24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

<strong>The</strong> heroic display ethos of a culture or subculture is that collective set<br />

of behaviors, expected actions, and principles or codes of conduct that ideally<br />

guide and are displayed by a hero, and are the subject of many traditional<br />

ballads or epics where seemingly superhuman heroes display bravery,<br />

courage, and valor in the face of death. As Elias points out, for the Greeks,<br />

Hector was as glorious in defeat as his conqueror, Achilles, since he too<br />

fought as one must to be a hero, with all one’s “might until one was<br />

maimed, wounded, or killed and could fight no longer. ... What was inglorious<br />

and shameful was to surrender victory without a sufficient show of<br />

bravery and endurance” (1972, 100). <strong>The</strong> game-contests and dances provided<br />

opportunities for the performative display of the heroic ethos that was<br />

a legacy of the Homeric epics.<br />

<strong>The</strong> heroic display ethos of a culture, the oral and/or written mythologies<br />

and histories of martial exploits, and the specific martial techniques<br />

per se collectively constitute a network of three symbiotically interrelated<br />

phenomena, which combine to constitute a variety of genres of cultural<br />

performance ranging from aesthetic, virtual displays choreographed in<br />

highly stylized dance or dramatic forms (such as the Anapale), to gamecontests<br />

or mock combats arranged as part of a public festival (such as the<br />

original Olympic contests), to duels or combats (the later gladiatorial combats/contests<br />

of the Roman Empire), to external warfare itself. Public displays<br />

of power or arms, socially and legally sanctioned arenas where tests<br />

of strength or duels occur, and mock combats or exhibitions of martial<br />

skills have always served as discrete and important types of cultural performance<br />

in which martial techniques have played an important role.<br />

Through such public performances a particular (sub) culture’s warrior-hero<br />

ethos itself is displayed to a wide public through use of actual techniques.<br />

In the West there are many examples of historically significant heroic<br />

literatures that embody a particular period’s display ethos; however, few<br />

examples of performance forms exist in the modern West that are based on<br />

martial forms or that embody the heroic or display ethos of a former era.<br />

<strong>The</strong> forms that do exist in the West are often examples of what Schechner<br />

has called “restored behavior,” today’s Renaissance Fairs, for example,<br />

which employ actors dressed in period costumes reconstructing jousting<br />

matches in which knights stage mock combats for the hands of fair ladies<br />

of court, or stage combat techniques historically reconstructing the precise<br />

use of historically accurate weaponry as part of a staged drama.<br />

Unlike the West, in Asia and other parts of the world we find many<br />

cases of living martial traditions whose techniques have formed the core of<br />

many cultural performances that display the culture’s heroic ethos as well<br />

as bring to life its mythic, epic, or historical heroic literatures. Such performances<br />

include ritual and folk, as well as “classical,” genres. Indeed, it<br />

Performing <strong>Arts</strong> 419

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!