Shotokan's Secret: The Hidden Truth Behind...
Posted: Sat Mar 01, 2008 8:40 pm
Karate's Fighting Origin by Bruce D. Clayton, Phd (in ecology , BTW)
Interesting book. Basically outlines the generation before Funakoshi. He theorizes, and I mean theroizes, that all these guys were bodyguards to the ruler of Shuri and Karate was a bodyguard art. He goes on to back engineer how that explains a bunch of stuff. Certainly academically interesting, and who knows, he's done his homework.
The thing that gave it a little more credence for me is he readily admits that karate is missing lot's of stuff for fighting, that karate as it is taught today is a farce and outlines a Shuri -te ll that includes weapons, ground fighting etc...
Worth a read if you're into this kind of thing.
Also reread Seamus Heaney "Opened Ground" Selected Poems 1966-1996 - this is of course a must read. Very much in the man poetry genre, if you will.
Interesting book. Basically outlines the generation before Funakoshi. He theorizes, and I mean theroizes, that all these guys were bodyguards to the ruler of Shuri and Karate was a bodyguard art. He goes on to back engineer how that explains a bunch of stuff. Certainly academically interesting, and who knows, he's done his homework.
The thing that gave it a little more credence for me is he readily admits that karate is missing lot's of stuff for fighting, that karate as it is taught today is a farce and outlines a Shuri -te ll that includes weapons, ground fighting etc...
Worth a read if you're into this kind of thing.
Also reread Seamus Heaney "Opened Ground" Selected Poems 1966-1996 - this is of course a must read. Very much in the man poetry genre, if you will.