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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Combat sports & self-defence > Fencing
Growing up in Maplewood, New Jersey the only Black, Muslim-American
in hijab, in middle school Ibtihaj discovered fencing, a sport
traditionally reserved for the wealthy and elite. Though she would
start fencing later than most at 12 years old, she had an
undeniable talent-the sort that would soon put her on the
international stage. But Ibtihaj saw something more in her Olympic
journey: an opportunity to take action, to stand up and make a
Muslim-American woman of color impossible to ignore. Ibtihaj's path
to Olympic greatness has been marked with hateful opposition and
near-debilitating challenges-bigotry from teammates at Duke
University and Team USA, death threats, and social hardships as a
Muslim-American. In Proud, her exhilarating emergence from young
outsider to national hero and outspoken activist is a timeless,
uniquely American tale of hard work, determination, and resilience
that hasn't been told.
Originally published in 1804 and aimed at the volunteer regiments
of the Napoleonic Era, when engagements with swords were still a
reality of warfare, The Art of Defence was written for civilians
wanting to learn to fence with the sabre, broad-sword or spadroon.
The growing interest in Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA) has
led to a world-wide increase in clubs and societies, and this text
is aimed at these new students. The content is presented in a
highly-structured way and in easily accessible language. Although
primarily aimed at the novice, the text contains a number of more
advanced techniques, from which more experienced fencers can
benefit. This newly transcribed edition puts the complete, original
text into a modern typesetting to make it easily accessible during
lessons, but is otherwise left unchanged. To ensure the
transcription will remain as compatible with other sources that
refer to specific parts of the text as the original edition, all
content has remained on the same page. All the plates, including
the foldouts, have been photographed and digitally enhanced in
order to reproduce them in as much detail as possible.
This open access book is the first publication to provide a
comparative framework for the study of martial culture and
historical martial arts in Europe and Asia, in particular in Italy
and China. Due to the interdisciplinary nature of martial studies,
contributors to this volume include historians, archeologists, art
historians, scholars of fencing literature, metallurgists, as well
as contemporary master swordsmiths and masters-of-arms in
historical martial arts. Assembling researchers from these diverse
fields, this book offers a multi-perspectival and dynamic view of
martial culture across time and space. The cross-cultural and
interdisciplinary significance of this book cannot be
overemphasized. Whereas a number of contributors are
internationally recognized and, indeed, leading authorities in
their respective fields; for example, Jeffrey Shaw has been a
world-leading new media artist and scholar since the 1970s, while
Ma Mingda is a well-known historian and the contemporary founder of
Chinese martial studies; and while there are significant overlaps
in their research interests, this book brings their research within
a single volume for the first time. Equally significant, the book
is structured in such a way to reflect the various core aspects of
martial studies, particularly in relation to the study of historic
sword culture, including history, culture, philosophy, literature
and knowledge transmission, material culture, as well as the
technical aspects of historical fencing. As one of the first titles
on martial studies, this book becomes a reference not only for
scholars taking an interest in this subject, but also for
historians; scholars with interest in Chinese and/or Italian
history (particularly of the Medieval or early modern periods), the
history of international relations in Asia / Far East;
anthropologists; scholars of martial (arts) studies and researchers
in sword-making and/or historic metallurgy.
The most detailed and comprehensive treatise on swordsmanship ever
written. Gerard Thibault’s Academy of the
Sword offers an extraordinary glimpse into a forgotten
landscape of ideas, in which Pythagorean sacred geometry
illuminated the lethal realities of rapier combat to create one of
the Western world’s only thoroughly documented esoteric martial
arts. Translated by the widely respected occultist and scholar John
Michael Greer, this stunningly illustrated and precisely detailed
manual of Renaissance swordsmanship is a triumphant document of
Renaissance culture—as well as a practical manual of a martial
art that can still be studied and practiced today.
Lights, camera ... kidnap! 'Dreams of stardom; sibling rivalry
& a gripping ending, Sister to a Star has it all & I
gobbled up the entire book' BONKERS ABOUT BOOKS Evie is forever
crossing swords with her twin. While she practises her after-school
fencing, Tallulah is winning movie auditions. Neither of them could
have imagined how their worlds would collide, but when Tallulah
goes to Hollywood Evie goes too - as her sister's identical
stand-in. But that changes, when the film needs some all-action
sword-play. Soon Evie's the one enjoying the limelight - that is,
until Tallulah goes missing ... An action-packed sibling adventure
of twin rivalry, glamour and skulduggery set against the bright
lights of Hollywood! Written by ex-Olympic fencer, Eloise Smith
Features a diverse ensemble cast of brave and spirited kids you
can't help but root for!
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