Postby Jake_Norwood » Thu Jul 01, 2004 10:01 am
I agree absolutely. Meyer is one of the best technical writers of the entire fechtbuch world, if not the best. And the images are top-notch.
Now, as for the purpose of Meyer's book, and it's relation to the earlier German material, that's where I (and Mike Rassmussen, based on our recent conversations) strongly disagree with the general concensus (at least out at SFI). We both agree that it's a classroom manual, aimed at the classroom, but that these men in the classroom are training to "really fight," not primarily for some kind of scored combative sport. There's a load of in-text evidence that I've discovered, recently, in fact, that supports the train-to-fight-for-real approach to Meyer's text as well.
I also think that Meyer is one of the best ways in which to approach the earlier German material. Yes, there are a few differences, some of which are classroom-based and others are simple interpretation differences between, say, Ringeck and Meyer, but both are markedly "German post-Liechtenauer."
Jake
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director