As a young person who practices Shotokan - which i find to be a fine striking art, i feel that on the internet and to many people, Shotokan is misrepresented in it's form and history.
Most people know the Karate of yesterday where in the 1970's many tournaments were turned into all out wars. I've seen the videos, many fighters from that time were of exceptional skill. While browsing this forum i saw a few threads about old schoo karate, people saying how it has "fallen from it's former greatness" and i must say, i agree. In many aspects it has gone the way of the "TKD McDojo" but i feel there's something missing. I know plenty of Dojos that are reliable and great places to learn and grow. I've trained at several of them in my home town of Los Angeles, and while we may have several of our own 'McDojos' in the SKA(Shotokan Karate of America) it is mostly an extremely respectable traditional karate organization. But I digress!
The real history of Shotokan and well, Karate in general goes back many years, before World War II. In 1917 Gichin Funakoshi, an Okinawan man whom practiced karate long before it had any names, it was simply 'karate', made a trip to Kyoto under permission from his master to hold a karate demonstration. To make a long story short, japanese interest was high after the the Emperor Hirohito saw an okinawan karate demonstration and was so interested that he talked about it for days. When Funakoshi left his home in okinawa, including his wife(whom expressed praise for his wanting to share karate) and his masters, he moved to Tokyo and began teaching the general japanese population Karate. (if you'd like to read more, this is all i have to offer. http://www.worldblackbelt.com/Martial_Arts_Styles/Shotokan.asp)
Oh, and about the name? Shoto was Funakoshi's pen name when he was young, so when they named the style they called it "Shotokan" or "House of Shoto", making it one of the first Karate styles to have it's own 'name' . If you'd like to know more, i'd suggest getting Funakoshi's biography titled "Karate Do, My way of Life" it's a very good book and offers alot of incite on modern karate.
Hope you enjoyed my little bit of history here; i'm sure not everyone here will enjoy this but hopefully some who enjoy the 'art' part of martial arts will like this. I could go on and on with more and more history, so kust ask if you'd like to know more!
ironlurker
7/07/2007 3:05pm,
Most people know the Karate of yesterday where in the 1970's many tournaments were turned into all out wars. I've seen the videos, many fighters from that time were of exceptional skill.
I've read books about old school shotokan and bloody bareknuckle fights. But at the same time, while the fighters prided themselves on their toughness, it seemed that an ambivalence to (full-)contact fighting, brawling, etc. quickly grew, spurred in part (at least according to what I've read) by bad PR from sensationalistic headlines about "violent karate", "karate nut arrested for x or y", "bloody karate battle", etc. Quotes from karate people like Tegner and Mattson come to mind.
One shotokan author (whose name escapes me right now) maintained that newer karatekas were "better athletes" after the move away from the fights you talk about, which was more important then being "a fighter." So, what do you think was responsible for this change?
a) bad PR/legal issues
b) lack/ignorance of proper protective gear, so a dichotomy of "emergency room" vs. "point sparring" came into play
c) mass marketing, to kids/parents/hobbyists etc. not interested in fighting per se
d) the feeling that "sport" was more important then "fighting", or that the two were mutually exclusive
e) the feeling that pulled strikes or point-contact did not degrade the fighting capability of the style
D Masters
7/07/2007 3:51pm,
I've read books about old school shotokan and bloody bareknuckle fights. But at the same time, while the fighters prided themselves on their toughness, it seemed that an ambivalence to (full-)contact fighting, brawling, etc. quickly grew, spurred in part (at least according to what I've read) by bad PR from sensationalistic headlines about "violent karate", "karate nut arrested for x or y", "bloody karate battle", etc. Quotes from karate people like Tegner and Mattson come to mind.
One shotokan author (whose name escapes me right now) maintained that newer karatekas were "better athletes" after the move away from the fights you talk about, which was more important then being "a fighter." So, what do you think was responsible for this change?
a) bad PR/legal issues
b) lack/ignorance of proper protective gear, so a dichotomy of "emergency room" vs. "point sparring" came into play
c) mass marketing, to kids/parents/hobbyists etc. not interested in fighting per se
d) the feeling that "sport" was more important then "fighting", or that the two were mutually exclusive
e) the feeling that pulled strikes or point-contact did not degrade the fighting capability of the style
Well personally, from my own experience at my dojo, they market it out to women's self defense and confidence for little kids, but when it gets into the advanced classes that are populated mostly by black belts the fighting gets pretty vicious.
I personally think what was responsible for that change though was just social shift. The 70's were right after the vietnam war, people were angry at the government, many men needed something to take out their aggressions. This was also the hayday of Bruce Lee and kung/fu karate movies. Alot of my parent's friends and older friends all took some form of martial arts when they were young.
I think you're right though, about the violence thing. Karate was extremely bloody and violent in the 70's.
As for point sparring? I've had my share of instances when i had obviously won a fight but still lost due to a bad point system. So go figure, you know?
kwoww
7/07/2007 5:29pm,
As for point sparring? I've had my share of instances when i had obviously won a fight but still lost due to a bad point system. So go figure, you know?
This happens in MMA, too. See: Palmer v. Cole in the IFL.
Permalost
7/07/2007 5:31pm,
The real history of Shotokan and well, Karate in general goes back many years, before World War II. In 1917 Gichin Funakoshi, an Okinawan man whom practiced karate long before it had any names, it was simply 'karate', made a trip to Kyoto under permission from his master to hold a karate demonstration. To make a long story short, japanese interest was high after the the Emperor Hirohito saw an okinawan karate demonstration and was so interested that he talked about it for days. When Funakoshi left his home in okinawa, including his wife(whom expressed praise for his wanting to share karate) and his masters, he moved to Tokyo and began teaching the general japanese population Karate. (if you'd like to read more, this is all i have to offer.
I think the more important parts of shotokan history are neglected here. The karate Funakoshi learned from Azato is different from the older branches of karate you can find in Okinawa. Why did these older teachers change the CMA type karate that was done before? I think this is key to understanding shotokan and other hard style karate. If you research the bunkai stuff, you learn about what these changes were and why they happened.
*note: I don't practice Shotokan; the closest I've done was a semester of tang soo do at SDSU.
Permalost
7/07/2007 5:34pm,
I'll also note that the Shotokan practitioners I've met have been pretty cool- at least they focus on things like developing hard, connected punches and elbows, and hard front and side kicks instead of 540 jumping hook kicks and such. Beating a makiwara has advantages over some of the drills and such I've seen in other arts.
Mr Bosco
7/07/2007 10:43pm,
From what I've heard so far around here, the main style of Karate people respect is Kyokushin. But the techniques of Kyokushin must be si,ilar to that of SHotokan. I suppose if you take a Shotokan dojo, drill them with lot's of pad work, fitness work and hard contact sparring you'll have good fighters. Much like any other martial art.
D Masters
7/08/2007 3:29am,
I think the more important parts of shotokan history are neglected here. The karate Funakoshi learned from Azato is different from the older branches of karate you can find in Okinawa. Why did these older teachers change the CMA type karate that was done before? I think this is key to understanding shotokan and other hard style karate. If you research the bunkai stuff, you learn about what these changes were and why they happened.
*note: I don't practice Shotokan; the closest I've done was a semester of tang soo do at SDSU.
Of course Karate predates what happened in what i wrote, i was really only focusing on the time when Shotokan itself was 'created'. I don't think much changed as Funakoshi passed down the art that was taught to him by Azato and several others ( i'll get my Funakoshi biography to get the other's names later) because Funakoshi found it extremely disrespectfull and felt he had no place to change anything they had taught him.
That's something i admore about the japanese, very respectfull. Good to see that people know their stuff around here :)
This happens in MMA, too. See: Palmer v. Cole in the IFL.
It's unfortunate, but nothing to dwell on.
I'll also note that the Shotokan practitioners I've met have been pretty cool- at least they focus on things like developing hard, connected punches and elbows, and hard front and side kicks instead of 540 jumping hook kicks and such. Beating a makiwara has advantages over some of the drills and such I've seen in other arts.
Yeah we don't do much acrobatic stuff. It's mostly just training by doing. Many oizuki or tseiken tsuki punches up and down the floor and etc. We do alot of drillwork, kata, basics, and sparring at my dojo. It's pretty well rounded. (although i will admit, my home dojo is known among some others for practicing alot of sparring, so i can't vouch for other shotokan schools in the area.)
From what I've heard so far around here, the main style of Karate people respect is Kyokushin. But the techniques of Kyokushin must be si,ilar to that of SHotokan. I suppose if you take a Shotokan dojo, drill them with lot's of pad work, fitness work and hard contact sparring you'll have good fighters. Much like any other martial art.
Personally i respect all martial arts styles unless they outwardly prove themselves to be fake. I respect kyokushin heavily. After watching some Ryu Narushima videos, i don't see much difference from how we conduct our free sparring in our classes. We do a bit of pad work, but alot of drilling. Not much fitness though, i handle that on my own.
"Hard contact sparring you'll have good fighters. Much like any other martial art."
You raise a fine point! Most people don't realize that with enough effort, any style can be both dangerous and effective. I think that's something many people don't realize :)
Mr Bosco
7/08/2007 4:39am,
Exactly.
Okay, fitness work you do on your own. I do too. Nothing wrong with that. I don't like paying people to do pushups, sprint drills or burpees. That I cab do by myself.
But, how is the fight training. Do you guys do lots of fight technique work ? Do you guys do pad work or hard contact fighting ? If the answer to those questions is "Yes" you have a good club. If not I would find something else.
urasj
7/08/2007 5:37am,
The problem for some "TMA" is that they don't sparr enough. Many Traditional Karate dojos have same drills / techniques as kyokushin, but kyokushin usually produce better fighters. The reason is probably that kyokushin does alot more hard sparring while TMA might be abit laid back on that area. Ofcourse, should the TMA also have hard sparring, they too would probably produce good fighters.
Shotokan in Norway is more or less regarded as a "Kata" martial art. Little sparring compared to other TMA styles. From what I understand though, Traditional Karate in Norway seems to put more focus on hard sparring than form what I hear of US Dojos.
TheMightyMcClaw
7/08/2007 9:49am,
Shotokan was the first martial art I ever studied. I've done it for about three years, and got up to brown belt.
The dojo I went to had some vicious, full contact sparring.Much harder than anything I've done with MMA and muay thai guys.
Of course, getting my brain kicked in kind of made me less eager to spar, so it's not nescessarily a good thing.
That said, I don't really like Shotokan. While I like my dojo, and visit whenever I'm in town, the style in and of itself has some irritating problems:
-Point break kumite. While this wasn't the way we fought in the dojo, it was the way we fought in tournaments. I hate, hate, hate point break kumite. Aside from the general problems of pointfighting, having the match stopped every five seconds for the ref to say "not enough" seriously gets on my nerves.
-No leg kicks is lame. Especially since all the traditional kicks in the kata are thrown below the waist.... but the only kicks allowed in competition are ABOVE the waist.
-Kata. Specifically, kata for competition. Spending half an hour getting that kukotsu dachi to line up just perfectly so I can score better in the next tournament never struck me as a good way to spend time. This same complaint can be extended to any martial art that does form competitions (excluding wushu, that **** is just fun).
-All those deep stances and snapping kicks cannot be good for your hips and knees. When I practiced Shotokan, it seemed like their was a constant ache in my lower joints.
Mobious12
7/08/2007 9:54am,
I left my shotokan dojo because we simple didnt spar far enough, and sparing was rather limited (although we did not do full out point sparring) all our drills were for kata , little "self defense", and we had full 90 minute classes of kata.
It was a workout, but total bull when in a fight.
^ The above poster is right on with my experiences as well.
jtkarate
7/08/2007 10:17am,
Shotokan was the first martial art I ever studied. I've done it for about three years, and got up to brown belt.
The dojo I went to had some vicious, full contact sparring.Much harder than anything I've done with MMA and muay thai guys.
Of course, getting my brain kicked in kind of made me less eager to spar, so it's not nescessarily a good thing.
Whats not a good thing about that . So you went from a TMA that does hard full contact sparring to something that is weaker. According to your statement.
Point break kumite. While this wasn't the way we fought in the dojo, it was the way we fought in tournaments. I hate, hate, hate point break kumite. Aside from the general problems of pointfighting, having the match stopped every five seconds for the ref to say "not enough" seriously gets on my nerves.
Agree with you on that.
-
Kata. Specifically, kata for competition. Spending half an hour getting that kukotsu dachi to line up just perfectly so I can score better in the next tournament never struck me as a good way to spend time. This same complaint can be extended to any martial art that does form competitions (excluding wushu, that **** is just fun).
Spending time learning how to do a stance properly is supposed to be done to help you learn how to do the technique correctly and is also used for conditioning. If you try and do mawashi geri for example from an incorrect stance you could end up hurting yourself.
-
All those deep stances and snapping kicks cannot be good for your hips and knees. When I practiced Shotokan, it seemed like their was a constant ache in my lower joints.
See above:4robot:
jtkarate
7/08/2007 10:18am,
I left my shotokan dojo because we simple didnt spar far enough, and sparing was rather limited (although we did not do full out point sparring) all our drills were for kata , little "self defense", and we had full 90 minute classes of kata.
It was a workout, but total bull when in a fight.
^ The above poster is right on with my experiences as well.
Smart move on getting out of there.
Permalost
7/08/2007 11:27am,
Of course Karate predates what happened in what i wrote, i was really only focusing on the time when Shotokan itself was 'created'. I don't think much changed as Funakoshi passed down the art that was taught to him by Azato and several others ( i'll get my Funakoshi biography to get the other's names later) because Funakoshi found it extremely disrespectfull and felt he had no place to change anything they had taught him.
Funakoshi didn't really make the changes, but his teachers did. Funakoshi just didn't teach applications of the moves because he either never learned them or thought the health benefits outweighted the need to teach that stuff to school children.
ironlurker
7/08/2007 11:40am,
-Point break kumite. While this wasn't the way we fought in the dojo, it was the way we fought in tournaments
That's really annoying. When I did Uechi this was the case as well. Depending on the dojo and rank you could do a lot of contact, but all the tournaments I remember were point.