Okinawan Karate: Teachers, Styles and Secret Techniques
C**S
One of the MUST HAVE book on the subject
I purchased the original edition many years ago, and last month bought several copies of the 2nd edition from Amazon for myself as well as X'mas gifts to my students.As someone who is interested in the history of Okinawan Karate-Do, I found this book highly useful. This is one of two "must have" English books on the subject, the other being "Karate-Do : History and Philosophy" by Takao Nakaya. Readers will find very similar and complementary information on both book, the difference being more due to difference of the authors' perspective rather than factual error.The majority of the information in the book came from the author's personal interviews with the various Okinawan masters. The coverage of the various Okinawan styles are rather comprehensive. In addition to Karate-Do, the author also included 2 chapters on Kobudo (traditional weapons of Okinawa).However, there are a couple of issues that cost the book a 5-star rating.1] The author can make the book a more scholarly text by dating the interviews. This would be invaluable to future researchers in the history of Karate-Do in Okinawa.[2] The subtitle of the book is "Teachers, styles and secret techniques". The "secret techniques" part is rather thin and anyone who want to discover any thing "secret" from this book will be disappointed.DISCLOSURE : I am a student of Takao Nakaya Shihan, the author of the other book I mentioned above.
S**.
Good reference book on karate schools
Beware, Mark Bishop is coming to your dojo to review it !!!Good reference book on karate schools. Some info should be taken with a grain of salt (most of it is, I think, quite accurate), but a very good read non the less. If you have some humor and can take some distance from the subject, this book can be hilarious at times (the English guy coming to give his remarks on a dojo as he was some gourmet review for the Michelin Restaurant Guide).Anyway this is a very good book and it contains some good info about teachers and their lineage, and there is an exhaustive list of kata by shools.The "secret technique" is a bit of a buy bait, but there is few interesting interpretations of obscure or old techniques, that can, be considered "secret" by some.
B**Y
Another good read on the history of karate, but no book has the answers
There is no one book that has the full correct history of the Okinawan Arts, this one attempts to do so. If you study karate , you should definately read it as Mark seems to have painstakenly tried to pry the truth from the living masters, so it's as close as you are going to find from past on tales. The issues witrh it are as folows, especially the beginning this is a tough read. It is edited poorly and the words run into each other. The author is very opinionated especially with the first few masters. The other issue is he himself has contradictory stories, which he admits in the book. The problem being he lists things as fact from whatever he was told. Many of the masters he is interviewing may not remember things correctly or misinterpreted there understanding. A big for instance is the history of Itosu. The author claims he left Shuri for 20 years and developed the Pinan kata after learning Kunsaku(and Chinto) in Tomarei. In reality he is historically documented living in Shuri during this time frame and working with Funakoshi. He also would have learned Kunsaku and Chinto from Soku Matsumura as he was his first master and Matsumura clearly knew these forms. Kunsaku came directly from Master Kunsaku to Sakugawa (who was Matsumura's master) and Chinto was the name of the pirate that developed the kata with Matsumura. More than likely Itosu had a friend in tomerei that he worked the kata with(more than likely under the direction of Matsumura), changed them all (including Passai) and developed the Pinan from there. It's possible this friend also learned Kunsaku 2nd generation as Matsumra did, but highly unlikely he could have known Chinto unless Matsumura taught it to him. Bruce Clayton's book has a better view of Itosu, but also is far from being the complete truth.Any how despite the criticisms noted, the author does make a decent effort and anyone studying a traditional karate style should read.
B**S
second edition
Sensei Mark Bishop's book is a rare, objective, unbiased look into the unique world of the "Okinawan karates". As a practioner of Goju-ryu and Isshin-ryu, after receiving my !st dan in Tae Kwon Do, I loved his well researched, academic style of writing. His thorough review of the histories of styles, their masters and their uniqueness, is complete and accurate. In a day in age where cd's are the vehicle of martial arts information transference, this "book" is a treasure.
V**R
This Guy did his homework
This is a great book about Okinawan Karate and it's lineages. It's hard to find this much factual information from one source. While looking for some information for shinobiexchange.com I came across this book and it was interesting to see how Okinawan Karate has ties to Ninjutsu of ancient Japan. Great Book, will look for other titles by this author.
G**3
this is going to be a great reference books for years to come
My only complaint about this book is there is a lot of personal opinions rather then just stating the history and background of the art. Minus that, this is going to be a great reference books for years to come.
S**1
Good buy
This is a good book especially those who studied martial arts in Okinawa Japan or those who are interested of the origin of Karate.
M**E
Okinawan Karate - from a karateka's perspective
This is an ok book delivering some good information on the history of karate. I must say that for most people it is possibly excellent . But for me, considering I have over 50 years in the art, there were some gaps in the information. Gaps that could have been resolved prior to printing by talking to the right people in Okinawa.Overall? A book that I am happy enough to have in my library but having read it once will probably not bother with again. I may loan it to students who want to begin their journey into the history.
D**W
Welcome book
Bought for my son for Christmas. Delivered on time and well-liked.
Z**Z
Factual Errors and Missing Information
Don't waste your money. There are a number of factual errors throughout the book. In addition, much of the subject matter is incompletely covered. If you are looking for an authority on Okinawan martial arts, this is not it. There are many better options available.
V**
Nada nuevo bajo el sol
Bueno, lei buenas críticas de este libro...pero se ha quedado ha medio camino, no cuenta nada nuevo, nada en extensión, creo que los árboles genealógicos no están mal, pero en general el libro es bastante flojo. De cada maestro encontaréis más información en wikipedia que en este libro. Insisto en que lo único que me ha gustado ha sido alguna foto y los árboles genealógicos, por lo demás y al mismo precio encontraréis una colección mucho mejor.
S**
Great book!! many macro and mini lessons on Okinawan karate .
This book is not exactly for beginners but for someone who has at least spent some years understanding and practicing their own style or even styles!! . This book is great for getting an historical perspective of karate as karate is a martial art that has been altered and variated according to circumstances that is where this book will help you in getting an idea of how every other style is somewhat same but just has different ways of doing things. And lastly the book includes content that book has tittled as it represents the history and styles of various OKINAWAN STYLES so you are not going to mostly find modern day styles but rather their predecessor.
A**S
Excelente livro!
Este livro é destinado a pesquisadores e a todos os que buscam informações detalhadas a respeito da história do Karatê-do.
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