TY - JOUR
T1 - Psychological Collectivism in Traditional Martial Arts
AU - Partikova, Veronika
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Cardiff University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/1/21
Y1 - 2019/1/21
N2 - This paper offers a new perspective for viewing traditional martial arts in terms of psychology. It argues that ‘traditional’ martial arts offer physical skills, moral codes, rituals, roles, and hierarchical relationships which, taken together, creates the perfect environment for psychological collectivism . Psychological collectivism focuses on individuals and their abilities to accept the norms of an in-group, understand hierarchy, and feel interdependence or the common faith of the group. First, this paper introduces the theory of psychological collectivism and connects it with traditional martial arts known as wushu or kung fu. It argues that traditional Asian martial arts create situations strong enough to activate collectivistic attributes of self and suggests that practitioners’ mind-sets can be different within and outside of the training environment. This kind of collectivistic interaction may provide one explanation for how non-Asian practitioners function in such training environments and how the traditional Asian martial arts can work as psychosocial therapies.
AB - This paper offers a new perspective for viewing traditional martial arts in terms of psychology. It argues that ‘traditional’ martial arts offer physical skills, moral codes, rituals, roles, and hierarchical relationships which, taken together, creates the perfect environment for psychological collectivism . Psychological collectivism focuses on individuals and their abilities to accept the norms of an in-group, understand hierarchy, and feel interdependence or the common faith of the group. First, this paper introduces the theory of psychological collectivism and connects it with traditional martial arts known as wushu or kung fu. It argues that traditional Asian martial arts create situations strong enough to activate collectivistic attributes of self and suggests that practitioners’ mind-sets can be different within and outside of the training environment. This kind of collectivistic interaction may provide one explanation for how non-Asian practitioners function in such training environments and how the traditional Asian martial arts can work as psychosocial therapies.
KW - kung fu
KW - kung fu family
KW - membership
KW - Psychological collectivism
KW - traditional martial arts
KW - wushu
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85112274402&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.18573/mas.72
DO - 10.18573/mas.72
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85112274402
SN - 2057-5696
SP - 49
EP - 59
JO - Martial Arts Studies
JF - Martial Arts Studies
IS - 7
ER -