El judo llega a California: judo vs. lucha en el oeste de los Estados Unidos, 1900-1920

Autores/as

  • Matt Hlinak Northwestern University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18002/rama.v4i3.174

Palabras clave:

Judo, lucha, Estados Unidos

Resumen

Este ensayo analiza la inmigración japonesa-americana hacia el oeste de los Estados Unidos a través del prisma de los deportes, examinando específicamente una serie de enfrentamientos entre judokas y luchadores celebrados en California entre 1900 y 1920. La popularidad de estos enfrentamientos demuestra la compleja relación entre los japoneses-americanos y la cultura europeo-americana dominante en los estados occidentales durante este periodo. Esta complejidad se mostrará observando en primer lugar el modo en que las artes marciales están estrechamente relacionadas con la identidad étnica y nacional. La gran tradición existente en el mundo del espectáculo tanto en el judo como en la lucha condujo a la realización de diversos enfrentamientos que tuvieron una gran atracción para los europeo-americanos de aquella época. Estos encuentros apelaban a un interés en la cultura japonesa, a un deseo de ver reforzados los estereotipos y a las tendencias nacionalistas durante una época de incertidumbre.

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Métricas alternativas

Citas

ARCHER, J. & SVINTH, J. (2005). Professional wrestling: Where sport and theater collide. InYo: Journal of Alternative Perspectives. Disponible en: http://web.archive.org/web/20070818163456/ejmas.com/jalt/jaltframe.htm.

BETTS, J. (1971). Home front, battlefield and sport during the Civil War. Research Quarterly 42: 113-32.

BETTS, J. (1974). America’s sporting heritage: 1850-1950. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.

BILLIG, M. (1995). Banal nationalism. London: Sage Publications.

BURDICK, D. (1999). The American way of fighting: unarmed defense in the United States, 1845-1945. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University, Bloomington.

CAMPBELL, J. (1996). Professional wrestling: Why the bad guy wins. Journal of American Culture 19(2): 127-132.

CARR, K. (1993). Making way: War, philosophy and sport in Japanese judo. Journal of Sport History 20(2), 167-188.

COPECI, D. & WILKERSON, M. (1983). Multifarious hero. Journal of Sport History 10(3): 5-25.

DEETER-SCHMELZ, D. & SOJKA, J. (2004). Wrestling with American values: An exploratory investigation of World Wrestling Entertainment as a product-based subculture. Journal of Consumer Behaviour 4(2): 132-143.

EDGREN, R. (1905). The fearful art of jiu jitsu. Outing, 322-28. Reprinted in Svinth, J. (ed.)(2000). Journal of Combative Sport. Disponible en: http://ejmas.com/jcs/jcsart_edgren1_0300.htm.

FIELDING, L. (1975). Reflections from the sport mirror: selected treatments of Civil War sport. Journal of Sport History 2: 132-144.

FIELDING, L. (1977). War and trifles: sport in the shadow of Civil War Army life. Journal of Sport History 4: 151-168.

FILA (2004). History of wrestling. International Wrestling Hall of Fame. Disponible en: http://www.filahalloffame.com/historyofwrestling.html.

GERMS, G. (2006). The athletic crusade: Sport and American cultural imperialism. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.

GORN, E. (1985). “Gouge and bite, pull hair and scratch”: The social significance of fighting in the southern backcountry. American Historical Review 90(1): 18-43.

GUTTMANN, A. (1988). A whole new ball game: an interpretation of American sports. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

GUTTMANN, A. (1994). Games and empires: Modern sports and cultural imperialism. New York: Columbia University Press.

GUTTMANN, A. & THOMPSON, L. (2001). Japanese sports: A history. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.

HEWITT, M. (2005). Catch wrestling: a wild and wooly look at the early days of pro wrestling in America. Boulder, CO: Paladin Press

HOBSBAWN, E. (1990). Nations and nationalism since 1780. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

KIKU, K. (2004). The development of sport in Japan: martial arts and baseball. En Dunning, E., et al. (eds.), Sports histories: figurational studies of the development of modern sports (pp. 153-171). New York: Routledge.

LOY, J. & ELVOGUE, J. (1970). Racial segregation in American sport. International Review of Sport Sociology 5, 5-23.

MANDELL, R. (1984). Sport: A cultural history. New York: Columbia University Press.

MOGULL, R. (1981). Racial discrimination in professional sports. Arena Review 5(2): 12-15.

MONDAK, J. (1989). The politics of professional wrestling. Journal of Popular Culture 23(2): 139-149.

MORTON, G. & O’BRIEN, G. (1985). Wrestling to rasslin’: Ancient sport to American spectacle. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular Press.

MROZEK, D. (1983). Sport and American mentality, 1880-1910. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.

POPE, S. (1997). Patriotic games: sporting traditions in the American imagination, 1876-1926. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

RAINVILLE, R. ET AL. (1978). Recognition of covert racial prejudice. Journalism Quarterly 55(2): 256-259.

RICKARD, J. (1999). “The spectacle of excess”: The emergence of modern profesional wrestling in the United States and Australia. Journal of Popular Culture 33(1): 129- 137.

ROSENBLUM, M. (1981). Martial arts poetics. Journal of American Culture 4(3): 148-153.

SABO, D. (1985). Sport, patriarchy, and male identity. Arena Review 9(2): 1-30.

SAVENGA, D. (1995). The problem of wrestling ‘styles’ in the modern Olympic Games: A failure of Olympic philosophy. Citius, Altius, Fortius (actualmente Journal of Olympic Sport History) 3(3): 19-29.

SCHNEIDER, J. & EITZEN, D. (1979). Racial discrimination in American sports. Journal of Sport Behavior 2(3), 136-142.

SHUN, I. (1998). The invention of the martial arts: Kano Jigoro and Kodokan judo. En S. Vlastos (ed.), Mirror of modernity: Invented traditions of modern Japan (pp. 163-173). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

SNYDER, L. (1990). Encyclopedia of nationalism. New York: Paragon House.

SVINTH, J. (2000a). Sizing ‘em up: statistical relationships between various combative sports in the Japanese American communities of the Pacific Northwest, circa 1910 to circa 1942. In Yo: Journal of Alternate Perspectives. Disponible en: http://ejmas.com /jalt/jaltart_svinth1_0300.htm.

SVINTH, J. (2000b). Women who would not be sheep. In Yo: Journal of Alternate Perspectives. Disponible en: http://ejmas.com/jalt/jaltart_svinth4_1199.htm.

SVINTH, J. (2001). The evolution of women’s judo, 1900-1945. In Yo: Journal of Alternate Perspectives. Disponible en: http://ejmas.com/jalt/jaltart_svinth_0201.htm.

SVINTH, J. (2003). Getting a grip: Judo in the Nikkei communities of the Pacific Northwest, 1900-1950. Guelph, Ontario: Electronic Journals of Martial Arts and Science.

TERRY, T. (1902). Jiu-jutsu, Japanese self-defense without weapons. Outing 41, 12-18.

WILSON, G. (Ed.)(2000). The history of Japanese immigration. Brown Quarterly 3(4). Available: http://brownvboard.org/brwnqurt/03-4/03-4a.htm.

Descargas

Publicado

2012-07-16

Cómo citar

Hlinak, M. (2012). El judo llega a California: judo vs. lucha en el oeste de los Estados Unidos, 1900-1920. Revista de Artes Marciales Asiáticas, 4(3), 8–19. https://doi.org/10.18002/rama.v4i3.174

Número

Sección

Artículos