel in Denmark: to mainly ‘shotte’ was uneven; warfare was in flux, and pikes still
lingered on in the British armoury until 1702 [Falkner 2014: 115-116],
Colonel Holk Commander of Cronenburg a Dane, and Colonel when the Duke of Marlborough did away with them, his battlefield
Capel of the Province of Galderland came hither last week; tactics and the socket bayonet having finally rendered them obsolete
they fell out with one another and came to blows but were [Black 1994: 111-113; Manning 2007: 691]. Even by 1670, according
hindered to go any further; but the case of their coming hither to The Cry of Innocent Blood…, a polemic written by Robert Allen,
was to fight a Duel. Yesterday they went out with their seconds appalling cruelty was dished out to Quakers by ‘red coats’ both with
two or three miles off from hence, a quarter of a mile beyond muskets and pikes, and on horseback, though a great deal of the
the Town of Daerdorp, belonging to the Prince of Saxon violence involves either the butts of pistols and muskets, or the threat of
Lowenburg, having shaketh hands with one another, and shootings [Allen 1670].
some words passing between them, they pulled off their Coats
and Doublets taking a Pistol in one hand and the Sword in the This shift would nonetheless gather pace during the 1660-1670 period,
other, they went on foot asunder about forty paces, and then as news coverage shows. Mostly, it was in the form of reported deaths
approaching to one another six paces they gave fire upon one by musketfire, such as the death of Admiral Van Hurst during a sea
another; Colonel Capel received a shot under the arme in the battle in 1666 [Current Intelligence, 18 June 1666-21 June 1666], or
side... The Commander... was dangerously wounded. The Corps the death of a boatswain shot ‘through the neck, of which hurt he
of the Colonel was brother hither this morning, above two immediately died’ in another naval altercation [London Gazette, 18 July
hundred persons went thither from hence to see the Duel. 1670-21 July 1670, Issue 488], or the injuring through shot visited upon
[Mercurius Publicus, 12 June 1662-19 June 1662, issue 24] the captain and ‘6 or 7’ of the crew of the Drake in 1665 [Intelligencer
Published for the Satisfaction and Information of the People, 14 August
What is significant is what they use to fight the duel with. In one hand, 1665, Issue 63].
they wield a sword, as might be expected, but in the other, they carry a
pistol, and it is the latter which is used to conduct the duel, both men The situation ashore was no safer. A Visier was reported shot in
being out of range to fight at close quarters, and the duel itself being the head during a siege in 1668, ‘but how dangerous we yet know
decided with both men gravely wounded, perhaps fatally. not’ [London Gazette, 10 September 1668-14 September 1668, Issue
295]. Meanwhile a 1660 clash between the ‘Regimen of Artois’ and
What this news story does is demonstrate a turning point in the history ‘a battalion landed from the Galleys of Maltha’ put Ottoman forces
of English and European martial arts. Firearms were increasingly to flight with ‘such a showre of bullets, that many fell upon the place’
overshadowing sword arts and this is the point where this becomes [Parliamentary Intelligencer, 10 December 1660-17 December 17 1660,
particularly evident. That is not to say that firearms were a new Issue 51].
invention or unknown on the battlefield. Arguably, their first known
deployment on British soil, albeit in a crude form, was at the 1461 Battle Reports of injuries and deaths by gunfire are remarkably common in
of Towton [BBC News Online 2010; Sutherland 2011: 13], while the newspapers at this time – though usually from abroad. Interestingly,

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however, volleys of shot had also become an accepted way of saluting Comprising the Sum of Forraign Intelligence, 23 August 1660-30
a dignitary in Britain, as the newspapers would often report, such as August 1660, Issue 35], while in 1666, a merchant’s apprentice reported
that provided by the Edinburgh militia in 1666 for visiting and local Carlisle had been attacked by up to 250 horsemen [London Gazette,
dignitaries, ‘expressing an Infinite Zeal and Chearfulness to serve his November 22, 1666 – November 26, 1666; Issue 107]. A particularly
Majesty and their Country on any publick occasion’ [London Gazette, dramatic case, meanwhile, unfolded in 1662:
13 September 1666-17 September 1666, Issue 87].
The Prosecutors preferred two Bills of Indictment against
The rest of this news story is interesting in that it demonstrates how the them, one for the Robbery, another for the murder, and were
use of guns was fast becoming standard practice; no mention of pikes or very eager in the Prosecution... That these five Gentlemen
swords is given. Other examples of musket salutes demonstrate a similar going that day to Waltham to accompany one Mr Vaughn in
pattern, such as that which received one Colonel Rossiter when he his journey towards the North, in their return met with one
inspected his Lincolnshire troops in 1660, ‘who received him with many [unintelligible] and one [unintelligible] [who] told them they
expressions of satisfaction and several volleys of Shot’ [Parliamentary were rob’d by four persons who had taken away ten pounds
Intelligencer, 2 April 1660-9 April 1660, Issue 15, 240]. from them, and were before on the road, and desired those five
Gentlemen to persue them, and they thereupon made hast,
When reports of battles are made, the only other force mentioned, time and in their pursuit towards London met one Goddard, who
and again, are cavalry, which, as the English Civil War demonstrated, likewise told them that those four thieves had robbed him and
was the best way to counter musketeers at close quarters, though it were before upon the road... and riding still on in the pursuit of
often required combined arms to ensure this: ‘About this time Monsieur the Theeves with their swords drawn.
de Bauveze advanc’d with a Squadron of Horse beyond a Wood, to [Kingdomes Intelligencer, 7 April 1662-14 April 1662, Issue 15]
make a discovery of the Post, receiving many Shot, and having divers
of his Cavaliers wounded in the Attempt’ [Intelligencer, 22 August Time and again, we see the same pattern – weight of numbers, firearms
1664, Issue 67]. Newspaper coverage of Venner’s Uprising confirms this or horses, or a combination thereof. Such an approach to violence,
trend: while echoing the influence of military tactics of the time, also hinted at
a certain de-skilling of the martial arts at this point. If you could ride a
The Colonel (John Corbet) took onely twenty horse, and horse – as many could – aim a pistol and have enough of your friends at
coming to Woodstreet found the Rebels in a very narrow place, your side, the skill requirements would, of course, now be much lower.
where horse without much difficulty could not approach to If duels and fencing masters ensured the art of swordfighting continued,
do service. Howsoever with nine of his twenty he gallantly it was increasingly overshadowed by the gun. Why learn to use a sword
charged the Rebels (for the truth is, those that charged were no when it takes a much shorter time to load and fire a pistol?
more) and brose those Rebellious Blunderbussers, so as the foot
had little to do but to pursue the Rebels now they were broken. Newspaper coverage of Venner’s Rising in 1661 confirms this trend:
[Kingdomes Intelligencer, London, England, 7 January 1661-14
January 1661, Issue 2] After this, the Rebels were pursued to the end of Moor-lane,
where seven of them unable to fly farther, betook themselves
Cavalry tactics also had an effect on criminal activity in Britain and to an House, where though they were summoned they stood
elsewhere. Highwaymen were a growing problem [Picard 2004: 233], out, till Lieutenant Lambert [...] got some Musketeers of the
but contrary to the modern public image, these robbers often hunted Trained-Bands into the next room to the Rebels, who refusing
in packs, sometimes of very great size. In 1669, the London Gazette to yield, the Trained-Bands fired, and the Rebels did the like,
reported a series of robberies between Naples and Rome, carried out by till four of them were kill’d, and the fiff lay for dead, and yet
‘120 banditi’ on horseback [London Gazette, 29 April 1669-3 May 1669, the other two refused to submit, until the Lieutenant untiled
Issue 361], but the press also reported similar cases in Britain, such [?] the room and got in amongst them, and then they cried
as the nine ‘well hosted and armed’ highwaymen committed for trial Quarter for Jesus sake; but while he was dis-arming them, the
in Ilchester after ‘confessing a Designe’ to rob the house of a wealthy fifth that lay for dead snapt a Pistol (loaden with a Slug) at the
woman [London Gazette, 28 February 1667-4 March 1667, Issue 135]. Lieutenant, who thereupon run him through, and brought
In 1660, Sir William Grove was robbed in his Berkshire home by forth the other two prisoners.
seven men on horseback, all armed with pistols [Mercurius Publicus [Kingdomes Intelligencer, 7 January 1661-14 January 1661,
Issue 2, 24]

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This is the only specific reference in the story to any sword fighting. Instead, Cavendish argued not only for the cultural supremacy of the
Indeed, the story continually details the use of firearms on both sides, sword, and indeed the Swordsman, but also that it still retained its
such as exchanges of fire and deaths and injuries caused by gunshot relevance and effectiveness as a weapon of war, primarily in close
wounds. Lieutenant Lambert only got to use his sword when his combat against unarmed infantry.
opponents were unable to fire and on the brink of defeat. Guns, not
swords, had brought an end to Venner’s Rising. As for Foot Commanders, they must Chiefly, if not only,
Practise the Use of the Sword, for it is the Sword that makes
Firearms were also increasingly used by criminals on foot. In 1664, the greatest Execution; for though neither Horse nor Sword
one of L’Estrange’s news books reported the murder of a Portuguese is either Defensive or Offensive against Canon Bullets, they
merchant at the pistol point of his manservant [Newes Published for are both Usefull against Bodies of men; for all sorts of Bullets,
Satisfaction and Information of the People, 24 March 1664, Issue 24]. either from Canons, Muskets, or Pistols will Miss ten times
Another story in the same year, also published in the Newes, told of for Hitting once, whereas an Army when Joyning so close
the daughter of a Kentish noblewoman, shot en route to church by an as to Fight Hand to Hand, the Sword is the Chief and Prime
assailant who fled the scene [Sutherland 1986: 97]. In a more benign Executor, insomuch, that a Sword Skilfully or Artificially
fashion, guns had entered day-to-day parlance as metaphors. For Used, hat the Advantage over the Strength of Clowns or their
example, Robert Hook’s 1665 study of nature through microscopes, Clubs, or the But-ends of their Muskets […] for by the fore-
Micrographia, described the bursting of a heated bladder as having mentioned arts [including ‘the management of his Horse’] you
‘almost made me deaf for the present, and much surpassed the noise of a will make a great Slaughter, and a Quicker Dispatch to Victory,
musket’ [Hooke 1665]. and Gain a great Renown or Game to each Particular Person,
that are so well Bred or Taught to be Horse-men and Sword-
Another sign of the ascent of guns, however, was the cultural backlash men.
against them. This was not due to them being used to kill people, [Cavendish 1662]
however. Instead, as the woman of letters, Margaret Cavendish, argued,
the problem with guns was a matter, quite literally, of class: Cavendish was, of course, far too optimistic about the usefulness
of the sword against massed musketry and weight of numbers,
For Shooting is not a direct Fighting, because they must stand clowns notwithstanding. Tellingly, however, she does also argue
at some Distance to take Aim, which in my opinion appears for the supremacy of cavalry, and in that regard at least, Cavendish
Cowardly, to Pelt at each other, as if they were Afraid to come demonstrated some understanding of the new dynamics of war that
near each other; besides, a Child may have so much Skill and would continue, to varying degrees, until World War One. It is also
Courage as to shoot off a Pistol, and may chance to Kill a Man, worth noting that Cavendish would later write a glowing account of
but a Child cannot tell how to use a Sword, or manage a Horse; her husband’s exploits in the English Civil War, alongside his great and
also a Peasant or such mean bred Persons, can shoot off Pistols, effective reliance on muskets and cannons during that conflict, with
or Carbines, or Muskets, but they have no skill to use a Sword, nary a hint of irony [Cavendish 1667: 143]. In that sense, of course,
nor know not how to manage an Horse, unless a Cart-Horse. Cavendish had no issue with firearms so long as the right sort were in
[Cavendish 1664: 143-144] control of them. Even an idealist like her could admit, albeit indirectly,
that times have moved on.
In other words, Cavendish saw that guns, in effect, democratised
violence and suggested a threat not only to the established order but A further confirmation of this change in the dynamics of British martial
its cultural expectations and traditions. While the blithe snobbery of arts was written several decades after the era covered by this article.
Cavendish’s rhetoric is certainly evident, it is not without context. Swordmaster William Hope’s 1691 fencing treatise, The Sword Man’s
Written only four years after the Restoration, and three years after Vade Mecum, both echoes Cavendish’s criticism and uses similar
the Venner Uprising, and by someone with first hand experience of rhetoric:
both the Civil War and exile to France, her contempt for the common
man, or ‘clown’, with his ‘carbines or muskets’, is rooted in a genuine But suppose they should openly reflect upon him, and
concern. The kingdom was insecure and instability an ongoing and very undervalue his Art, by threatening him with that
real threat, as the angry protests outside her husband’s London mansion unanswerable defence, as they think of their Ignorance, and
after the 1667 Medway Raid made only too clear [Sutherland 1986: 98]. infallible Defeater of all Art (I mean by ingaging him to fight

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with a Pistol, or other such like Fire weapons) and indeed to Conclusion
hear some People talk, one would think that by their gaining
this one point, of engaging a Sword-man to fight with Fire- As this article has shown, newspaper and media archives are effective
armes, they make no doubt, but all will go well with them, and sources of historical information in regards to the martial arts. What
that the day is certainly their own… Such discourse as this is they reveal, however, is not always what we may expect. While the
but too common amongst Ignorants, and they think when they theme of the paper was ‘News of the Duels’, it is also, in hindsight, a
talk at this rate, they have found the Philosopher Stone, which demonstration that Restoration Britain’s martial arts were as subject
in place of turning every thing into Gold, can turn all their to disruption as any other aspect of life at the time, including the press.
Ignorance into the profoundest Art and Skill, and all skilful Naturally, there is a need for caution in regards to these sources. As
Persons, Art, and Judgement into the greatest Ignorance. L’Estrange demonstrates, their bias was integral. We must also be
[Hope 1691] aware of how terms of reference change over time – if newspapers and
newsbooks of the time did not cover duels in great detail, this may be
Hope does, nonetheless, make concessions to the point, noting that as much down to readers’ common knowledge as censoriousness on the
‘no Man will be so foolish, as to pretend to parie the shot of a Pistol’, part of the reporters. For example, for us, karate needs no introduction
qualifying this with a claim that there are ways to ‘shun a shot’, but that or description, though a 17th century reader would beg to differ.
he does not think it ‘fit at present to mention’. Unable to completely
argue for the supremacy of the sword against the gun, therefore, The article’s focus on newspapers also means other media at the time,
Hope instead tries to equivocate that only expert shots can exceed the omitted for reasons of space, still await further investigation. While
swordsman, and that since the weapons are so different, the point is newsbook coverage of martial arts have been explored somewhat, a
essentially moot: deeper study is needed. Handwritten newsletters, as produced on the
side by newspaperman Henry Muddiman [Griffiths 2006: 13], when he
So that the only way to end this Debate, is, that they either wasn’t working for L’Estrange and, latterly, the London Gazette, would
fight with Weapons altogether unknown to both, or … propose also be illuminating, not least because they were more detailed and far
a Barrel of Gun-powder should be brought to each, in the less censored. Meanwhile, the Bills of Mortality, while mentioned in
middle of which, they were to place themselves, and then with passing, would be a valid area of research, if only to see how Londoners
fired Matches to try who could most Manfully, or I may rather may have killed each other. The article has also referred to non-
say Madly blow up the other. journalistic texts from the period; they are a rich source of further
[Hope 1691] information, as the works of Lady Cavendish, Richard Allestree and
Samuel Pepys are any yardstick.
In Hope’s work, we see defiance but also a barely admitted resignation.
The musket and the pistol, alongside the horse and the bayonet, While the press was limited in what it could report by the Licensing
were the future of warfare and the sword would be relegated to Act, there was a brief hiatus between 1679 and 1685, and the law itself
a sign of rank for military officers. Meanwhile, duellists from the was finally refused renewal by Parliament in 1695. How was violence of
18th century onwards set aside the sword for the pistol [Shoemaker any stripe recorded during these times, and how much more revealing
2002: 528] before mounting criticism and social/cultural shifts ended are they from a martial arts studies perspective? Foreign newspapers
duels altogether in the 19th century [Shoemaker 2002: 545]. As the from the period, such as Dutch and German publications, could also
newspapers of the 1660-1670 period amply demonstrate, journalism provide an outsider’s perspective on British violence at the time, skilled
was not so much recording the nature of duelling at the time, but the or otherwise.
beginning of its end, and an existential challenge to British martial arts
themselves. The gun had prevailed over the sword. Finally, I hope this article will be of use to martial artists themselves.
While fencing manuals from the period are standard texts, other
sources offer further information. HEMA practitioners may wish to
consider how cavalry tactics and blackpowder warfare, supported
by swords and bayonets, can be recreated and taught (preferably
without the live fire) from the material given here and in the archives
themselves. The study of newspapers offers a new source of material
as to how fighting not only took place but was perceived by those
alive at the time. What is clear is that a great deal can be learned not
just through the practice of the time but also by considering how the
populace at large chose to read all about it afterwards.

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Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquriries
Thereupon. London: The Royal Society. Pepys, Samuel. 1879. The Diary Of Samuel Pepys, ESQ., F.R.S. London:
Frederick Warne and Co. http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/
epub/3331/pg3331.txt.

Pettegree, Andrew. 2014. The Invention of News: How the World Came to
Know About Itself. New Haven: Yale University Press.

100 Winter 2016


MARTIAL News of the Duels
ARTS STUDIES Alexander Hay

Picard, Liza. 2004. Restoration London: Everyday Life in London 1660-1670.


London: Phoenix Books.

Raymond, Joad. 1996. The Invention of the Newspaper. Oxford: Clarendon


Press.

Rosenfeld, Sybil. 1936. ‘Dramatic Advertisements in the Burney


Newspapers 1660-1700’, PMLA 51.1, 123-152.
https://doi.org/10.2307/458318

Schwarz, L.D. 2003. London in the Age of Industrialisation: Entrepreneurs,


Labour Force and Living Conditions, 1700-1850. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.

Seaward, Paul. 1991. The Restoration, 1660-1688. London: Macmillan.

Seidel, Michael A. 1972. ‘The Restoration Mob: Drones and Dregs,


Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900’, Restoration and Eighteenth
Century 12.3, 429-443.

Shoemaker, R.B. 1991. Prosecution and Punishment: Petty Crime and the
Law in London and Rural Middlesex, c. 1660-1725. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.

Shoemaker, R.B. 2002. ‘The Taming of the Duel: Masculinity, Honour


and Ritual Violence in London, 1660–1800’, The Historical Journal 45.3,
525-545.
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x02002534

Sommerville, C. John. 1996. News Revolution in England. Oxford: Oxford


University Press.

Sutherland, James. 1986. The Restoration Newspaper and its Development.


Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Sutherland, T.L. 2011. ‘Guns at Towton’ Battlefield’, The Magazine of the


Battlefields Trust 16.1, 13-14.

Turner, James. 2002. Libertines and Radicals in Early Modern London:


Sexuality, Politics and Literary Culture, 1630-1685. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.

Wall, Cynthia. 1998. The Literary and Cultural Spaces of Restoration


London. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Ward, Stephen J.A. 2005. Invention of Journalism Ethics: The Path to


Objectivity and Beyond. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s Press.

martialartsstudies.org 101
BOOK REVIEW
Now with Kung Fu Grip! – How Bodybuilders, A growing body of scholarship has examined the introduction,
Soldiers and a Hairdresser Reinvented Martial Arts diffusion, and cultural domestication of Asian martial arts in the
for America. United States. Veteran martial arts researchers such as Joseph Svinth
and Thomas Green have demonstrated the value of both archival and
Jared Miracle
ethnographic approaches to the topic, and new publications – such
McFarland & Co., 2016 as Charles Russo’s study of martial arts in the San Francisco Bay area
277 pages $30 /£24 during the 1950s and 1960s – are emerging to shed light on neglected
topics. Whereas these studies have tended (judiciously?) to delimit their
scope to a relatively narrow historical period, to a single martial art, or
to a particular geographic region (or some combination thereof), Jared
Miracle’s Now with Kung Fu Grip! spans more than a century, explores
the history of various martial arts in both East Asia and the United
States, and discusses pedagogical practices, professional competitions,
and the impact and significance of media creations ranging from martial
arts movies to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series. This book is, in
other words, an ambitious undertaking.

Although the book’s main title might elude readers unfamiliar with
American advertising slogans, the intriguing subtitle promises a lively
and iconoclastic inquiry into how Asian martial arts in the United States
became ‘Americanized’ over time. The five main chapter titles serve to
further pique the reader’s curiosity: Chapter 1, ‘The YMCA, Christian
Muscle and Breakfast Cereal’, examines the history of various fighting
arts in the United States from the late 19th century through to the
beginning of WWII, with a focus on the YMCA’s advocacy of what
is now known as ‘muscular Christianity’; Chapter 2, ‘Karate, Boxing
and Other Japanese Creations’, focuses on Japan during roughly the
same time period; Chapter 3, ‘U.S. Occupation and a New Manly Art’,
examines how the postwar American occupation of Japan and Okinawa
shaped the way in which martial arts were later ‘translated’ for domestic
consumption and also features a discussion of Kyokushin karate
founder, Masutatsu Oyama; Chapter 4, ‘In Search of the Death Touch’,
concentrates on Robert Smith, Donn F. Draeger, and John ‘Count
Dante’ Keehan; and Chapter 5, ‘Bigger Muscles, Mutant Turtles and
Cage-Fighting Philosophers’, is, in the author’s words, ‘concerned with
the transformation of the martial artist identity as it has interacted with
discursive masculinity from the 1970s to the present’ 12-13].

In the Preface, the author notes that his aim in the book is ‘to tease
REVIEWER out trends in each generation’s approach to the martial arts, both East
Asian and Western’ [2], and he describes the process as follows: ‘After
Michael Molasky,Waseda University sifting through historical material from the past century or so in three
languages, interviewing famous – and not-so-famous – fighters, artists,
and fans of the genre, and spending countless hours engaging in all
elements of the martial arts industry on two continents, a few running
themes emerged’ [2]. With all of this build-up, what reader would not
be chomping at the bit to devour the main text?

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McFarland & Co.

The book does, in fact, contain much of interest, and its attention to the role of the YMCA in promoting
athletics and to the shifting attitudes toward boxing in American society provides a fresh lens through
which to view the reception of Asian martial arts in the United States. The author has gathered a diverse
range of material from both primary sources and from interviews that he personally conducted, and readers
unfamiliar with the colorful characters who fill the latter half of the book will find themselves entertained as
well as informed. Those interested in shifting social constructions of masculinity will also find much that is
worthwhile.

Notwithstanding its virtues, the book as a whole fails to live up to the high expectations fostered by the
chapter titles and opening pages. Perhaps the most serious flaw, in view of the historical nature of the project,
is the lax treatment of historical detail and context. This is particularly evident in the sections that dwell on
Japanese history (why a book ostensibly about the ‘reinvention of martial arts for America’ should devote so
much space to Japanese history and to the development of martial arts within Japan is already puzzling). For
example, in his discussion of judo founder, Kano Jigoro, the author notes that, ‘following Western pedagogical
practices and almost certainly with the police and military in mind, Kano devised a system of ten grades to
identify the level of a practitioner’s ability and experience’ [53]. In fact, the adoption of the ‘dan’ ranking system
in judo was borrowed from the long-established systems used in Japanese chess (shogi) and Go to rank players;
and Kano awarded a student the rank of ‘first degree black belt’ (shodan) as early as 1883, several years before
his official contact with the Tokyo Metropolitan Police.

In the book’s twenty-five-page ‘Conclusion’, which serves mainly to recapitulate points discussed at length
in the preceding chapters, the author writes: ‘From the turn of the century and into the 1910s and 1920s, a
forward-thinking professor of education, Kano Jigoro, carried out an intensive study of the Japanese classical
martial arts and formulated a system that he called “judo”’ [152] – this after devoting many pages to a detailed
discussion Kano and judo in Chapter 2, and after noting that Kano opened the Kodokan judo headquarters in
1882, which followed his intensive martial arts study referred to above.

In the next paragraph, the author mentions that Kano was responsible for introducing Okinawan karate
master Funakoshi Gichin to Japanese educational authorities. He then adds, for the reader’s edification, that,
‘although it was later incorporated as a full prefecture of Japan, at the time Okinawa was still essentially a
foreign culture’ [152]. The remark about Okinawa’s cultural difference from mainland Japan is accurate, but
Okinawa was officially made a Japanese prefecture in 1879. Funakoshi would have been about eleven years old
at the time.

One would have hoped that such historical inaccuracies were limited to the Meiji era (1868-1912), but the
treatment of the postwar era is also problematic. In discussing this period, the author implies that Masutatsu
Oyama was the son of Korean immigrants to Japan [76]; rather, he left his family’s home in Korea for Japan
by himself while still a teenager, and although decades later he became a naturalized citizen, for many years
he concealed his Korean origins in an effort to ‘pass’ as Japanese. Much of the above information is available
in Japanese (and probably in English as well), but while the author claims to have sifted ‘through historical
material from the past century or so in three languages’, the book’s bibliography only lists works written in
English, and it is unclear what other two languages were employed in his research. Written Japanese would
not appear to be among them.

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The author further states that, ‘although members of the occupying forces were probably familiar with judo to
some extent prior to arriving in Japan, it was karate that came to be popularized by these men after returning
to the U.S.’ [82]. Yet during the occupation of Japan, judo was far more well-known and popular among the
American troops than was karate (at least among those stationed in mainland Japan), and when fledgling
American martial artists returned from their tour of duty and began teaching martial arts back home, judo
classes far outnumbered karate classes throughout the 1950s.

At times, the author’s treatment of American history is also perplexing. At one point, for example, he makes
the following jaw-dropping claim: ‘American women attained suffrage in 1920 after decades of public
demonstrations and legal arguments. This is a clear indication of the degree to which women had the same
autonomy as men’ [36].

In terms of its theoretical framework, this book suffers from what appears to be a conflict between the
author’s acknowledgement of the multifaceted and constructed nature of identity (‘masculinities are also
fluid, varied, and sometimes contradictory’ [34]) and his desire to indulge in essentialist claims relying on
monolithic concepts. The following, rather awkwardly-worded, assertion is but one example: ‘The attraction
of the Asian martial arts for the American psyche would appear to be their advertised ability to grant individual
power, ensuring the autonomy needed for enacting the lone warrior myth’ [87, italics added]. One result of
this monolithic approach to uncovering social and psychological motives behind Americans’ interest in Asian
martial arts is that the author ends up choosing a single social sector – namely, white, Christian, middle class
men, typically in white collar jobs – then extends his argument to society in general. To give him credit,
he does attempt to historicize, and he also points to instances where images (or fantasies) of working class
masculinity are appropriated by the middle and upper classes.

More disturbing is this book’s utter inattention to the critical role played by African American communities
in the dissemination, popularization, and cultural domestication of Asian martial arts in the United States,
particularly from the 1960s onward. Many, if not most, of this book’s claims about the appeal of Asian
martial arts to suburban, white, middle class American men are unlikely to apply to young, impoverished
African American males, who were among the most avid consumers of martial arts movies and constituted
an enthusiastic base of practitioners as well. Yet middle class white men are treated as normative throughout
most of the book, and generalizations about this population are frequently conflated with those of American
society writ large.

Finally, this book could have benefited from a hard-nosed editor to weed out the misspellings (‘dissent’ for
‘descent’ [35]; ‘proselyting’ for ‘proselytizing’ [150]), awkward phrasing and inane sentences (‘Education is
the key to preventing repeats of history’ [165]), and, above all, the repetition of entire blocks of information
throughout the book. This reviewer was left with the impression that the author must have rushed off his
manuscript to the publisher, which in turn prematurely sent it to press. That is unfortunate, since the book
contains the seeds for an immensely valuable project.

104 Winter 2016


BOOK REVIEW
The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and Its Music: From The word ‘interdisciplinary’ gets thrown around a lot in academia
Southeast Asian Village to Global Movement these days. Boundaries between fields of study are increasingly porous
Uwe U. Paetzold and Paul H. Mason (editors) and it is not unusual for scholars to deploy theories or methods
drawn from several different disciplines. In fact, Paul Bowman [2015]
Brill, 2016
has suggested that the emerging field of martial arts studies is well
376 pages £142 positioned to further disrupt disciplinary boundaries thanks to the
multiplicity of approaches being taken – or that could be taken – to its
heterogeneous object of study. It is still somewhat rare, however, to find
interdisciplinary work dealing closely with music while still remaining
intelligible to scholars outside of (ethno)musicology. The Fighting Art
of Pencak Silat and Its Music [2016] is a fine example of how martial
arts studies can encompass musical (and choreographic) considerations
alongside issues of culture, society, religion, ritual, media, politics,
nationalism, identity, gender, and embodiment.

Uwe Paetzold and Paul Mason’s edited book arose out of productive
interactions at the 2010 meeting of the International Council for
Traditional Music (ICTM) held in Singapore. During that conference,
the inaugural symposium of the ICTM Study Group on The
Performing Arts of Southeast Asia was held, and pencak silat received
both ethnomusicological and ethnochoreological attention from the
participants of several panels. Studies of martial arts have until recently
been under-represented in music and dance scholarship, perhaps
because violent behaviour appeared to fall outside the purview of
research on practices that are more often concerned with aesthetics and
social cohesion.

Pencak silat can be thought of as what Clifford Geertz famously referred


to as a ‘blurred genre’ [Geertz 1983] and which the editors discuss
briefly in the Introduction. Precedent for theorizing music and martial
arts in this way was set with studies of the Afro-Brazilian dance-fight-
game capoeira [Lewis 1992; Downey 2002, 2005], to which I would like
to add my own research on percussion music and lion dance in Chinese
kung fu [McGuire 2010, 2015]. Like these other types of musical martial
arts, interdisciplinarity in pencak silat results in a field of practice
where it is advisable not to separate the constituent parts, but rather
to deal with them as a single whole. Music, dance, drama, costuming,
performance, and ritual are not independent from the fighting skills
of pencak silat – they form an integral part of it. Granted, pencak silat
REVIEWER is a blanket term of relatively recent vintage that seeks to encompass
a wide and idiosyncratic range of practices, so not all local versions
Colin P. McGuire is Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow in the and variants contain every possible aspect in equal concentration, but
Department of Music, University College Cork, Ireland. proceeding with the idea of a blurred genre in mind is still useful.

A basic premise of the book is that, ‘when distilled into performance


arts, activities correlated with fighting, self-defence, and physical
aggression are able to offer highly meaningful anthropological insights

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into cultural life’ that may not be available elsewhere [Paetzold and Mason 2016: 1]. This position ties into a
key concept for research in the broad area of music and martial arts that Phillip Zarrilli might call heroic display
ethos. He defines it as, ‘that collective set of behaviors, expected actions, and principles or codes of conduct
that ideally guide and are displayed by a hero’ [Zarrilli 2010: 606]. Viewed from this perspective, a full range
of martial art genres – broadly considered – from dance and dramatized combat to fighting sports and even
organized warfare can be productively analyzed for their performative qualities.

This book is not self-identified as martial arts studies per se, but it does show an awareness of some of the
relevant concerns. In the Introduction, Paetzold and Mason provide a definition of ‘martial arts’, which is
considered alongside related terms like ‘fighting arts’ and ‘self-defence arts’. It should be noted, however, that
the rest of the authors do not appear to be as invested in that discussion. It is unfortunate that the editors’
discussion does not engage with recent work on definitions from martial arts studies [e.g., Wetzler 2015].
Nonetheless, they make some useful contributions to martial arts studies discourse, particularly regarding
aspects that are sometimes overlooked, like music:

As for music, when it comes to performing in public, it can be said to be one important aspect,
or component, to differentiate a ‘self-defence related art’ – as manifested in some form of
choreography, dance, or theatre – from a sheer self-defence art in the closer motoric functioning
sense of a ‘Form-Follows-Function’ concept. Music is an important modality to bring pencak
silat into the public arena, and to make it a movement art in everyday life. These are some of the
assumptions from which this book starts.
[Paetzold and Mason 2016: 6]

Paetzold and Mason use David Jones’ [2002] list of possible characteristics for martial arts but further this
schema by adding two characteristics of their own. They also provide an Index of Terms and Associative
Expressions at the end of the book that helps to organize the chapters by providing page references under
section headings according to Jones’ expanded model. The classification schema introduced in Jones’ Combat,
Ritual, and Performance: Anthropology of the Martial Arts should be familiar to most readers of this journal, so I
will simply list Jones’ categories for convenient reference along with his caveat that not all boxes need to be
checked in order for a practice to be called a martial art: 1) Kata, 2) Emphasis on shock combat, 3) Ritual, 4)
Techniques, repetition, and drill, 5) Sparring, 6) Entertainment, 7) Seeking internal power, 8) Ranking and
indication of rank, 9) Connection with social elites. The editors’ additions to Jones’ schema are: 10) Medium
for education and 11) Medium for movement therapy. The former educational aspect applies from large-scale
government initiatives through to boots-on-the-ground work with street youth wherever martial arts are used
as a means to inculcate social competence as well as control aggression. The latter movement therapy category
refers to the holistic wellness benefits of some types of martial arts practice, which might be exemplified by
taijiquan.

One of the greatest strengths of this book is its broad-yet-deep approach, which is unlikely to have been
possible as a single, double, or even triple-author monograph. The twelve contributors combine approaches
from ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, anthropology, and performance studies. They cover nearly the
whole ‘world of silat’, including Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei Darussalam, southern Thailand,
and overseas transplants. In the root Indonesian-Malay culture areas, there are further differentiations by
region belying the Java-centric nationalist discourses that threaten to construct pencak silat as a monolithic
practice. The four parts of the book each contain several chapters. They cover 1) the general origins, history,
development, and standardization of pencak silat; 2) specific case studies of local silat forms and their musics;
3) examinations of dances, rituals, and dramas that draw on or arise from pencak silat; 4) and considerations of

106 Winter 2016


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insider/outsider experiences and approaches to silat’s embodied logic. The chapters in the third section cover
movement arts like luambek, rudat, and jaipongan, which stretches the blurred genre concept as they sometimes
only reference fighting skills in very stylized ways. These studies of silat-esque dances and dramas demonstrate
how the martial arts aspects can be foregrounded in work on practices that might seem to be one step removed
from fighting arts.

A thread running through various chapters is the way that pencak silat and its music are imbricated with
discourses of identity, gender, power, and society (among others) that can be analyzed through careful
attention to the details of performance. All the authors touch on sound and movement in their texts, but
the representational methods they use in relation to these discussions are divergent. Some use Western staff
notation for music, which presents a barrier for readers not familiar with that system, but also allows a degree
of precision that is difficult to match in regard to pitch, rhythm, and duration. Other authors use graphical
representations of music that are more intuitive to the uninitiated. Similarly, several authors use (or adapt)
the language of Laban Movement Analysis to precisely describe and interpret the physical action they discuss,
without necessarily getting into the symbols of Labanotation. One of the most inclusive approaches was that
of Zahara Kamal and Indija Mahjoeddin, who represent sound and movement in an integrated choreomusical
analysis, which strikes me as important when dealing with a blurred genre. In an appendix to their chapter,
they provide a text-based table with three columns (movement, time, and music) that helps to make explicit
the structures of sound and physical action that they analyze in relation to social organization.

The Fighting Art of Pencak Silat and Its Music would be a valuable resource for people with interests in martial
arts as a blurred genre, as well as in the general topic area of Southeast Asian performing arts. It has been
difficult to do this book justice in such a short review, particularly because I have dwelt on issues of theory
and method rather than delving into the rich ethnographic, historical, cultural, social, musical, choreographic,
and, of course, martial detail. In terms of critique, I am afraid that the steep price of the tome will scare some
people away, although I hear that institutions who purchase the equally expensive access to an online e-book
version will also be able to order much more affordable paperback ‘MyBook’ editions for their members. It is
also unfortunate that the publisher could not (would not?) host a website for audiovisual supplements, and so
the editors have taken on this task themselves. Their password-protected media site has its gate unlocked by
a code available in the book. It is a work in progress, but the video is particularly helpful for those unfamiliar
with silat and its music. Integration of audiovisual material with the text, however, is rather awkward. The
authors were unable to refer to the supplementary website in their chapters because it was not available before
publishing time, thus leaving readers to comb through the companion website to look for retrofitted examples.
Minor faults aside, though, I heartily recommend this book.

martialartsstudies.org 107
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References
Bowman, Paul. 2015. Martial Arts Studies: Disrupting Disciplinary
Boundaries. London: Rowman and Littlefield International.

Downey, Greg. 2002. ‘Listening to Capoeira: Phenomenology,


Embodiment, and the Materiality of Music’, Ethnomusicology 46.3,
487–509.
https://doi.org/10.2307/852720

Downey, Greg. 2005. Learning Capoeira: Lessons in Cunning from an Afro-


Brazilian Art. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Geertz, Clifford. 1983. Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive


Anthropology. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Jones, David E. 2002. ‘Towards a Definition of the Martial Arts’, in


Combat, Ritual, and Performance: Anthropology of the Martial Arts, edited
by David E. Jones, Westport, CN and London: Praeger, xi-xv.

Lewis, J. Lowell. 1992. Ring of Liberation: Deceptive Discourse in Brazilian


Capoeira. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

McGuire, Colin. 2010. ‘Rhythm Skills Development in Chinese Martial


Arts’, The International Journal of Sport and Society 1.3, 209–218.
https://doi.org/10.18848/2152-7857/CGP/v01i03/54024

McGuire, Colin. 2015. ‘The Rhythm of Combat: Understanding the


Role of Music in Performances of Traditional Chinese Martial Arts and
Lion Dance’, MUSICultures 42.1. https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/
MC/article/view/24252

Paetzold, Uwe U. and Paul H. Mason [eds]. 2016. The Fighting Art
of Pencak Silat and Its Music: From Southeast Asian Village to Global
Movement. Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV.

Wetzler, Sixt. 2015. ‘Martial Arts Studies as Kulturewissenschaft: A


Possible Theoretical Framework’, Martial Arts Studies 1, 20–33.
https://doi.org/10.18573/j.2016.10016

Zarrilli, Phillip. 2010. ‘Performing Arts’, in Martial Arts of the World: An


Encyclopedia of History and Innovation, edited by Thomas A. Green and
Joseph R. Svinth, Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 606-608.

108 Winter 2016


BOOK REVIEW
Fighting Scholars: Habitus and Ethnographies of Fighting Scholars is an edited collection of ethnographic scholarship
Martial Arts and Combat Sports on martial arts and combat sports (hereafter referred to as MACS
Raúl Sánchez García and Dale C. Spencer (editors) [Channon and Jennings 2014]). This volume is the first of its kind;
it brings together a selection of empirical studies that demonstrates
Anthem Press, 2014
the fecundity of ethnographic research on the one hand and of Loïc
234 pages $40 /£25 (pb) Wacquant’s notion of ‘carnal sociology’ [Wacquant 2004, 2014] on the
other. This volume is also quite timely when considered in relation
to the wider context of the ‘bodily turn’ in the social scientific and
anthropological study of sport and physical culture [Shilling 2007].

In the introductory chapter, editors Raúl Sánchez García and Dale C.


Spencer outline their rationale for the volume, indicating in the process
the considerable influence of Wacquant. In addition to contributing a
chapter and an epilogue to the volume, Wacquant first introduced his
ideas in his pioneering ethnography of boxing, Body and Soul [2004],
in which he drew from and sought to develop the work of Pierre
Bourdieu. The main idea put forth by Wacquant is to ‘use habitus as
a methodological pathway, through the technique of apprenticeship,
to pry into the forging and functioning of habitus as a spring of social
action’ [Wacquant 2014: 211]. It is this idea and its implications for
research in MACS with which the contributing authors all seek to
engage.

Additionally, García and Spencer provide their explanation for what


they see as the volume’s four-fold thematic division. Their method of
division highlights four key areas – body techniques, race/ethnicity,
gender and religion – which they believe can be fruitfully explored
with a ‘carnal’ approach. However, this division does not shape the
organisation of the ensuing chapters. Rather, it draws attention to some
of the main, recurring points of focus across the various chapters. This
thematic division could have been useful for readers in allowing them to
navigate the volume, explore areas of particular interest and facilitate in
highlighting the aspects of their contribution with regard to the frame
of reference used by the editors.

Considering the importance of Wacquant’s oeuvre to this collection,


it is appropriate that his chapter opens the proceedings. In his
contribution, Wacquant reflects on his fieldwork in the Woodlawn
boxing gym in Chicago, which was the subject of his most influential
REVIEWER scholarship and which inspired many scholars (including myself) to take
a carnal approach to the study of MACS. Following Wacquant, the rest
Dr. Anu Vaittinen is a qualitative sociologist of sport, health and of the chapters focus on a variety of topics and provide myriad insights
physical culture. She holds a position of a research associate for the across the wide range of MACS. Despite demonstrating a great deal of
Institute of Health & Society at Newcastle University (UK). Anu is a diversity in this respect, it is worth pointing out that the contributors
lifelong sports practitioner and is a recreational MMA and wing chun to the volume all seem to approach their research from a decidedly
practitioner and a novice triathlete. Western/dominant point of view. This is something that future
research could perhaps balance out by encouraging considerations of/
from alternative perspectives.
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Along with Wacquant’s carnal approach, the chapters in this volume are informed by the Bourdieusian notion
of habitus. Regarding the latter, the chapter by David Brown and George Jennings offers interesting avenues
for further research. Brown and Jennings aim to identify some core dispositions that make up a martial
habitus in the context of wing chun and taijiquan. They also contemplate the possible identification of shared
dispositions across MACS. Although they strongly emphasise that this is a preliminary enquiry, the idea of
identifying shared dispositions that span different MACS in diverse ways and to different degrees could extend
the study and use of habitus considerably.

Another highlight from this volume is Brian Hogeeven’s chapter on Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Hogeeven utilizes a
phenomenological framework which relies on the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty. In doing so, he draws
attention to the intricate sensory and perceptual dimensions of phenomenological conceptualisations of habit
(rather than habitus) and thereby demonstrates the potential in developing an approach to the study of MACS
that is truly derived ‘from the body’. The central role of the sensory and perceptual dimensions of habitus is
a topic explored further in subsequent chapters, including Sara K. Schneider’s chapter on somatic learning in
kalarippayattu and Sara Delamont and Neil Stephens’ chapter on mental agility and enculturation in capoeira.
However, it bears mentioning that these authors’ analytical grasp of the implications of the sensory seems less
systematic in comparison to Hogeeven’s.

Furthermore, Einat Bar-On Cohen introduces another possible avenue for further enquiry in her chapter
on kuydo, the Japanese art of archery, in which she makes use of ideas advanced by Gilles Deleuze and
Félix Guattari. Specifically, she suggests replacing the habitus/practice nexus with poststructuralist
conceptualisations of actuality/virtuality. Doing so yields intricate insights into such matters as the
intertwining of combat and religion (one of the key themes highlighted by the editors). Conversely, Spencer’s
chapter on muay thai offers insights into the complexities of national identities through a consideration of
attempts by Westerners to learn this art in Thailand. Lastly, Garcia employs Norbert Elias’ theory of the
‘civilizing process’ in his ethnographic study of aikido and boxing. The Eliasian framework has been examined
extensively in social scientific studies of sport. However, these studies have taken a more macro, socio-
historical approach, with the fleshy field of practice unfortunately suffering occlusion. Garcia’s timely effort to
redress this imbalance thus serves as a useful contribution to further research in the ethnographic domain.

Overall, Fighting Scholars offers rich empirical and theoretical insights which are consistent with the stated
goals of the editors. Although each individual chapter demonstrates in its own way, based on the perspectives
of each individual scholar, the value of carnal sociology and ethnography applied to scholarly investigations
of MACS, I do agree with the note Wacquant makes in the epilogue, viz. that the goals laid out by the
editors remain to be achieved in future studies. One possible and as-yet-unexplored avenue would be to
integrate literature not directly focused on MACS. For example, anthropological studies on embodied ways
of knowing [Harris 2007] now encompass a wide range of corporeal and sensory bodies of knowledge. Such
interdisciplinary efforts could help to make a stronger case for the relevance of martial/combat habitus to
other connected fields of enquiry as well as enhance the developing field of martial arts studies.

Critical to this task is to highlight how the topics central to habitus in these contexts connect, intersect
and interact with the societal contexts within which these gyms, dojos and MACS spaces are embedded.
In particular, much remains to be explored vis-à-vis the dynamic structures and the everyday operation of
inequality and resistance to/reproduction of relations of oppression in connection with the themes of race,
ethnicity, gender and religion. Moreover, I would also add to the list of themes put forth by Garcia and
Spencer the theme of ‘class’, which is interestingly absent from the chapters in this volume. The chapter
that best demonstrates the importance of this wider awareness is the chapter by Alex Channon in which

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he examines the transformative potential of mixed-sex MACS training with respect to established gender
relations and hierarchies.

In conclusion, Fighting Scholars takes a pioneering step forward towards a more systematic, critical and
corporeally-grounded study of MACS. Continuing in the tradition of Wacquant’s early groundbreaking
efforts, this volume aligns methodology and theory with corporeal insights. Fighting Scholars is therefore a
valuable and essential resource for martial arts studies scholars and points the way towards a very bright future
for the study of MACS and for martial arts studies more broadly.

References
Channon, Alex and George Jennings. 2014. ‘Exploring Embodiment
through Martial Arts and Combat Sports: A Review of Empirical
Research’, Sport in Society 17.6, 773-789.
https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2014.882906

Harris, Michael [ed]. 2007. Ways of Knowing: Anthropological Approaches


to Crafting Experience and Knowledge. 18 vols. New York: Berghahn
Books.

Shilling, Chris [ed]. 2007. Embodying Sociology: Retrospect, Progress and


Prospects. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

Wacquant, Loïc. 2004. Body and Soul: Notebooks of an Apprentice Boxer.


Oxford: Oxford University Press.

martialartsstudies.org 111
BOOK REVIEW
The Body and Senses in Martial Culture Lionel Loh Han Loong’s ethnographic study of muay thai training
Lionel Loh Han Loong explores the experiences of short-term migrant practitioners in
Palgrave Macmillan, 2016 Thailand, based at the Kwaan-saa-maat Gym in the rural province of
Ubon Ratachathani, which Loong tells us lies in ‘relative isolation’ from
137 pages
the country’s ‘touristy locations’ [18] regularly frequented by foreigners.
In this sense, the gym holds a certain appeal as an authentic destination
for practicing muay thai, epitomising the goal of many globetrotting
martial arts consumers as they go about their search for ‘traditional’,
fully immersive experiences of training in the geographically-bounded
spaces out of which any given discipline is assumed to have originally
emerged. Although such notions of authenticity, tourism and globalised
consumerism are not the primary focus of Loong’s analysis, the gym’s
geographic and symbolic location make this an exciting (even if not
completely original) site for gathering ethnographic data on the lived
experience of contemporary martial artists.

Organising his work primarily as a study of embodiment, Loong


actually chooses to focus on a three-fold analysis of masculinity,
liminality, and Norbert Elias’ notion of the civilising process. There are
two main arguments put forth in this short text which, as I read them,
coalesce around the following points: firstly, the men who are training
at Kwaan-saa-maat Gym undergo a liminal experience by putting aside
‘their inhibitions of the civilising process’ [10] for a fixed time while
training in a thoroughly masculinised space. Secondly, understanding
such lived experiences requires an embodied approach to research (and
writing) which, Loong claims, has largely been missing from research
on martial arts to date.

As these arguments were outlined within the first two chapters, I


felt a sense of disappointment with what I had initially hoped would
be an original addition to the fast-developing field of martial arts
studies. Sadly, as I detail below, Loong’s book does not offer anything
particularly new, and is more noteworthy as an example of missed
opportunities and analytical errors than the kind of agenda-setting text
that one would expect of an ethnographic monograph. In particular,
there are two main faults to call to light here, which I will address in
turn.

Firstly, Loong begins the text with a short and far-from-comprehensive


REVIEWER literature review. Leading with the claim that ‘martial arts are often
analysed in a discursive manner by researchers who are not themselves
Alex Channon, University of Brighton practitioners’ [4] and developing an argument that suggests issues
around bodies and embodiment have been ignored by scholars of
martial arts, he overlooks a plethora of recent (and not-so-recent)

DOI
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MARTIAL The Body and Senses in Martial Culture Reviewed by
ARTS STUDIES Lionel Loh Han Loong Alex Channon
Palgrave Macmillan

ethnographic studies that in fact do exactly what he claims is missing.1 Perhaps most notably, these include two
recent, edited volumes on martial arts and embodiment [Farrer and Whalen-Bridge 2011; Sánchez García and
Spencer 2013], one of which was exclusively written by practitioner-researchers using ethnographic methods
and both of which feature chapters on muay thai training in Thailand. Strangely, while not counting them in
his initial analysis of the state of the field, Loong does go on to cite several other ethnographic studies later in
the text, which begs the question as to why these – along with the preceding work that their authors would
have built them on – weren’t considered earlier in the piece.

By not having incorporated such work into his initial assessment, Loong’s study unfortunately falls into the
trap of assuming originality in a fairly saturated empirical space. Despite the (relative) uniqueness of the
research setting, the study ends up being yet another discussion of (mostly) Western men’s body projects,
theorised largely around the apparent ‘violence’ and ‘masculinity’ of combat sports. Within both the sociology
of sport and martial arts studies literature, this is now a very well-trodden path, meaning little of the data
presented throughout the rest of the text did much to surprise or excite. By failing to engage properly with
previous work, Loong has arrived rather late to a party that he claims to be throwing all by himself.

The second key issue relates to weaknesses within the book’s core analytical themes. Here, the overstated,
loosely theorised and under-evidenced discussion of ‘masculinity’ was particularly frustrating. In many
sections of the book, ‘masculine’ almost becomes a synonym for ‘fighter’. With one or two exceptions, Loong
consistently used this term without justification vis-à-vis what the participants themselves actually thought
about masculinity, let alone about gender more broadly. This is out of step with his claimed commitment to
the ethnographic method: while ‘fighting’ might generally be coded ‘masculine’ in wider societal contexts,
the social construction and negotiation of gender within specific martial arts subcultures and across the
‘increasingly globalised martialscape’ [102] needs to be considered before we can assign such meaning to any
given community of practice.

This is especially the case in the 2010s, given the increasing prominence of women as regular practitioners
but also elite fighters in many combat sport disciplines, and the development of competing discourses of
femininity and masculinity that their visibility has inspired. Without clearly showing that it carries these
meanings for participants, it makes little sense to assert ‘masculinity’ as a central, organising principle of
gym life. At best, Loong is guilty here of not providing enough data to support his position on a contentious
issue; at worst, he is complicit in essentialising the identity and behaviours associated with ‘being a fighter’ as
masculine objects.

Meanwhile, the handling of Elias’ notion of ‘civilising processes’ weakens Loong’s argument around the
‘liminal’ quality of the gym as a social space. A simplistic (mis)reading of Elias’ thesis is to argue that any form
of interpersonal violence is illustrative of a departure from the project of advancing civilisation, and Loong
consistently makes this mistake. In fact, it is central to his argument around training at the gym as a liminal
experience, which is theorised here largely in terms of a temporary departure from normality (which is itself
odd, given that the majority of his respondents are either professional fighters or long-term martial arts
practitioners).

While Loong provides a decent discussion of Eliasian theory in abstract terms, his analytical application lacks

1 It is worth noting that Loong’s claims about the lack of embodied sociological research on martial arts repeats a tendency
among contemporary writers (most often, male writers) to completely ignore the vast body of feminist literature on women’s self-defence
training [see, for instance, McCaughey 1997; Thomson 2010; Hollander 2015]. Much of this is based on ethnographic research and is
concerned centrally with the politics of the body, making it ideal theoretical, methodological and substantive material for informing current
research trends in our field, especially those focusing on gender.

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nuance, overlooking the key contribution that it might bring to martial arts studies. In essence, the notion
that sparring ‘goes against the civilising process’ [55] misses the ways in which this practice of fighting is
actually highly ‘civilised’ in the Eliasian sense. The equation of sparring and ‘violence’ is likely at fault here;
Loong needed to consider the notion of mimesis in greater depth, and question the extent to which sparring
involves a ‘controlled de-controlling’ of inhibitions [Elias and Dunning 1986] and can be interpreted as an
ironic epitome, rather than obvious antithesis, of our everyday ‘civilised’ behaviour.2 Without interrogating
the deeper meaning of Elias’ theory, the resulting analysis is left feeling fairly superficial.

Although I’ve found much to critique in this text, it would be inaccurate and unfair to suggest the book is
without merit at all. Particularly, although the last substantive chapter was considerably shorter than the
others, it was here that I felt Loong’s discussion started to move onto stronger ground, and the conclusion was
also neatly written. I was interested by his discussion of globalisation and its effects on the de-territorialisation
of martial arts, while the paradox inherent in seeking ‘authentic’, traditional experiences whilst also adhering
to a strict doctrine of efficacy regarding the value of any given technique or method represents an intriguing
question of its own. I would have liked the discussion of these issues to have been more of a central focus for
the text overall. While Loong isn’t the first to write about them, it would seem that his fieldwork and research
site would stand to make a more meaningful contribution to such debates than to those he eventually focused
on here.

Ultimately, my feeling is that this study would probably have been better written up as a series of journal
articles – something the author may yet pursue in future. This would’ve given him the benefit of a more
robust, pre-publication peer review process, and it would’ve arguably made for a more fitting format within
which to publish ‘more of the same’ data regarding now-familiar discussions of the embodied experiences of
men training in combat sports. This text should remind us that the development of martial arts studies will
depend upon our ability to shape future projects around, or in response to, the knowledge and arguments
already forwarded by others, but also on carefully developed, academically sound theorising. Both of these
elements seem to me to be missing here, unfortunately scuppering what might’ve been a highly informative
report on a relatively under-researched and fascinating phenomenon in contemporary, commodified,
globalised martial arts culture.

2 A recent study that represents a fantastic example of Eliasian analysis of mimetic violence and martial arts is Neil Gong’s [2015]
study of a no-rules fighting group in California.

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References
Elias, Norbert and Eric Dunning [eds]. 1986. Quest for Excitement: Sport
and Leisure in the Civilising Process. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.

Farrer, Douglas S. and John Whalen-Bridge [eds]. 2011. Martial Arts as


Embodied Knowledge: Asian Traditions in a Transnational World. Albany:
State University of New York Press.

Gong, Neil. 2015. ‘How to Fight Without Rules: On Civilized Violence


in “De-Civilized” Spaces’, Social Problems, 1-18.
https://doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spv014

Hollander, Jocelyn. 2015. ‘Outlaw Emotions: Gender, Emotion


and Transformation in Women’s Self-Defence Training’, in Global
Perspectives on Women in Combat Sports: Women Warriors around
the World, edited by Alex Channon and Christopher R. Matthews,
Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 187-203.

McCaughey, Martha. 1997. Real Knockouts: The Physical Feminism of


Women’s Self-Defense. New York: New York University Press.

Sánchez García, Raul and Dale C. Spencer [eds]. 2013. Fighting Scholars:
Habitus and Ethnographies of Martial Arts and Combat Sports. London:
Anthem.

Thomson, Martha E. 2010. ‘Empowering Self-Defense Training’,


Violence Against Women 20.3, 351-359.
https://doi.org/10.1177/1077801214526051PMid:24686126

martialartsstudies.org 115
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MARTIAL
ARTS STUDIES
EDITORS EDITORIAL ADVISORY PANEL
Paul Bowman Oleg Benesch University of York
Benjamin N. Judkins Stephen Chan SOAS
Greg Downey Macquarie University
D.S. Farrer University of Guam
Adam Frank University of Central Arkansas
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Thomas A. Green Texas A&M University
T. J. Hinrichs Cornell University
Kyle Barrowman 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

C b n d

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