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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Moreover, they say, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that<br />

pattern practice is meant to be employed only as a tool for teaching and<br />

learning the principles that underlie the techniques that make up the kata.<br />

Once these principles have been absorbed, the tool is to be set aside. A student’s<br />

training begins with pattern practice, but it is not supposed to end<br />

there. <strong>The</strong> eventual goal is for students to move beyond codified, technical<br />

applications to express the essential principles of the art in their own<br />

unique fashion, to transcend both the kata and the techniques from which<br />

they are composed, just as art students moved beyond imitation and copying<br />

to produce works of their own.<br />

But while controversy concerning the relative merits of pattern practice,<br />

free sparring, and other training methods is often characterized as one<br />

of traditionalists versus reformers, it is actually anything but new. In Japan,<br />

for example, the conflict is in fact nearly 300 years old, and the “traditionalist”<br />

position only antedates the “reformist” one by a few decades.<br />

<strong>The</strong> historical record indicates that pattern practice had become the<br />

principal means of transmission in Japanese martial art instruction by the<br />

late 1400s. It was not, however, the only way in which warriors of the period<br />

learned how to fight. Most samurai built on insights gleaned from pattern<br />

practice with experience in actual combat. This was, after all, the “Age<br />

of the Country at War,” when participation in battles was both the goal<br />

and the motivation for martial training. But training conditions altered<br />

considerably in the seventeenth century. First, the era of warring domains<br />

came to an end, and Japan settled into a 250-year Pax Tokugawa. Second,<br />

the new Tokugawa shogunate placed severe restrictions on the freedom of<br />

samurai to travel outside their own domains. Third, the teaching of martial<br />

art began to emerge as a profession. And fourth, contests between practitioners<br />

from different schools came to be frowned upon by both the government<br />

and many of the schools themselves.<br />

One result of these developments was a tendency for pattern practice<br />

to assume an enlarged role in the teaching and learning process. For new<br />

generations of first students and then teachers who had never known combat,<br />

kata became their only exposure to martial skills. In some schools, skill<br />

in pattern practice became an end in itself. Kata grew showier and more<br />

stylized, while trainees danced their way through them with little attempt<br />

to internalize anything but the outward form. By the late seventeenth century,<br />

self-styled experts on proper samurai behavior were already mourning<br />

the decline of martial training. In the early 1700s, several sword schools<br />

in what is now Tokyo began experimenting with equipment designed to<br />

permit free sparring at full or near-full speed and power, while at the same<br />

time maintaining a reasonable level of safety. This innovation touched off<br />

the debate that continues to this day.<br />

Form/Xing/Kata/Pattern Practice 139

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