Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho

The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts (新陰流兵法目録書; shinkage-ryū heihō mokuroku), drawn by Yagyū Munetoshi, the founder of the Yagyū shinkage ryū, in 1601, is a classical catalogue of the style’s techniques. Munetoshi painted the scroll as a present to a friend of his, a noh actor...

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Main Author: Michael Mattner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:Acta Periodica Duellatorum
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/apd/article/view/7150
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spelling doaj-30a4a44631cb4525a5a5cd55dda981302021-05-25T13:33:11ZengBern Open PublishingActa Periodica Duellatorum2064-04042020-10-018110.36950/apd-2020-011 Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadenshoMichael Mattner0Ruhr Universität Bochum The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts (新陰流兵法目録書; shinkage-ryū heihō mokuroku), drawn by Yagyū Munetoshi, the founder of the Yagyū shinkage ryū, in 1601, is a classical catalogue of the style’s techniques. Munetoshi painted the scroll as a present to a friend of his, a noh actor. When looking at it one sees the clear calligraphy explaining the techniques, helping anyone who reads to get a grasp of the depicted techniques. Yet these explanations were added in 1707 over one hundred years after the scroll was painted. The explanations themselves sometimes directly seem to quote from the heihō kadensho (“A Hereditary Book on the Art of War”) written around 1632 by Yagyū Munenori, the son of Munetoshi, which can be considered the central text of the style. Despite being written at different times, can the depictions, descriptions and the text together function as a mean to learn the techniques? Is it possible to extract the embodied knowledge embedded in the text by combining the scroll with the commentary and the book? To answer these questions a practical experiment in learning the techniques was undertaken. https://bop.unibe.ch/apd/article/view/7150fighting manualfight booktransmission of knowledgetraditionmartial arts studiesJapan
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Mattner
spellingShingle Michael Mattner
Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho
Acta Periodica Duellatorum
fighting manual
fight book
transmission of knowledge
tradition
martial arts studies
Japan
author_facet Michael Mattner
author_sort Michael Mattner
title Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho
title_short Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho
title_full Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho
title_fullStr Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the No-sword with no teacher: A practical attempt to read The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts with the help of Yagyū heihō kadensho
title_sort understanding the no-sword with no teacher: a practical attempt to read the illustrated catalogue of the shinkage-ryū martial arts with the help of yagyū heihō kadensho
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Acta Periodica Duellatorum
issn 2064-0404
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The Illustrated Catalogue of the Shinkage-Ryū Martial Arts (新陰流兵法目録書; shinkage-ryū heihō mokuroku), drawn by Yagyū Munetoshi, the founder of the Yagyū shinkage ryū, in 1601, is a classical catalogue of the style’s techniques. Munetoshi painted the scroll as a present to a friend of his, a noh actor. When looking at it one sees the clear calligraphy explaining the techniques, helping anyone who reads to get a grasp of the depicted techniques. Yet these explanations were added in 1707 over one hundred years after the scroll was painted. The explanations themselves sometimes directly seem to quote from the heihō kadensho (“A Hereditary Book on the Art of War”) written around 1632 by Yagyū Munenori, the son of Munetoshi, which can be considered the central text of the style. Despite being written at different times, can the depictions, descriptions and the text together function as a mean to learn the techniques? Is it possible to extract the embodied knowledge embedded in the text by combining the scroll with the commentary and the book? To answer these questions a practical experiment in learning the techniques was undertaken.
topic fighting manual
fight book
transmission of knowledge
tradition
martial arts studies
Japan
url https://bop.unibe.ch/apd/article/view/7150
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