Invention of Martial Arts
Popular Culture Between Asia and America
chiefly an invention of media representations. Les mer
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chiefly an invention of media representations. Rather than passively taking up a preexisting history of martial arts practices-some of which, of course, predated the martial arts boom in popular culture-media images and narratives actively constructed martial arts.
Grounded in a historical survey of the British media history of martial arts such as Bartitsu, jujutsu, judo, karate, tai chi, and MMA across a range of media, this book thoroughly recasts our understanding of the history of martial arts. By interweaving theories of key thinkers on historiography, such as Foucault and Hobsbawm, and Said's ideas on Orientalism with analyses of both mainstream and marginal media texts, Bowman arrives at the surprising insight that media representations created
martial arts rather than the other way around. In this way, he not only deepens our understanding of martial arts but also demonstrates the productive power of media discourses.
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Utgitt:
2021
Forlag: Oxford University Press Inc
Innbinding: Paperback
Språk: Engelsk
ISBN: 9780197540343
Format: 23 x 15 cm
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«In The Invention of Martial Arts, Bowman takes readers on an expedition in media archeology. Important and surprising in turns, this exploration explains the ways that we think, talk and fantasize about these fighting systems. This exhaustively researched and theoretically informed work is sure to become required reading for students of cultural, media and martial arts studies.»
«Wide ranging, rich in detail, and meticulously researched, The Invention of Martial Arts traces multiple and varied representations of structured, combative praxes in the UK. Moving beyond a now-conventional inquiry into kung fu film, Bowman provides a history of the idea of martial arts as articulated through popular culture forms as diverse as novels, TV commercials, cartoons, and pop music.»
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction--The Invention of Martial Arts: Popular Culture between Asia and America
Chapter 2: Modernity, Media and Martial Arts, or: From Beginning at the Origin to the Origin of the Beginning
Chapter 3: Martial Arts into Media Culture
Chapter 4: Everybody Was Kung Ku Citing: Inventing Popular Martial Arts Aesthetics
Chapter 5: From Linear History to Discursive Constellation
Chapter 6: The Meaning of Martial Arts
Chapter 7: I Want My TKD: Martial Arts in Music Videos
Chapter 8: Martial Ads
Chapter 9: The Invention of Tradition in Martial Arts
Chapter 10: Inventing Martial Subjects: Toxic Masculinity, MMA and Media Representations
Conclusion: After the Invention
References
Index