Search

Help

Log in

Forum

Events

Gallery

Clubs

You are here: Forum Index -> Historical Combat
Philosophical: mood change in NZ reenactment
Goto page 1, 2  Next
 
Post new topic   Reply to topic     View previous topic :: View next topic  
 
Author Message
Colin



Location: Wellington

PostPosted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 5:44 pm     Philosophical: mood change in NZ reenactment Reply with quote

Quotes taken from here: http://www.gatheringdarkness.co.nz/forum/viewtopic.php?t=449&start=55

blackcrow wrote:
The mood of the hobby is changing I think, to be more inline with international standards. This means head blows of one form or another.


and

blackcrow wrote:
...internationally many groups are turning to head blow combat to fully engage in HEMA.


This isn't the first time I have heard this in the recent past. You are, however, the first to make it public. I am curious about why the mood in NZ is changing. I distinctly remember the days when the mood was positively hostile, seemingly religiously so (at least from my perspective). That attitude of overwhelmingly negative reaction forms one of the major reasons why I have gone to great lengths at disassociating and distancing WMA/HEMA from the (NAAMA) re-enactment community.

I'm puzzled as to why there would be a 180 degree swing now. What has changed?

_________________
The person who writes for fools is always sure of a large audience.
- Arthur Schopenhauer

See http://www.swordsmanship.co.nz/
Joel of Old




PostPosted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 6:10 pm      Reply with quote

I can only comment on my own change in opinion.

An age ago I was enamored with the NAAMA way of life. It was fun and frolic from sun up till down - and 'safe' because there were no head shots. Besides I came from a background in fencing and it suited my style.

Then big shields came into play and no-one could get past them - and the head was not a valid target..? wtf I thought - Must be a safety thing.

In the past year I have come to the realization that headblow can be safe and that in order for it not to be 'a medieval themed sport' and even remotely close to combat, then the head MUST be an allowed target, indeed the preferred target.

However, I can see the movement becoming to 'elitist' for some and there being a drop-off in numbers.
---

_________________
When they hit you, just smile back with broken teeth and spit them in their face.
Scott




PostPosted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 6:17 pm      Reply with quote

I have some thoughts on this, but before I launch into them I would like to beg your permission to speak frankly - I know you'll agree so I'll just carry on here.

I think when we first started our journey we did believe what we were taught was authentic. It is a bitter pill to swallow to accept that years of training may have ultimately been pointless (er... except as entertainment, I suppose). It's also extremely difficult to change when you're comfortable with the status quo.

Not only that but you have an annoying tendency to ride roughshod over other people's feelings when you're right (or when you think you're right). I can't remember if I discussed this with you in the store, but I'm fairly sure I brought it up at one point:

If WMA wants to expand it's saturation into our hobby we all need to be better advocates for it.

It's not enough to say "I have this style which has a verified primary source and an international discussion about it's implementation." Yes, those are very important characteristics for us WMA people, but the key point is that we are in a hobby, people take different things away from it and the one thing everyone is after is fun.

It's not fun when someone challenges your style - it's not relevant if their claim is valid or not, it still gets perceived as an attack and consequently people get defensive.

So we need to all promote the hobby aspect. Yes, we're picky about the fighting, but not everyone else is... but they could be if we just demonstrated why we learn the things we do in a friendly, polite and non-confrontational manner.

If we don't do that then our ultimate place in this hobby is as the fighting variant of the "All my garb is hand-stitched and sourced from natural fibres, so I'm just soooooooooooo much better than you" authenticity elitists whom no-one likes!

(Yes, I could have been more diplomatic, but Colin knows me well enough to understand that this is me speaking my mind, not having a go at him Smile )
Gerard Kraay




PostPosted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 8:19 pm     Re: Philosophical: mood change in NZ reenactment Reply with quote

Colin wrote:
Quotes taken from here: http://www.gatheringdarkness.co.nz/forum/viewtopic.php?t=449&start=55

blackcrow wrote:
The mood of the hobby is changing I think, to be more inline with international standards. This means head blows of one form or another.


and

blackcrow wrote:
...internationally many groups are turning to head blow combat to fully engage in HEMA.


This isn't the first time I have heard this in the recent past. You are, however, the first to make it public. I am curious about why the mood in NZ is changing. I distinctly remember the days when the mood was positively hostile, seemingly religiously so (at least from my perspective). That attitude of overwhelmingly negative reaction forms one of the major reasons why I have gone to great lengths at disassociating and distancing WMA/HEMA from the (NAAMA) re-enactment community.

I'm puzzled as to why there would be a 180 degree swing now. What has changed?


Cant give you concrete specifics I'm afraid, just my feeling from talking to a variety of people involved in re-enactment and metal weapon fighting of one sort or another.

_________________
"The Dragon made me do it."
Angel
Site Admin


Location: Wellington

PostPosted: Mon Sep 17, 2007 11:48 am     Re: Philosophical: mood change in NZ reenactment Reply with quote

Colin wrote:
I'm puzzled as to why there would be a 180 degree swing now. What has changed?


Personality clashes and scale. If you have 10 people who are interested, but one or two people being asshats, then it has a significant impact on the group as personalities collide. When you have 100 people who are interested and 10 asshats (or more likely, the same one or two) then the problem is less marked, as the other 90-99% still have plenty of people that that they get on with well enough that the 1-10% that are asshats can be tuned out.

There are significantly more people involved in re-enactment of various forms now, so the numbers of people who are interested in various forms of authenticity (combat, costume etc) are going to be high enough that there are enough people to play nice with, that you can ignore those that you don't get along with.

_________________
Recognise anyone? Flame Warriors
Colin



Location: Wellington

PostPosted: Mon Sep 17, 2007 5:16 pm      Reply with quote

Interesting comments Kerry. One would think with all the "woe is me" type conversations that reenactment in New Zealand has been contracting. I wouldn't know whether this is true or not as am only going on the rumours I've heard. Certainly many of the post-2001 crowd has been more receptive to new ideas, at least from my perspective.

As for your comments Scott, most of my "riding roughshod" has been reactive to the extremely antagonistic attitude from reenactment circles. I'm not some compliant scapegoat some would wish Laughing

_________________
The person who writes for fools is always sure of a large audience.
- Arthur Schopenhauer

See http://www.swordsmanship.co.nz/
Carl



Location: Just beyond the firelight

PostPosted: Mon Sep 17, 2007 11:32 pm      Reply with quote

Colin wrote:

As for your comments Scott, most of my "riding roughshod" has been reactive to the extremely antagonistic attitude from reenactment circles. I'm not some compliant scapegoat some would wish Laughing


Although that may the case at times Colin, it was not the case for me personally. i was turned off WMA completely when you told me that I knew nothing about sword fighting because I could not cut a Coke Bottle in half, I believe you need to take responsibility for causing a fair amount of the antagonistic attitude you speak of.

The Elitism I saw from yourself and others in WMA made me want to stay as far away from it as I could, I am still seeing that attitude now but I have made a commitment to study WMA/HEMA so I put it aside.

the gulf between re-enactment and WMA/HEMA was created by mistakes and attitudes on both sides and if there as Gerard says a shift in feelings then we need fix the mistakes of the past and celebrate our commonalities not our differences.

just my thoughts on the subject, not trying to cause any bad blood.

_________________
It is not enough to say I will not be evil. Evil must be fought wherever it is found
Colin



Location: Wellington

PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 11:34 am      Reply with quote

A fascinating read Carl, but HEMA is way bigger than me. It's quite possible to purchase one's own books and/or engage in conversation on a global level. I did not hinder the development of HEMA interest in the NZ reenactment scene. Apathy towards HEMA existed long before the antagonism started. HEMA interest could have started as has already been noted elsewhere back 1997 without me having any direct influence (though my first forays into HEMA did start that year).

I have typed out several replies to your other comments, but I've decided not to. While I find it interesting to read the other perspectives, especially of those who were not the ringleaders of the witch hunt, all I'm going to do is provoke more antagonism. Something I did not intend when I started this thread. I'm more interested in why there has been a turnabout in interest. The change in mood is more than the recent commitment that AS&S have done (though other clubs are less formal about the arrangement). I'm curious to understand why. Kerry offers some insight in how: that the voices of the zealots are (possibly) no longer loud enough to hinder it, but not why.

_________________
The person who writes for fools is always sure of a large audience.
- Arthur Schopenhauer

See http://www.swordsmanship.co.nz/
Scott




PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 11:48 am      Reply with quote

Well I can offer my personal reasons:

1) You got my interest in the discussions we had in the store (yes, it's all your fault Very Happy )
2) It's very interesting having a defined goal with academically credible sources to work from.
3) The global communications over the issue is so wonderful now with the internet as a resource. It would have been impossible to do this as well twenty years ago and very difficult as little as ten years ago when you started (I guess I am preaching to the converted)

So maybe that's the real secret... it's such much *easier* now. Help is an e-mail away and advice from reliable and experienced proponents can come from Wellington, Hobart, Chicago... where-ever!
Angel
Site Admin


Location: Wellington

PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 12:11 pm      Reply with quote

I think the number of people interested in more authentic forms of reenactment stems from the amount of time people have been involved.

When you first start doing medieval stuff, the Hollywood version of medieval tends to be good enough for you - you're just happy to be there.

Often, through pure immersion, you actually start to learn about real medieval stuff, and you begin to realise that the Hollywood version is often wrong. Which bits you think of as wrong depend on where your interests lie. Some people might start picking on costume, others might pick on armour, others might pick on combat style.

This process accelerates as people actively begin researching, and finding out what other bits were wrong. The internet is a wonderful resource, as we've been able to make use of the research that others ahead of us on the authenticty journey have done. The internet is far more useful today than it was 10 years ago.

Once you get a big enough group of people who have made the journey, they begin to drag others with them. People at the start of the road have less steps to take to get to where we are now, because we've installed a travellator.

If you started the journey long before everyone else, then you get to sit at the end whinging that there's no one to talk to, and no one understands. And everyone still on the road thinks you're being an asshat for saying "neener neener, I won the race, I'm better than you" - even if you're not saying that at all.

Once more people get further along the road, being at the end becomes a more acceptable place to be - because that's where all the cool kids are, and the trip there is now so much shorter.

It's a critical mass thing.

_________________
Recognise anyone? Flame Warriors
Carl



Location: Just beyond the firelight

PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 9:42 pm      Reply with quote

Colin wrote:
A fascinating read Carl


Well thats the way i saw it, I was interested in the training but the attitudes kept me away, thats all.

you can take it personally or not but my feelings are mine, right or wrong.

_________________
It is not enough to say I will not be evil. Evil must be fought wherever it is found
Colin



Location: Wellington

PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 10:46 pm      Reply with quote

Scott wrote:
1) You got my interest in the discussions we had in the store (yes, it's all your fault Very Happy )


Yeah, but it cannot have been that good since you never did turn up to any training. Though your store was very good advertising...we got a number of people coming along Very Happy

_________________
The person who writes for fools is always sure of a large audience.
- Arthur Schopenhauer

See http://www.swordsmanship.co.nz/
Nathan




PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 11:59 pm      Reply with quote

As you said Kerry, things change.

When I started I just wanted to fight to put it bluntly.
I have since started on my own path towards 'accuracy' - finding longsword discussions with ARMA, studing Med Hist at Uni etc - so that now I wish to "better" myself in my [/u]own[u] eyes.

Saying that, I still enjoy "NAAMA" fighting and NAAMA in general to the point of getting really irritated with those that keep bagging it. I greatly support the differnt styles that are taking place through out the country and am glad that this year we should be able to see and experiance many of them. This is what I belive the point of NAAMA is, is it not??

Question: has anyone asked SCA guys to come this year? whoud be cool if they came.

Night

_________________
Paper, Scissors, Poleaxe
Chevalier




PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 12:22 am      Reply with quote

Quote:
has anyone asked SCA guys to come this year? whoud be cool if they came


SCA people have been attending NAAMA for years...
Nathan




PostPosted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 1:14 am      Reply with quote

I was meaning in a "display" form. I realise that they cannot offically do combat with steel around (is that right) but a demostration would be cool.

Yes I know that many involved with NAAMA also do SCA. Laughing

_________________
Paper, Scissors, Poleaxe
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Back to top Goto page 1, 2  Next
Page 1 of 2

 
Jump to:  


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group Please read the terms of use Contact the Site Admin
Your donations help keep this site ad-free