Looking East and South: Philosophical Reflections on Taijiquan and Capoeira

Author:

Jennings George1ORCID,Delamont Sara2

Affiliation:

1. Cardiff School of Sport and Health Sciences, Cardiff Metropolitan University, Cardiff CF5 2YB, UK

2. School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF10 3AT, UK

Abstract

In a precarious occupation, martial arts instructors must be inspiring and build a shared philosophy. Drawing on Taijiquan and Capoeira, which have their philosophical or epistemological roots in Asia and Africa, this article explores core concepts that feature in students’ enculturation. These concepts are grounded in epistemologies contrasting with Papineau’s work on popular and elite sport, Knowing the Score. More specifically, the philosophical approach used builds upon Papineau’s chapters on focus, cheating and racism, although these martial practices are not grounded in the Judeo-Christian Western epistemologies underlying Papineau’s thinking. Indeed, one of the attractions for Western Capoeira and Taijiquan students is precisely their “strange” or exotic philosophical concepts driving specific pedagogical practices. Ethnographic fieldwork in Britain and written and oral accounts of embodied expertise are used to explore the practical uses of these non-Western epistemologies by teachers to build shared cultures for their students. Specifically, we examine the concepts of axé (life force) and malicia (artful trickery) in Capoeira, noting its contrast to Western ideas of energy and fair play. We then examine Taijiquan and the concepts of song (鬆 or “letting go”) and ting (听 or “focused listening”), considering the movement skill of systematic relaxation and the focus on specific components of human anatomy and body technique among adults unlearning embodied tension built throughout their lives. We close with considerations for projects examining the diverse, alternative southern, non-Western, and potentially decolonial and subaltern epistemologies in such martial activities.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,Philosophy

Reference63 articles.

1. Shahar, M. (2008). The Shaolin Monastery: History, Religion and the Chinese Martial Arts, University of Hawaii Press.

2. Papineau, D. (2017). Knowing the Score: How Sport Teaches Us about Philosophy (and Philosophy about Sport), Little Brown and Co.

3. Mbiti, J. (1969). African Religions and Philosophy, Heinemann.

4. Maffie, J. (2014). Aztec Philosophy: Understanding a World in Motion, University of Colorado Press.

5. Exploring embodiment through martial arts and combat sports: A review of empirical research;Channon;Sport Soc.,2014

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