Postby Guest » Tue Jun 17, 2003 5:40 am
It is interesting to me that most modern practitioners of Chinese martial have a foolishly romantic notion that Chinese martial arts had nothing to do with making money. If you look at Qing era (1644-1911) Chinese martial artists you will find that martial arts was a manual trade, not much different that bricklaying. Qing era martial artists did not practice for their health, for some religious reason or to improve their character. They practiced because martial arts were their job.
The majority of them were full time career soldiers and arts such as xingyi or various of the Shaolin systems were part of being a soldier. The emphasis for these soldier martial artists was not empty hand, but rather the basic weapons. By that I mean spear, staff and saber. Obviously by the time you get to the end of the Qing era rife marksmanship was starting to replace spear and saber work as the main skill.
Private security companies were one of the major ways that martial artists in the Qing era made their livings. The other common employments were teaching martial arts or working as a “bone setter ( a type of traditional Chinese medicine that involved massage, herbal remedies and plasters). Martial artists who found none of those employments to their liking or lot in life, tended to drift downward on the social scale into either street entertainer (i.e. doing martial arts performances on the street and then passing the hat around) or crime. Contrary to the movies and popular impression, most martial artists of Qing era China were not grizzled and wise monks nor handsome and brave knight errants. They had more mundane ways to make a living from their martial arts.
As to the strip mall martial artists approach happening to western martial arts, I would guess it will. And that raises another interesting point which is why, the real reason why, do most people who take martial arts do so. For most parents (who are I strongly suspect, the biggest buyers of martial arts lessons in America) paying for lessons for the kids; the parents do not really care if the kid learns to fight or if the system is traditional or authentic. It is just something for the kiddies to do. As long as the school seems safe and the kids like the instructor, that is all the parents care about. What this means as a practical matter is that the quality of the martial art being taught is basically meaningless. Anyway, can the average Joe Parent tell real martial arts from fake?
Now turning to the adult market, which I suspect is only about 1/4 of the total market, most adults are far more interested in martial arts for health, or as some form of recreation; than in real combat ability or the system being true, authentic, traditional or any of those criteria. I would say the average Joe Adult neither cares nor can tell real martial arts from fake.
So if western martial arts does enter the marketplace, if it does catch the public's fancy, then I suspect you will find in the near future a banner at a strip mall near you something like:
Sir Brian's School of Battle Sword and Robin Hood Staff (a licensed franchise of Sir Brian Inc.)
3 Months for $99,
Free Balsa Wood Staff Included
Well, hopefully not.
Take care,
Brian