Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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678 Women in the Martial Arts weak and unfit as its goal. People who did not read him closely soon applied this theory to social dynamics, and called the result Social Darwinism. Social Darwinism was a very popular theory among white-collar workers whose masculinity (and jobs) were threatened by women and immigrants. 1865 General James Miranda Barry, the inspector general of the British Army Medical Department, dies in London, and is discovered after death to have been female. 1870 In a world where clerks and secretaries are increasingly female, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch’s novel Venus in Chains turns male clerks’ terror of what Henry James called “damnable feminization” into a fantastic story of fur-clad, whip-cracking women verbally and sexually abusing men. Besides creating a stock figure for subsequent pornographic fiction, von Sacher-Masoch’s conclusion retains some validity: “Whoever allows himself to be whipped deserves to be whipped.” 1875 Parisian street gangsters are reported shaving their heads and dressing in metal-studded leather jackets; the press responds by calling such people “apaches.” Originally, this name referred to a Belgian pepperbox revolver that had a blade under its barrel and a knuckle-duster in its butt, rather than to the Athabascan people of the American Southwest, but after the Apache leader Geronimo became a household word, the revolver was forgotten. Around 1890, the apache name also began to describe a sadomasochistic dance genre in which tattooed, scarred women fought knife or saber duels while stripped to their underclothes, or smiled while men slapped them around. 1878 J. R. Headington argues in the American Christian Review that female athletics represent a nine-step path to ruin; for example, a croquet party leads to picnics, picnics lead to dances, dances lead to absence from church, absence from church leads to immoral conduct, immoral conduct leads to exclusion from church (no forgiveness here!), exclusion from church leads to running away, running away leads to poverty and discontent, poverty and discontent lead to shame and disgrace, and shame and disgrace lead to ruin. Although many middle-class women heeded Headington’s advice, fewer upper-class women did, causing female athleticism, especially in golf, tennis, and cycling, to become increasingly common throughout the late nineteenth century. 1881 Author Charlotte Perkins Gilman of Providence, Rhode Island, perhaps best known for her short story “The Yellow Wallpaper,” becomes the United States’ first known female bodybuilder. Besides lifting weights, Gilman ran a mile a day and boasted of her ability to “vault and jump, go up a knotted rope, walk on my hands under a ladder, kick as high as my head, and revel in the flying rings” (Guttman 1991, 124). By 1904, fencing was also popular with Rhode Island society women; instructors

included Eleanor Baldwin Cass, and students included Marion Fish and Natalie Wells. 1881 A Swedish woman named Martina Bergman-Osterberg becomes the superintendent of physical education for London’s public schools. By 1886, she had trained 1,300 English schoolteachers in the methods of Swedish gymnastics. “I try to train my girls to help raise their own sex,” said Bergman-Osterberg, “and so accelerate the progress of the race.” 1884 The British scientist Sir Francis Galton tests 500 men and 270 women to see how fast they can punch; he finds that the men average 18 feet per second, with a maximum speed of 29 feet per second, while the women average 13 feet per second, with a maximum speed of 20 feet per second. In other words, although some women could hit harder than the average man, most women could hit only 55 percent as hard. 1884 A 20-year-old American woman named Etta Hattan adopts the stage name of Jaguarina, and bills herself as the “Ideal Amazon of the Age.” Whether Hattan was all of that is of course debatable, but she was certainly Amazon enough to defeat many men at mounted broadsword fencing during her fifteen-year professional career. 1887 Circus magnate P. T. Barnum hires wrestler Ed Decker, the Little Wonder from Vermont, as a sideshow attraction, offering to pay $100 to anyone who can pin Decker, and $50 to anyone who can avoid being pinned within three minutes. Despite weighing only 150 pounds and standing only 5 feet 6 inches tall, Decker reportedly never lost to a paying customer. Of course, some matches were harder than others, and as a British sideshow boxer told a reporter a year later, “I still pray, ‘Oh, Lord, let me win the easy way.’” Women also fought as booth boxers. According to Ron Taylor, a Welsh sideshow promoter of the 1960s, “My grandmother used to challenge all comers. She wore protectors on her chest, but she never needed them. Nobody she ever went up against could even come close to hitting her” (undated clippings in Joseph Svinth collection). The most famous of these British fairground pugilists was probably Barbara Buttrick, who was the women’s fly and bantamweight boxing champion from 1950 to 1960. This said, not all the female pugilists were female. For instance, a carnival shill named Charles Edwards told A. J. Liebling about a turn-ofthe-century Texas circus that had a woman stand in front of the tent promising $50 to any man who could stay three rounds with her. Once inside the dimly lit tent, the mark then found himself boxing a cross-dressing male look-alike. 1889 Female boxing becomes popular throughout the United States. Champions included Nellie Stewart of Norfolk, Virginia; Ann Lewis of Cleveland, Ohio; and Hattie Leslie of New York. The audiences were male, and the fighters sometimes stripped to their drawers like men. Savate fights, Women in the Martial Arts 679

678 Women in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong><br />

weak and unfit as its goal. People who did not read him closely soon applied<br />

this theory to social dynamics, and called the result Social Darwinism.<br />

Social Darwinism was a very popular theory among white-collar workers<br />

whose masculinity (and jobs) were threatened by women and immigrants.<br />

1865 General James Miranda Barry, the inspector general of the<br />

British Army Medical Department, dies in London, and is discovered after<br />

death to have been female.<br />

1870 In a world where clerks and secretaries are increasingly female,<br />

Leopold von Sacher-Masoch’s novel Venus in Chains turns male clerks’ terror<br />

of what Henry James called “damnable feminization” into a fantastic<br />

story of fur-clad, whip-cracking women verbally and sexually abusing men.<br />

Besides creating a stock figure for subsequent pornographic fiction, von<br />

Sacher-Masoch’s conclusion retains some validity: “Whoever allows himself<br />

to be whipped deserves to be whipped.”<br />

1875 Parisian street gangsters are reported shaving their heads and<br />

dressing in metal-studded leather jackets; the press responds by calling such<br />

people “apaches.” Originally, this name referred to a Belgian pepperbox<br />

revolver that had a blade under its barrel and a knuckle-duster in its butt,<br />

rather than to the Athabascan people of the American Southwest, but after<br />

the Apache leader Geronimo became a household word, the revolver was<br />

forgotten. Around 1890, the apache name also began to describe a sadomasochistic<br />

dance genre in which tattooed, scarred women fought knife or<br />

saber duels while stripped to their underclothes, or smiled while men<br />

slapped them around.<br />

1878 J. R. Headington argues in the American Christian Review that<br />

female athletics represent a nine-step path to ruin; for example, a croquet<br />

party leads to picnics, picnics lead to dances, dances lead to absence from<br />

church, absence from church leads to immoral conduct, immoral conduct<br />

leads to exclusion from church (no forgiveness here!), exclusion from<br />

church leads to running away, running away leads to poverty and discontent,<br />

poverty and discontent lead to shame and disgrace, and shame and<br />

disgrace lead to ruin. Although many middle-class women heeded Headington’s<br />

advice, fewer upper-class women did, causing female athleticism,<br />

especially in golf, tennis, and cycling, to become increasingly common<br />

throughout the late nineteenth century.<br />

1881 Author Charlotte Perkins Gilman of Providence, Rhode Island,<br />

perhaps best known for her short story “<strong>The</strong> Yellow Wallpaper,” becomes<br />

the United States’ first known female bodybuilder. Besides lifting weights,<br />

Gilman ran a mile a day and boasted of her ability to “vault and jump,<br />

go up a knotted rope, walk on my hands under a ladder, kick as high as<br />

my head, and revel in the flying rings” (Guttman 1991, 124). By 1904,<br />

fencing was also popular with Rhode Island society women; instructors

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