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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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stance, which calls for feet shoulder-width apart with the toes and knees<br />

turned in at 45-degree angles. <strong>The</strong> system favors flowing with an opponent<br />

rather than meeting force with force and deflecting strikes with one’s own<br />

strikes at such an angle as to simultaneously block and attack. <strong>The</strong>refore,<br />

yongchun is well suited for use by a smaller, weaker person against a larger,<br />

stronger one.<br />

Finally, yongchun, unlike the overwhelming majority of Asian martial<br />

arts and many non-Asian ones, is notable for its absence of ritual. <strong>The</strong> primary<br />

example of this is the fact that the yongchun sets begin without the<br />

formal bow that precedes the forms of most other martial arts.<br />

Yongchun systems exist that developed parallel to Yip Man’s. Since<br />

the 1970s, however, Yip’s system has enjoyed overwhelming international<br />

popularity. Some of this is due to Grand Master Yip himself; he developed<br />

an effective system and introduced it to the public before his rivals. More<br />

importantly, though, he taught film star Bruce Lee (1940–1973) yongchun<br />

in the mid-1950s. Lee vocally acknowledged his debt to Yip throughout his<br />

career. As a result of these factors, Yip’s students, such as Hawkins Cheung,<br />

Leung Ting, William Cheung, and others, have successfully perpetuated<br />

the Yip system of yongchun.<br />

During the 1960s, Bruce Lee developed his own martial systems,<br />

which expanded on and departed from the yongchun techniques he learned<br />

from Yip Man. For example, Jeet Kune Do translates as “intercepting fist<br />

way”; the intercepting fist is also a principle of yongchun.<br />

In Hong Kong, Leung Ting has sought to systematize and popularize<br />

Yip Man’s yongchun by introducing a highly structured curriculum, a ranking<br />

hierarchy, uniforms, and diplomas under the auspices of the Wing Tsun<br />

Leung Ting <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Association.<br />

Yongchun systems, unlike many other martial arts, show no sign of<br />

developing into sports. <strong>The</strong>ir compact movements lack the spectacular acrobatics<br />

that have caused other arts to capture public attention. As a practical<br />

defensive art, however, the international popularity of yongchun continues<br />

undiminished.<br />

Thomas A. Green<br />

See also Boxing, Chinese; Boxing, Chinese Shaolin Styles; Folklore in<br />

the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>; Women in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>: China; Written Texts:<br />

China<br />

References<br />

Chaudhuri, Joyotpaul. 1995. “Defending the Motherline: Wing Chun’s Sil<br />

Lim Tao.” Journal of Asian <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 4, no. 4: 70–83.<br />

Cheung, Hawkins. 1987. “<strong>The</strong> Beginning of Modern Day Wing Chun.”<br />

Inside Kung-Fu 14 (January): 58–64, 106–108.<br />

Godwin, Karl. 1986. “In Search of Wing Chun’s Roots.” Black Belt 24<br />

(June): 39–42, 92.<br />

Yongchun/Wing Chun 785

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