Below is an excerpt from another excellent post at Kung Fu Tea. The subject is to examine what is our beginning and continuing motivation to practice martial arts. The full post may be read here.
Connecting the dots between an individual’s intentions, their actions
and subsequent systemic outcomes is more difficult than one might
suspect. Just ask any social scientist. Understanding each of these
categories is important if we want to come to terms with either the
causes, or interpretive meanings, of any event. Yet the structure of
the social world dictates that none of us get to work our will just how
we would like. My desires may bump up against your goals, and suddenly
we both find ourselves acting “strategically.” As the environment
becomes complex, everyone is forced to do things that are not reflective
of their original intentions. Often this brings about situations that
no single actor intended.
This is how you get major interstate wars, at least according to a
number of leading scholars in the discipline of International
Relations. Given its excessively costly nature, great power war is
often modeled as a type of miscalculation. Or as one of my old teachers
put it “War is the error term.” We could say something similar about
lots of bad outcomes. There is not a single super-villain out there
devising a plan to pollute the world’s oceans with plastics. Rather,
lots of people make individual choices about personal consumption, or
corporate policy, and the end result is something that no one individual
truly intended. Such is the tragedy of the commons.
This leads us to one of the most important realizations to emerge
from the field of Political Science (and before that Philosophy). Our
fellow humans are responsible for many of the bad things that seem to
define life, yet none of them (or very few) are actually evil. Even
fully rational people seeking their own self interest will inevitably
fall into conflict and probably violence. And that is a best-case
scenario. To make matters worse, students of psychology have determined
most decision making is no-where near “rational.”
Violence is pervasive. It takes many forms. There are short, sharp,
instances of acute physical violence. Wars, or physical assaults tend
to get the most press. But I don’t think there is any evidence to
suggest that in total they are really more destructive than the other
forms of structural violence that humans wreak on each other. Famine,
disease, colonialism and addiction have all taken their toll. But at
least we can still quantify things like infant mortality rates (which
typically go up in civil wars) or life expectancy (which tends to drop
when economies go into a serious prolonged crisis). Harder to measure,
though no less real, are social stressors like inequality,
discrimination and humiliation.
The martial arts interest me as a social scientist for many reasons.
Yet one of the most powerful is that they are a relatively inexpensive
tools which local societies, across the globe, turn to as they seek to
address the effects of violence in their own communities. It wasn’t
really until the 1960s and 1970s that social scientists in the West
began to diversify our understanding of violence as having more than
just a physical or political dimension. Yet already in the 1920’s we
can read book after book, article after article, in which Chinese
martial artists argued that their practices could insulate the nation
from each of the ills listed above. They seemed to be far ahead of the
curve on this.
This is also part of our challenge when we try to study the Chinese
martial arts. As I have argued before, it is impossible to reduce
Chinese hand combat down to a single set of motivations. Many people
have practiced these systems for many different reasons. An imperial
bannerman, a night watchman, an opera performer and a traveling medicine
salesman may all have practiced some sort of kung fu in the year 1819.
While they all may have done this so as to “make a living,” the sorts
of violence that they faced (structural or otherwise) was not exactly
the same.
Over the last few years Paul Bowman and I have, at different times,
called for greater focus on the problem(s) of violence within Martial
Arts Studies. Some of the things that have already been written suggest
that students of our field can bring very interesting perspectives to
these discussions.
For instance, I highly recommend that everyone take a
look at Sixt Wetzler’s chapter in the recently published Martial Arts Studies Reader as a great example of the unique type of work that we might be able to do.
But while violence is the drumbeat that structures so many people’s
lives, it is not a concept that can be understood (or even exist) in
isolation. As a result, we may not be able to fully grasp the social
work that the martial arts are called on to perform if we examine them
only in relation to this concept.
Most frequently, violence (or in its
interstate form “war”) is placed in opposition to the concept “peace.”
I put peace in quotes for a very good reason. The complexities of
defining and conceptualizing violence pale in comparison to the
challenges of understanding peace. Violence is, after all, encoded in
things that are done or structures that exist. Peace is a subtler
matter. Yet it is critical as it structures the motivations of a good
many martial artists, in a huge variety of times and places.
Perhaps the easiest place to start would be with a distinction drawn
within the Peace Studies literature, often attributed to Johan Galtung.
Still, it should be noted that these terms have been in circulation
since the start of the twentieth century and reflect a common pattern of
conceptual classification seen throughout the field of Political
Science. Galtung notes that “negative peace” is often taken to mean the
absence of violent acts. Importantly, it does not actually suggest a
lack of conflict. For example, Russia and the United States enjoyed a
negative peace during the Cold War.
Though their conflicts continued to
have a shaping effect on global politics, and terrified generations of
people with the prospects of nuclear annihilation, no actual shooting
between the two super powers ever took place. Clearly this is a type of
peace, but it is one that leaves something to be desired. Even in the
absence of a formal declaration of WWIII many people’s lives were
destroyed.
The stark nature of this paradox led to renewed focus (first in
Europe, and to a lesser extent in the United State) on the idea of
“positive peace” in the 1960s and 1970s. It sought to move beyond the
obvious violence to address sources of underlying conflict (where
possible). This often means creating new types of relationships between
actors, or internally seeking to address the systemic social and
economic failures (poverty, famine, alienation, inequality) that either
led to conflict in the past or might simply rob people of their basic
humanity going forward. Advocates of change through the creation of
positive peace are typically just as interested in what is happening in
the World Bank as the UN Security Council.
Peace Studies departments are much less common in the United States
than the sorts of International Relations (IR) programs where I received
my training. Still, a number of their concepts have found their way
into the general Political Science literature. One of these insights,
which might be particularly helpful for students of Martial Arts
Studies, bears on the question of scalability. Much of the traditional
IR discussion of violence has focused on events at the national level.
After all, nations which go to war and IR theorists very much want to
understand why.
But a moment’s thought suggest that it is not just nations that “go
to war.” It is also social groups, cities and individuals who are
mobilized in these campaigns. And it is at this much more local level
that the violence of a conflict, whether acute or structural, is
actually absorbed. We should not be surprised to discover that local
leaders and community actors are often very aware of the logic of
negative and positive peace.
Still, local community leaders have neither the resources nor the
ability to make the sorts of sweeping systemic changes that classical
Peace Theory often advocates. Instead they may find themselves relying
on voluntary groups as they attempt to steer their communities through
events not of their own making. This is one area, from Japan to
Indonesia to South America, where we have regularly seen martial arts
communities brought into the political realm.
For instance, one of the most common side effects of sudden economic
or political disruption is a spike in violent crime. At various times in
Chinese history martial arts groups have been explicitly called upon by
local officials to deal with these trends. They have been used to
clear the roads of bandits, protect crops ripening in the field from
neighboring villages and even to form militias. Or to put it slightly
differently, the martial arts societies were called upon to provide some
much-needed “negative peace.” In the short run one must protect the
village’s crops and keep bandits at bay before anything other sort of
policy action is possible. Likewise, when we train individuals to
physically protect themselves from the worst effects of a violent
assault in a modern American environment, we are focusing on a model of
negative peace. We are attempting to bring peace by ending an
anticipated attack.
Yet that was never the only goal of the Confucian officials who
would, from time to time, recruit martial arts groups to help and
restore order in the countryside. They were well aware that violent
bandit groups tended to recruit from the same pool of “bare sticks”
(young unmarried men with few economic prospects) that martial arts
schools drew on. In times of famine or economic disruption these
individuals, who were typically day laborers or only marginally
employed, were hit first and hardest by any disruption. That hunger and
desperation was precisely why they were likely to join a bandit
organization. Worse yet, they lacked a secure place within the
traditional village structure which defined one’s status through the
inheritance of land, marriage or educational attainment. The long-term
social prospects for excess sons was quite bleak. Or in current social
scientific parlance, we might say that these young men were systemically
disadvantaged.
The formal raising of militias, or the informal tolerance of martial
arts groups, addressed these issues on two levels. Militia membership
came with a paycheck that might forestall economic emergency.
Membership in a martial arts society provided an important source of
identity. There individuals would develop narratives about the
importance of protecting the same communities (and according to Avron Bortez, even the same norms)
which might otherwise have been seen as alienating and threatening. In
either case, by taking young men off the street the bandits brotherhoods
and rebel armies had fewer potential recruits and they tended to grow
more slowly. This, in turn, limited their ability to disrupt the peace.
All of this reveals an important pattern. Martial artists, while
lacking standing within the Confucian order, were often a critical asset
necessary for the stabilization, and projection of power into, local
society. In times of crisis it really was necessary to “man the
barricades” and fight bandits. Hence the actual efficacy of these
practices were important when thinking about the strategies for imposing
a “negative peace.” Yet these measures worked best when they succeeded
in convincing young men that they had a place in the system,
forestalling the rapid expansion of the types of social disorder that
arose quite frequently in Chinese history. And it is not at all clear
that the “most realistic” types of martial arts training would serve
these other ends the best. Basic fitness and self-defense skills are
always great. More importantly, they transform violence from an
existential threat to an engaging puzzle that one can organize their
training and identity around. And if the creation of a positive peace
is your central goal then public performance (lion dance), community
building (lineage mythology) and ritual begin to make a lot more sense.
When viewed from the perspective of negative peace these things may
appear to be secondary considerations at best. Others might see them as
distractions, or evidence of the “decayed” state of a martial system.
And yet these “secondary” practices and structures must also be
replicated through the generations, often at great expense. So why
maintain the effort? Why do so many systems continue to argue that the
martial arts are first and foremost a means by which young people learn
about their place in society? If we consider these same systems from
the perspective of positive peace theory suddenly these sorts of
practices make much more sense. Rather than being somehow secondary they
are important tools by which local society seeks to address the sorts
of ills that lead to festering conflict and eventually violence.
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