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Brandon Paul Heslop wrote:What others thought of them, did not stop my ancestors, when they fought off the Turks at Nicea, or when they took Jerusalem. And because of their actions, I don't have to live in a society dominated by a hateful theocracy.
Brandon Paul Heslop wrote: If we are to truly understand the martial pricipals of our European ancestors, the weapons, and the method in which they were wielded so effectively, then we must understand the cultural climate, and the environment that genertated them. It's part of the process. If we are truly embrace this (historical WMA) then we ought to know about the world in which it came into being, don't you think?
Martin Wallgren wrote:Brandon Paul Heslop wrote:What others thought of them, did not stop my ancestors, when they fought off the Turks at Nicea, or when they took Jerusalem. And because of their actions, I don't have to live in a society dominated by a hateful theocracy.
In what country do you live, just out of curiosity?
Kind regards!
david welch wrote:Brandon Paul Heslop wrote: If we are to truly understand the martial pricipals of our European ancestors, the weapons, and the method in which they were wielded so effectively, then we must understand the cultural climate, and the environment that genertated them. It's part of the process. If we are truly embrace this (historical WMA) then we ought to know about the world in which it came into being, don't you think?
You have no idea how much I agree with you on this.
This is one of the points of studying WMA I hate.
If I was to decide to study eastern arts, and wanted to learn about, say the Samurai, Oh, then I would be expected to learn about Bushido, and eastern philosophy, and why they were noble, and understand and be able to participate in their religious acts like being able to participate in a tea ceremony.
Want to learn WMA? Well then you have to accept that they had no social or religious underpinnings, they never acted on a noble thought, and if you even pretend they were motivated even once by anything other than avarice and greed you are labeled a racist.![]()
"I feel your pain."
Is there a word for the polar opposite of a xenophobe? Someone that is terrified that some day he might find something about his own history or culture he is not capable of loathing?
There should be.
David
david welch wrote:
Want to learn WMA? Well then you have to accept that they had no social or religious underpinnings, they never acted on a noble thought, and if you even pretend they were motivated even once by anything other than avarice and greed you are labeled a racist.![]()
J. F. McBrayer wrote:david welch wrote:
Want to learn WMA? Well then you have to accept that they had no social or religious underpinnings, they never acted on a noble thought, and if you even pretend they were motivated even once by anything other than avarice and greed you are labeled a racist.![]()
No one is saying this. This idea is coming purely from your emotional reaction to what people are saying.
I strongly agree that we should be studying the social and religious underpinnings of our arts. That said, we should be studying what those actually were for the periods and places we are interested in, not some vague and only quasi-historical notion of some Western Culture that everyone from the Spartans to Henry Kissinger shares in its entirety without any change over time.
I'm currently reading Baldassare Castiglione's Book of the Courtier as a guide to Renaissance Italian thought. I think the concepts of sprezzatura (studied nonchalance) and l'uomo universale are probably quite important to our study of martial arts of that period. I know less about the thought that may underpin medieval European martial arts, though I suspect the Seven Holy Virtues may be a starting point. I suspect that as we study these further, we will find them greatly in contradiction to our contemporary ideas about martial arts (aggression, doing anything to win, etc.), rather than in support.
Is our understanding of any of these furthered by vague pronouncements about the glory of the West, or Clash of Civilizations rhetoric, or citations of neoconservative court historians? I don't think so. The problem is not that there is too much attention to the cultural and historical context of our arts, but that there is too little!
Brandon Paul Heslop wrote:Mr. Clement's editorial IS founded upon solid history. It is relevant to historical WMA.
david welch wrote:J. F. McBrayer wrote:
No one is saying this. This idea is coming purely from your emotional reaction to what people are saying.
Funny, I thought it was coming from when I was called a racist.
Colin Wheeler wrote:
Can we please get back to talking about new and cool ways to kill each other with sharp pointy objects or our bare hands, and leave the killing each other with ennui-inducing re-iterations of past posts behind?
J. F. McBrayer wrote:
I'm currently reading Baldassare Castiglione's Book of the Courtier as a guide to Renaissance Italian thought. I think the concepts of sprezzatura (studied nonchalance) and l'uomo universale are probably quite important to our study of martial arts of that period.
Jon Pellett wrote:Colin Wheeler wrote:
Can we please get back to talking about new and cool ways to kill each other with sharp pointy objects or our bare hands, and leave the killing each other with ennui-inducing re-iterations of past posts behind?
Hear hear!
Or, if we are going to argue, let's actually read what people are saying, rather than what we imagine they mean according to our own prejudices.J. F. McBrayer wrote:
I'm currently reading Baldassare Castiglione's Book of the Courtier as a guide to Renaissance Italian thought. I think the concepts of sprezzatura (studied nonchalance) and l'uomo universale are probably quite important to our study of martial arts of that period.
Hush, you're drifting on topic.I have to read that book properly. From skimming it I got the impression that it should have been subtitled How to be the Coolest Kid Around.
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Do you think sprezzatura is a concept that can be applied directly to martial arts practice? To make it look effortless you have to be pretty damn good, and if you are doing something like Marozzo then the concept certainly applies, but what about say Fiore?
Cheers
Jon Pellett wrote:Do you think sprezzatura is a concept that can be applied directly to martial arts practice? To make it look effortless you have to be pretty damn good, and if you are doing something like Marozzo then the concept certainly applies, but what about say Fiore?
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