The paper is organised around the notion of embodied technique. The recent attempts to formulate scientific methodologies for the reconstruction of medieval fighting techniques based on a study of premodern fight books raise questions about the epistemological status of these (re)constructed techniques developed by modern practitioners of Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA). Approaching the subject from a perspective of cultural history and martial arts studies, the following questions are discussed: What is technique and how is it related to practice? How is technique acquired and transmitted? How can technique be recorded? And finally, how can historical records of technique be understood, interpreted and converted into practice? Fo...
This talk will place martial arts practice and studies in the context of an ongoing sea change in th...
Si la question de la violence à la fin de l’ère médiévale a été amplement traitée par les historie...
The phenomenon of the fight book is not restricted to the European tradition. Similar artefacts, usu...
The paper is organised around the notion of embodied technique. The recent attempts to formulate sci...
Historical European martial arts (HEMA) have to be considered an important part of our common Europe...
Historical European martial arts (HEMA) have to be considered an important part of our common Europe...
The two panels of the conference were concluded by a round-table aiming at discussing the future of ...
The following paper explores how intangible cultural knowledge is represented in the cultural record...
This article is based on the talk presented on 27th November 2016 in the course of the Journées d’ét...
This thesis aims to show the extent to which the accurate identification and reconstruction of histo...
The modern Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA) movement consists of a number of groups that seek...
European fight books form a large corpus of printed and manuscript material from the fourteenth cent...
From the famous wrestling scenes of the Beni Hasan cemetery in Egypt to self-defence manuals of the ...
During the late Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, fighting books—Fechtbücher—were produced in no...
The aim of this article is to describe the mechanisms of the genesis and functioning of martial arts...
This talk will place martial arts practice and studies in the context of an ongoing sea change in th...
Si la question de la violence à la fin de l’ère médiévale a été amplement traitée par les historie...
The phenomenon of the fight book is not restricted to the European tradition. Similar artefacts, usu...
The paper is organised around the notion of embodied technique. The recent attempts to formulate sci...
Historical European martial arts (HEMA) have to be considered an important part of our common Europe...
Historical European martial arts (HEMA) have to be considered an important part of our common Europe...
The two panels of the conference were concluded by a round-table aiming at discussing the future of ...
The following paper explores how intangible cultural knowledge is represented in the cultural record...
This article is based on the talk presented on 27th November 2016 in the course of the Journées d’ét...
This thesis aims to show the extent to which the accurate identification and reconstruction of histo...
The modern Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA) movement consists of a number of groups that seek...
European fight books form a large corpus of printed and manuscript material from the fourteenth cent...
From the famous wrestling scenes of the Beni Hasan cemetery in Egypt to self-defence manuals of the ...
During the late Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, fighting books—Fechtbücher—were produced in no...
The aim of this article is to describe the mechanisms of the genesis and functioning of martial arts...
This talk will place martial arts practice and studies in the context of an ongoing sea change in th...
Si la question de la violence à la fin de l’ère médiévale a été amplement traitée par les historie...
The phenomenon of the fight book is not restricted to the European tradition. Similar artefacts, usu...