The influence of Bruce Lee
Bruce Lee, the American-born, Hong Kong-bred martial artist and actor, was among the first in the United States, and perhaps the most influential theorist-practitioner in martial arts history to challenge many conservative ideas within martial arts, specifically, combat effectiveness vs. blind recitation of forms, the fear of non-Asians using their own art against them, and certain fundamentalist aspects of martial arts.
Although he favored the Southern Chinese art of Wing Chun, he was well-versed in a number of other Chinese martial traditions. Arriving in the Seattle area in the 1960s, he soon encountered styles of other martial arts, such as those practiced by established communities of post-Internment Japanese Americans and Filipino Americans in the Pacific Northwest. As an undergraduate philosophy student at the University of Washington, and after graduation, he began to teach kung fu to non-Chinese. At some point, he began to realize that even as martial arts maintained bodies of techniques, uncritical maintenance of traditions, and rote recitation of forms strangled combat effectiveness and dynamic response in the practice of unarmed combat. Couching his language in Taoism (also Daoism), but with a kind of hard pragmatism, he sought to create a mental framework -- "no style as style" -- focused solely on the improvement of unarmed combat. This attitude absorbed influences from all martial arts -- Filipino armed and unarmed techniques, European and Japanese grappling, wrestling, and fencing techniques, Korean kicking techniques, Chinese close range hand techniques -- and were evaluated for their effectiveness.
With his untimely death however in 1973, he was unable to develop and articulate his philosophy further, but, what he had already developed has since been built upon by his students and colleagues and developed, ironically, into a new style, which Lee himself named jeet kune do (Cantonese 截拳道, lit. way of the intercepting fist). To resolve this contradiction, practitioners, and more specifically, teachers of jeet kune do often maintain that what they practice is not a style or a tradition, but concepts. Whatever the case may be, Bruce Lee left an indelible legacy in the history of the martial arts, which has forever changed how the martial arts are thought about and practiced.
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