• Twenty-four women martial artists discuss the physical and spiritual challenges of martial arts training and how it helps bring meaning and purpose to their lives
• Women aged 12 to 83 are interviewed on the importance and meaning of martial arts in their lives.
• Explores in-depth why many women are dedicating themselves to the martial arts.
• An inspiration for anyone concerned with enhancing the physical, spiritual, and social dimensions of life, and for those interested in women's self-defense and safety.
Sharp Spear, Crystal Mirror explores in depth how, why, and to what effect considerable numbers of women are dedicating themselves to the martial arts. The twenty-four women interviewed here discuss the physical and spiritual challenges of martial arts training and how it helps to bring meaning and purpose to their lives. Their disciplines include T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Aikido, Capoeira, Wing Chun, Judo, Kajukenbo, Jujutsu, Tae Kwon Do, Karate, and Kung Fu, and their backgrounds are equally diverse. Some were accomplished athletes before beginning, while others had never been comfortable with their physical bodies until discovering the martial arts. All have received deep spiritual nourishment through their practice, integrating and healing their bodies and minds as well as enriching community bonds. Those interested in women's studies will find a wonderful sample of contemporary American women who speak articulately about the forces that have shaped their lives.
Focused primarily on the specifics of martial arts practice but also showing how those experiences pervade other areas, Hoppe provides female perspectives on what is stereotypically a very male world.
Hoppe interviews a broad range of female martial artists, seeking similarities and differences in how martial arts have shaped their lives and how their experiences differ from male martial artists.
The core of the book is formed of twenty chapters, each opening with a brief foreword by Hoppe about the context of the interview then setting out the interview itself verbatim. These are bookended by an introduction giving a little of Hoppe’s own involvement in martial arts and reasons for writing the book, and an epilogue setting out how doing the interviews reinforced or changed her perceptions of women in martial arts.
While all the interviewees are based in the United States, Hoppe has selected martial artists from many martial arts (both well-known and less so), aged from twelve to eighty years old, from a diverse range of backgrounds; thus, the interviews provide a relative spread of perspectives and foci.
Compiled in 1990 and mostly featuring women who have risen to seniority in their arts, many of the specific challenges and events mentioned in the interviews relate to the equal rights struggles of the Seventies and Eighties, potentially giving them a patina of historical document to some readers; however, some insights, such as the need for self-defence training that reflects the risks and situations faced by all groups rather than just assuming the biggest dangers are the bar fights and such faced by average men, apply equally in the modern day and beyond those who identify and present as women.
Although many of Hoppe’s interviews come via introductions or recommendations from her contacts or interviewees, meaning there is a certain slant in those selected, the primary criteria is being in martial arts rather than having a particular outlook; thus, the book includes distinctly different perspectives on mixed training, social roles, the place of violence, and other matters. As the interviews set these within a wider context of each woman’s art and life, the reader can see how these might make sense; thus, readers who are interested more in gender politics or human nature rather than martial arts specifically are likely to find things of interest.
While some of the interviewees incline more strongly toward an esoteric aspect to why martial arts works, rather than a strictly scientific theory based in biomechanics and psychology, the book is very much focused on the practical impact and experience of martial arts and not the abstruse or mystical.
Hoppe’s style is more chatty than formal or objective, allowing a space for the interviewee’s experience and thoughts and co-operating in bringing them forth. Depending on reader preference, this approach might seem more a promotion of personal narrative or a failure to test assertions.
Overall, I enjoyed this book. I recommend it to those seeking perspectives on martial arts and surrounding culture that are broader than the media representation of a Segal, Norris, or Chan.
This book is set up primarily as a question and answer format set of interviews with women and girls involved in several different styles of martial arts. The different styles include Kendo, Jujitsu, Tai Chi Ch'uan and other hard and soft styles. I expected more of this book, to be honest. It was rather boring and took me a long time to get through for that reason. The Q&A format is a tricky one that can only successfully be pulled off in certain situations, and I don't think this situation is one of them. I wish I had another book about women and martial arts to recommend, but the closest I have is an excellent book I read back in Feb. 2009 called "Real Knockouts: The Physical Feminism of Women's Self-Defense" by Martha McCaughey. As the title suggests, it's more about the nitty-gritty of being attacked and defending oneself than it is about martial arts.