don
20th November 2006, 23:04
Two articles related to common threads here:
William Bodiford
Zen and Japanese Swordmanship Reconsidered
Professor Bodiford reiterates his contention that the marriage of Ken-Zen is more illusory than real with lots of evidence closely considered.
Karl Friday
Off the Warpath: Military Science & Budo in the Evolution Ryuha Bugei
Friday similarly trashes the cherished myth that JUTSU became DO with the advent of peace under the Tokugawa. Very interesting thesis in which he claims that the Ryuha Bugei were from the beginning antiquarian pursuits largely out of touch with battlefield realities. Their emergence coincided with the emergence of other MICHI such as poetry and dance during the Sengoku period of constant warfare, not with peace after Tokugawa Ieyasu consolidated his grip on Japan. Friday maintains that Ryuha Bugei were very concerned with the development of the individual and thus DO coeval with their beginning.
Interestingly, other essays in the volume toe the line on the usual Ken-Zen, Jutsu-Do lore. See them all in--
Budo Perspectives
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Kendo World Publications (January 2005)
ISBN: 4990169433
http://www.amazon.com/Budo-Perspectives-Vol-Alexander-Bennet/dp/4990169433/sr=1-1/qid=1164065381/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/102-2275790-5092135?ie=UTF8&s=books
William Bodiford
Zen and Japanese Swordmanship Reconsidered
Professor Bodiford reiterates his contention that the marriage of Ken-Zen is more illusory than real with lots of evidence closely considered.
Karl Friday
Off the Warpath: Military Science & Budo in the Evolution Ryuha Bugei
Friday similarly trashes the cherished myth that JUTSU became DO with the advent of peace under the Tokugawa. Very interesting thesis in which he claims that the Ryuha Bugei were from the beginning antiquarian pursuits largely out of touch with battlefield realities. Their emergence coincided with the emergence of other MICHI such as poetry and dance during the Sengoku period of constant warfare, not with peace after Tokugawa Ieyasu consolidated his grip on Japan. Friday maintains that Ryuha Bugei were very concerned with the development of the individual and thus DO coeval with their beginning.
Interestingly, other essays in the volume toe the line on the usual Ken-Zen, Jutsu-Do lore. See them all in--
Budo Perspectives
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Kendo World Publications (January 2005)
ISBN: 4990169433
http://www.amazon.com/Budo-Perspectives-Vol-Alexander-Bennet/dp/4990169433/sr=1-1/qid=1164065381/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/102-2275790-5092135?ie=UTF8&s=books