Prince_Alarming
Master of Arts
As some found the discussion on a certain thread interesting, even with an unwelcome visitor, I thought I'd start a new thread on the same subject, without our unwelcome guest. The thing is, belief and use of in chi on the part of Western mankind can be interpreted as a form of orientalism, much like the japonisme movement in the 19th century. Now, this is not always a good thing. Edward Saïd, for instance, describes orientalism as part of a system of knowledge (epistemology) that is in fact intended to control and subjugate Oriental persons. Later scholarship often describes the practice as a form of cultural appropriation. I try not to use the term 'cultural appropriation' too often because it's regarded by scholars largely as a bad thing, and I take a more indulgent view- it is less that one wishes to appropriate cultural forms, but more that one genuinely admires oriental cultures and wishes to learn some of their ideas. There are different approaches. As I said in the other thread
I, for instance do a lot of ink drawing, for instance, but I do it with a western brush and reed pen and try to make it Welsh, not Japanese.[.quote]
I stated also that my personal approach is to attempt to share oriental knowledge- the ideas- without necessarily using the physical form of the object itself- which in academia one would in any case call plagiarism. The issue with this is that I absolutely love the kata of wado ryu karate, and they constitute an oriental form in a metaphysical sense. Personally, I think it's far more exclusionist to say 'No! you cannot do oriental martial arts! You must do your macho Western boxing, which I feel contains a whole set of assumptions which are deeply problematic, for instance the foul Western superstition I encountered as a teenager on the part of my peers that oriental men are somehow effeminate, which is obviously an awful thing to think.
Broadly speaking, I think that being aware of the issues and dealing with them in a way that one personally feels avoiding cultural appropriation goes a long way. @
windwalker099.
has said in private that his perspective is that one actually joins an eastern culture when one participates, humbly and reverently I would assume, in their cultural form.
I would love to hear your perspectives on this issue, which I feel is far thornier than one would imagine.