Postby Stacy Clifford » Tue Dec 30, 2008 12:05 pm
You have a lot more experience knowing what those arts are supposed to look like than I do, so I'll defer to your expertise on that, Jay. I agree I saw a lot of good stuff that looks familiar from our own arts throughout the videos. When I say ducking under, I'm referring to several times when I saw them stepping offline toward the oncoming blow, and instead of meeting it in a bind in kron and stifling it as I think the European masters seem more likely to advise, they void the blow and slice under it. I'm not suggesting that's wrong, it certainly works, I just don't recall too many instances where the fechtbuchs advise voiding a blow without binding it when stepping toward it. Voiding with a pass back makes sense in every art, no argument there.
I'm just seeing it as a matter of different tactical emphasis between the two cultures, since I don't really see any moves in there that we can't do with our own swords. The greater emphasis on slicing cuts makes obvious sense given the design of the katana; I'm sure that armpit slice works better than with a longer, straighter sword at the same range. It just seems as though some of the defensive choices run counter to the more common advice we see in the fechtbuchs, like choosing not to bind when you close in (and I can see that they do bind sometimes, I'm just observing more instances than I would expect where they don't, which might just be iaido guy being flashy for all I know). I think in most cases the fechtmeisters would probably tell you, "Yes, you can do that, but in my book I put down the best response to that attack, not the only possible response." I think there are a lot of moves that can work under the right conditions, but aren't the best choice, but in the Japanese arts I don't know what the standard wisdom is vs. what they do because it looks cool in the demo, so I'm commenting on what I see and relying on y'all for insight. Happy to keep an open mind here, this is interesting stuff.
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Stacy Clifford
Free-Scholar
ARMA Houston, TX