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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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A boy practicing<br />

martial arts on a<br />

beach in western<br />

Australia, 1980s.<br />

(Robert Garvey/<br />

Corbis)<br />

534 Social Uses of the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong><br />

chose the former, and as a result became<br />

the short-lived (but famous) hero of<br />

Homer’s Iliad. Meanwhile fights, duels,<br />

and homicide about matters of honor or<br />

masculinity are so common as to almost<br />

need no mention.<br />

Invented tradition. Invented traditions<br />

(a term introduced by E. J. Hobsbawm<br />

and Terence Ranger in 1983) establish<br />

social cohesion, legitimize<br />

political institutions, and sell commercial<br />

products. Examples of invented traditions<br />

include George Washington<br />

chopping down cherry trees, fat whitebearded<br />

Santas wearing red suits, and<br />

the Korean art taekwondo owing more<br />

to the warriors of ancient Silla than the<br />

college karate classes of Imperial Japan.<br />

Much (perhaps most) martial arts history<br />

is invented tradition; as Thomas<br />

Green has written, a system’s official<br />

past is more frequently the product of<br />

dialogue and imagination than chronology<br />

(1997, 159).<br />

Lord of disorder. Basically, people<br />

get together and hold festivals in which the normal order of the world is<br />

turned upside down. Thus feasting follows fasting. Energetic dancing follows<br />

heavy drinking. Women dressed as men abuse men dressed as women.<br />

Trickster becomes Warrior-King, and <strong>The</strong> Fool becomes the Sage. During<br />

these times, the authority of the state is always at risk: Something happens<br />

when people move out of the house or yard or dôjô and into the street with<br />

their martial activities. <strong>The</strong>re is a subtext to the word street-fighter. <strong>Martial</strong><br />

examples include stickfighting being associated with Carnival in the<br />

Philippines, fairs in Ireland and China, and harvest festivals in Africa, and<br />

wrestling being associated with fairs in Britain and the festival of<br />

Duesshera/Muharram in India.<br />

Military training. In traditional society, preparation for military service<br />

often involves archery and stick games, energetic dancing (Indian tandava,<br />

Brazilian capoeira, Spartan pyrrhiche), and horse or canoe races.<br />

However, in industrialized societies, the focus often has shifted to shooting<br />

and wrestling games. Not everyone agrees that wrestling and dancing are<br />

worth the effort, however. For example, in a biographical sketch called

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