{"id":12649,"date":"2012-11-09T09:23:20","date_gmt":"2012-11-09T09:23:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=12649"},"modified":"2012-11-09T10:21:37","modified_gmt":"2012-11-09T10:21:37","slug":"found-feminism-hands-off-womens-self-defence-1942-style","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/11\/09\/found-feminism-hands-off-womens-self-defence-1942-style\/","title":{"rendered":"Found Feminism: HANDS OFF! Women’s Self-defence, 1942 style"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s not automatically feminist for self-defence books to point out that women can be in physical danger from men. I wrote a previous post for BadRep<\/a> on suffragette Edith Garrud, who produced a leaflet describing a woman being attacked as she walked home at night, as well as a short play in which a wife defends herself against her drunken husband. In both those writings, she showed the woman in a routine or domestic situation defending herself using the ju-jutsu that Edith was teaching (in 1910!).<\/p>\n
Well, it’s maybe not surprising that Mrs Garrud’s guides were written from a feminist standpoint, but I wasn’t expecting quite the same level of realism from the very military William E. Fairbairn<\/a> in a book I stumbled across this week.<\/p>\n
A policeman and soldier, Fairbairn knew a LOT about combat. I mean, really.
No, REALLY. As the ever-excitable website Badass of the Week<\/strong><\/a> put it:<\/p>\n
Fairbairn was stationed in Japanese-occupied Korea from 1903 to 1907,
and he spent the majority of those four years learning everything he
possibly could about the long-lost art of epically kicking the fiery
rainbow-living sh**fire out of every living thing on the planet until
the only things left inhabiting Earth are multi-colored protoplasmic
bags of liquefied organs and bone shards.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
What made him unique was that he didn’t mind fighting very, very
dirty if it meant you won. And so he did win, usually against street
gangs and organised crime rings in Shanghai, where he served with the
police. And he then taught that to the commandos, and special forces,
the pre-CIA, he invented the SWAT team and tactics still being used
today, had a black belt in judo certified by
the guy who invented judo<\/em>, and allegedly held a six-week
training course in ‘silent killing’ which included using
only a normal stick. He is an enormous figure in Western close-combat
history.<\/p>\n