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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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722 Wrestling and Grappling: India<br />

It is difficult, if not impossible, to know whether there have been various<br />

alternatives to, or distinct stages between, the medieval and the modern<br />

traditions of wrestling. <strong>The</strong>re is no doubt, however, that the emphasis<br />

on celibacy is a fairly modern phenomenon, a phenomenon that articulates<br />

the high anxiety of masculinity in late colonial and postcolonial India.<br />

Wrestlers claim that celibacy is an imperative part of the training regimen<br />

because sex in general and the loss of semen in particular are thought to be<br />

debilitating. Brahmacharya, as abstinence and asensuality, has a long genealogy<br />

in South Asia, which can be most clearly traced in the practices of<br />

asceticism and yogic self-discipline on the one hand and the disciplinary<br />

practices of brahmanical ritual pedagogy on the other. Wrestlers explain<br />

their advocacy for absolute asexuality using these idioms, pointing out that<br />

abstinence promotes focused concentration and the development of skill, as<br />

well as the embodiment of shakti (superhuman, subtle strength) manifest in<br />

the aura of pervasive ojas (divine energy).<br />

However, it is clear that celibacy became a very problematic concept<br />

in twentieth-century India, invoking, on the one hand—in the context of<br />

Victorian colonialism—a kind of effete masculinity and, on the other, a<br />

kind of power that was displaced, disarticulated, and ambiguously marked<br />

on the male physique by virtue of its structural androgyny. In this light it is<br />

possible to understand how wrestlers in colonial India sought to articulate,<br />

with nervous bravado, an ideology of hypercelibacy—absolute detachment<br />

from sensual arousal—that was located, bombastically through hyper-selfdiscipline,<br />

in a massively masculine physique. <strong>The</strong> point of reference was<br />

not so much an idealized, intrinsically athletic physique as the threat of<br />

colonial masculinity defined by aggressive sexuality and the attendant feminization<br />

of the colonial subject.<br />

<strong>The</strong> akhara (wrestling gymnasium)—replete with the symbolic significance<br />

of the earthen pit, its microcosmic relationship to the elemental<br />

structure of the cosmos, and the ritualized structure of religious meanings<br />

associated with Lord Hanuman (a patron deity of wrestling), as well as its<br />

spatial and architectural form as an integrated whole—might be considered<br />

the most quintessentially Indian feature of Indian wrestling. Clearly the<br />

earth of the pit has come to symbolize elemental purity, fertility, and the<br />

power of nature. Hanuman’s embodiment of shakti through absolute<br />

celibacy substantiates this symbolism, and links the gymnasium to the sacred<br />

realm, defining it as a locus of physically expressed spiritual devotion.<br />

<strong>The</strong> integrated balance of earth, water, trees, and air is regarded as a kind<br />

of elemental matrix, both marking the gymnasium off as a world apart and<br />

yet redefining the world as whole by way of microcosmic instantiation. In<br />

most respects the gymnasium is conceptualized as a natural environment<br />

minimally transformed to evoke the ideal of a rural, agrarian landscape. In

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