Within my library recently read Noel Perrin’s Giving Up the Gun. The book itself is quite dated in writing, sources, and historiography; however, it is still cited to certain extent within the modern English scholarship of Japanese history. The book is an overview of Japan’s reasons as to why the samurai of old willingly abandoned … Continue reading Form Over Function: A Slave to Aesthetics
Tag: Katana
Creative Anachronism in Japanese Martial Arts: Preserving the Past Through Practice by Michael Martin
Creative anachronism is more than nostalgia; it’s the pointed revival of historical practices in the modern world, imbued with symbolic resonance, ritual, and performance. Like costumed historical reenactors staging battles for educational or cultural impact, practitioners of budō, or traditional Japanese martial arts, engage in reenactment through their uniforms, weapons, customs, and values. In the … Continue reading Creative Anachronism in Japanese Martial Arts: Preserving the Past Through Practice by Michael Martin
Interview with Akayama Ryu Jujutsu Headmaster Doug Bedsaul: History, Application, and Future
Doug Bedsaul found Akayama-Ryu Jujutsu after training in Taekwondo, Hapkido, and Judo. In 2024, Bedsaul assumed the mantle of Headmaster with the passing of Mark Barlow. Today, Bedsaul took some time to discuss his vision for expanding the reach of Akayama-Ryu, the importance of quality instruction, and how the system continues to evolve through rigorous … Continue reading Interview with Akayama Ryu Jujutsu Headmaster Doug Bedsaul: History, Application, and Future
Interview with Daito-ryu Practitioner Nicholas Mayer: Just Practice
Nicholas Mayer found Daito-ryu in 2018 through Andrew Thorburn. He trains under Antonino Certa of Italy in his Daitokai International Group. Today, Mayer took some time to discuss his time in Daito-ryu. Martial Arts of Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow: Thank you for joining, Mayer Sensei! Nicholas Mayer: It is good to be here. MAYTT: How … Continue reading Interview with Daito-ryu Practitioner Nicholas Mayer: Just Practice
Martial Mindset Versus a Sports Mindset
For several years now, I have taken up Olympic Fencing, learning the three weapons: foil, epee, and sabre. Coming from a martial arts background where the training revolves around the concepts of avoidance and proper position, I have found that the sporting culture of fencing does not yet synthesize all that well. For me, in … Continue reading Martial Mindset Versus a Sports Mindset
Interview with Order of the Blade Founder Richard Hughes: From the Duel to the Battlefield
Richard Hughes really wanted to be competitive with a weapon in hand. After learning Shinkendo, Hughes found historical fencing and has stuck with it since. He thrived on taking apart a concept, boiling it down to its essential principles and implementing his discoveries into his training. Likewise, he enjoys using this method to reach each … Continue reading Interview with Order of the Blade Founder Richard Hughes: From the Duel to the Battlefield
Interview with Lightspeed Saber League Founder Cang Snow: The Uniqueness of Light-Based Fencing
After spending some time in Olympic Epee, Cang Snow wanted to find a sport that was both fun for the participant and the spectator. He set out to establish Lightspeed Saber League for just that. In the aftermath of the recent Covid pandemic, the League has grown, something which Snow is planning on continuing. Today, … Continue reading Interview with Lightspeed Saber League Founder Cang Snow: The Uniqueness of Light-Based Fencing
Interview with Houston Heights Kendo Club Founder Masayuki Koyama: Accepting the Future Flow of Kendo
Masayuki Koyama began training in kendo during high school while growing up in Japan. Afterwards, he found himself in the United States and began teaching kendo to his son in 1999. Because he was teaching at a community center, other people started coming in, looking for kendo lessons. From then on, he established his Houston … Continue reading Interview with Houston Heights Kendo Club Founder Masayuki Koyama: Accepting the Future Flow of Kendo
Interview with Retired HEMAist Michael Edelson: HEMA in the Northeast, Part I
Michael Edelson began studying Yagyu Shinkage-ryu in the early 1990s and happened onto historical fencing by chance. From there, he bought himself a fight book, gathered some friends together, and started figuring out what the historical sources said to do. In 2005, Edelson established his New York Historical Fencing Association. Becoming friends with influential personality … Continue reading Interview with Retired HEMAist Michael Edelson: HEMA in the Northeast, Part I
The Jo and Aikido by Antonio Aloia and Michael Aloia
The jo; the short staff; a long stick. Not sharp but blunt. It can’t cut a limb off, but it can bludgeon and injure one, rendering the limb useless. However, several direct blows to the head could have a grave outcome as well. The jo is a weapon wielded in aikido training. But what do … Continue reading The Jo and Aikido by Antonio Aloia and Michael Aloia










