Learn the background of Japanese Karate along with the ins and outs of belonging to a dojo with this readable martial arts guide. The Japanese martial art of Karate is not only a means of self-defense; it is also a sport and a philosophy. The Karate Traditions and Tales of a Martial Art examines each of these aspects--through the colorful legends, tales, and traditions that are associated with the art--and explains why educators and parents are becoming increasingly interested in karate. This karate book shows how karate training can change the lives of those who practice it, by giving them health, self-confidence, both physical and mental discipline, as well as calm maturity. This martial arts book includes information the dojo, the belt system, kata and jiu-kumite, potential and goals, famous dojo stories, Okinawan martial arts fighters, ninjutsu, and more!
Peter Urban, geboren 1941 in Berlin, studierte Slavistik, Germanistik und Geschichte in Würzburg und Belgrad, war Verlagslektor bei Suhrkamp, Hörspieldramaturg beim WDR und ist Lektor im Verlag der Autoren in Frankfurt; er übersetzte u.a. Werke von Gorkij, Ostrovskij, Daniil Charms, Kazakov, Chlebnikov und das gesamte dramatische Werk von Anton Cechov. Für seine Neuedition und -übersetzung der Cechov-Briefe wurde ihm der Helmut-M.-Braem-Übersetzerpreis zuerkannt.
Certainly dated and of its time in places. Entirely still relevant in others. A good intro read for some practitioner’s. In a way a historical perspective/read which makes it interesting.
I read the original 1967 edition, which seemed a little dated. I thought it was interesting that kata is related to dance and that an aesthetically beautiful kata is one thing that makes karate a martial "art." In general, this book helps explain the culture of karate, which is a "way of life," not just a fighting technique.