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Kata

Kata is a Japanese word (型 or 形) meaning "form". It refers to a detailed choreographed pattern of martial arts movements made to be practised alone. It can also be reviewed within groups and in unison when training. It is practised in Japanese martial arts as a way to memorize and perfect the movements being executed. Korean martial arts with Japanese influence (hapkido, Tang Soo Do) use the derived term hyeong (hanja: 形) and also the term pumsae (hanja: 品勢 hangeul: 품새).

Kata
2005 cadet world karate champion [1] Emmanuelle Fumonde performing a kata.
Japanese name
Kanji1. 型
2. 形
Hiraganaかた
Transcriptions
Revised Hepburnkata

Kata are also used in many traditional Japanese arts such as theatre forms like kabuki and schools of tea ceremony (chadō), but are most commonly known in the martial arts. Kata are used by most Japanese and Okinawan martial arts, such as iaido, judo, kendo, kenpo, and karate.

Background

Kata originally were teaching and training methods by which successful combat techniques were preserved and passed on. Practising kata allowed a company of persons to engage in a struggle using a systematic approach, rather by practising in a repetitive manner the learner develops the ability to execute those techniques and movements in a natural, reflex-like manner. Systematic practice does not mean permanently rigid. The goal is to internalize the movements and techniques of a kata so they can be executed and adapted under different circumstances, without thought or hesitation. A novice's actions will look uneven and difficult, while a master's appear simple and smooth.[2]

Kata is a loanword in English, from the 1950s in reference to the judo kata due to Jigoro Kano, and from the 1970s also of karate kata; but the word has come to be used as a generic term for "forms" in martial arts in general, or even figuratively applied to other fields.[3]

Japanese martial arts

In Japanese martial arts practice, kata is often seen as an essential partner to randori training with one complementing the other. However, the actual type and frequency of kata versus randori training varies from art to art. In iaido, solo kata using the Japanese sword (katana) comprises almost all of the training. Whereas in judo, kata training is de-emphasized and usually only prepared for dan grading.

In kenjutsu, paired kata at the beginners level can appear to be stilted. At higher levels serious injury is prevented only by a high sensitivity of both participants to important concepts being taught and trained for. These include timing and distance, with the kata practised at realistic speed. This adjustability of kata training is found in other Japanese arts with roles of attacker and defender often interchanging within the sequence.[4] Many martial arts use kata for public demonstrations and in competitions, awarding points for such aspects of technique as style, balance, timing, and verisimilitude (appearance of being real).

 
Solo training of kata is the primary form of practice in some martial arts, such as iaido.

Karate

The most popular image associated with kata is that of a karate practitioner performing a series of punches and kicks in the air. The kata are executed as a specified series of approximately 20 to 70 moves, generally with stepping and turning, while attempting to maintain perfect form. There are perhaps 100 kata across the various forms of karate, each with many minor variations. The number of moves in a kata may be referred to in the name of the kata, e.g., Gojū Shiho, which means "54 steps." The practitioner is generally counselled to visualize the enemy attacks, and his responses, as actually occurring, and karateka are often told to "read" a kata, to explain the imagined events. Kata can contain techniques beyond the superficially obvious ones. The study of the meaning of the movements is referred to as the bunkai, meaning analysis, of the kata.[5]

One explanation of the use of kata is as a reference guide for a set of moves. Not to be used following that "set" pattern but to keep the movements "filed". After learning these kata, this set of learned skills can then be used in a sparring scenario (particularly without points). The main objective here is to try out different combinations of techniques in a safe environment to ultimately find out how to defeat your opponent.

 
Koshiki-no-kata by Kano(l) and Yamashita(r)

Recently, with the spread of extreme martial arts, or XMA, a style of kata called CMX kata has formed. These kata are performed in tournaments and include gymnastics related elements, such as backflips, cartwheels, and splits. These kata can also be performed with weapons such as the staff.

Judo

Judo has several kata, mostly created in the late 19th century by Kano Jigoro, the founder of judo. The judo kata involve two participants. Judo kata preserve a number of techniques that are not permitted in competition or in randori, including punches, kicks, and the use of the katana and other weapons. The study of kata is usually begun typically at around the green belt level. The most commonly studied judo kata is Nage-no-kata, which consists of fifteen throwing techniques. The Katame-no-kata is composed of pinning techniques, chokes, and joint locks. Kime-no-kata is a long kata consisting of self-defense techniques against both unarmed attacks, and attacks with swords and knives.[6][7]

 
Aka with stick (4 Winds)

Non-Japanese martial arts

While the Japanese term is most well known in the English language, forms are by no means exclusive to Japan. They have been recorded in China as early as the Tang dynasty, and are referred to in Mandarin as taolu.[citation needed]

South and Southeast Asian martial arts incorporate both preset and freestyle forms. In silat these are referred to as jurus and tari respectively. Malay folklore credits the introduction of forms to the Buddhist monk Bodhidharma.[8]

In Korean martial arts such as taekwondo and Tang Soo Do, the word hyung or hyeong is usually employed, though in some cases other words are used.[citation needed] The International Taekwon-Do Federation uses the word tul, while the World Taekwondo Federation uses the word poomsae or simply the English translations "pattern" or "form."[citation needed] Taekwondo patterns have multiple variations including Palgwe and the more popular Taeguk forms used by the WTF. Forms are included in certain taekwondo competitions and are a key element of gradings.[citation needed]

In Sanskrit, forms are known either as yudhan (combat form) or pentra (tactical deployment).[citation needed] Other Asian martial arts refer to forms by various terms specific to their respective languages, such as the Burmese word aka, the Vietnamese quyen and the Kashmiri khawankay.[citation needed]

In the Historical European martial arts and their modern reconstructions, there are forms, plays, drills and flourishes.[citation needed]

Outside martial arts

More recently kata has come to be used in English in a more general or figurative sense, referring to any basic form, routine, or pattern of behavior that is practised to various levels of mastery.[9]

In Japanese language kata (though written as 方) is a frequently-used suffix meaning “way of doing,” with emphasis on the form and order of the process. Other meanings are “training method” and “formal exercise.” The goal of a painter's practising, for example, is to merge their consciousness with their brush; the potter's with their clay; the garden designer's with the materials of the garden. Once such mastery is achieved, the theory goes, the doing of a thing perfectly is as easy as thinking it.[10]

Kata is a term used by some programmers in the Software Craftsmanship[11] movement. Computer programmers who call themselves "Software Craftsmen"[12] will write 'Kata'[13] - small snippets of code that they write in one sitting, sometimes repeatedly,[14] often daily, in order to build muscle memory and practise their craft.[13]

In 1999, the term was used by Dave Thomas, co-author of the book The Pragmatic Programmer.[15] The concept was implemented by Laurent Bossavit and Emmanuel Gaillot who talked about it at XP2005 in Sheffield (UK).[16] Following this conference, Robert C. Martin described the concept and initial usages in his article "The Programming Dojo".[17]

One of the things that characterize an organization's culture is its kata – its routines of thinking and practice.[18] Edgar Schein suggests an organization's culture helps it cope with its environment,[19] and one meaning of kata is, "a way to keep two things in sync or harmony with one another." A task for leaders and managers is to create and maintain the organizational culture through consistent role modeling, teaching, and coaching, which is in many ways analogous to how kata are taught in the martial arts.

Toyota Kata is a 2009 management book by Mike Rother aiming to establish a routine for establishing a continuous improvement process.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ "World junior and cadet championships 2005".
  2. ^ Rosenbaum, Michael. Kata and the Transmission of Knowledge in Traditional Martial Arts. YMAA Publication Center, Boston, 2004.
  3. ^ Rother, Mike (2010). Toyota Kata: Managing People for Improvement, Adaptiveness, and Super Results. New York: McGraw Hill Education. pp. 15–18. ISBN 978007163523-3.
  4. ^ "Classical Japanese Warrior Training Methods The Kata". www.shinmunenryu.org. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  5. ^
  6. ^ "Forms of Judo: Kata – Judo Info". www.judoinfo.com.
  7. ^ R.GROULS@WXS.NL. "Kata, nage, karame, gonosen, itsutsu, kime, no, video, movie, film, armlock, judo, Judoschool Jan Snijders, Oirschot, Bladel, Deurne, Gemert". www.judo-snijders.nl.
  8. ^ Zainal Abidin Shaikh Awab and Nigel Sutton (2006). Silat Tua: The Malay Dance Of Life. Kuala Lumpur: Azlan Ghanie Sdn Bhd. ISBN 978-983-42328-0-1.
  9. ^ Shook, John. Managing to Learn. Lean Enterprise Institute, 2008, p. 32
  10. ^ DeMenthe, Boye Lafayette. Kata, The Key to Understanding and Dealing with the Japanese! Tuttle Publishing, 2003, pp. 1–3
  11. ^ The Software Craftsmanship Movement
  12. ^ Martin, Micah; Steensma, Kelly (May 28, 2013). "Performing Code Katas - 8th Light". 8thlight.com.
  13. ^ a b "What's all this Nonsense about Katas? - Clean Coder". sites.google.com. November 21, 2009.
  14. ^ (@PragDave), Dave Thomas (December 30, 2013). "CodeKata: How It Started - CodeKata". codekata.com.
  15. ^ Hunt, Andrew; Thomas, Dave (1999). The Pragmatic Programmer. Addison Wesley. ISBN 020161622X.
  16. ^ The Coder's Dojo - A Different Way to Teach and Learn Programming. XP2005 in Sheffield (UK).
  17. ^ "The Programming Dojo"
  18. ^ Ichijo, Kazuo and Nonaka, Ikujiro, Knowledge Creation and Management: New Challenges for Managers, Oxford University Press, 2006, page 25
  19. ^ Schein, Edgar. Organizational Culture and Leadership: A Dynamic View. Jossey-Bass, 1985, p. 57
  20. ^ "Toyota Kata (Lean Culture Building) | UT Center for Industrial Services". cis.tennessee.edu. Retrieved 2 April 2022.

Further reading

  • Martin, Robert C. (2011). The Clean Coder: A Code of Conduct for Professional Programmers. Pearson Education. ISBN 9780137081073.

kata, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, nuristani, tribe, afghanistan, pakistan, people, quyen, redirects, here, name, list, people, with, name, quyen, name, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, ar. For other uses see Kata disambiguation Katas redirects here For a Nuristani tribe in Afghanistan and Pakistan see Kata people Quyen redirects here For the name and a list of people with the name see Quyen name This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kata news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Kata is a Japanese word 型 or 形 meaning form It refers to a detailed choreographed pattern of martial arts movements made to be practised alone It can also be reviewed within groups and in unison when training It is practised in Japanese martial arts as a way to memorize and perfect the movements being executed Korean martial arts with Japanese influence hapkido Tang Soo Do use the derived term hyeong hanja 形 and also the term pumsae hanja 品勢 hangeul 품새 Kata2005 cadet world karate champion 1 Emmanuelle Fumonde performing a kata Japanese nameKanji1 型2 形HiraganaかたTranscriptionsRevised HepburnkataKata are also used in many traditional Japanese arts such as theatre forms like kabuki and schools of tea ceremony chadō but are most commonly known in the martial arts Kata are used by most Japanese and Okinawan martial arts such as iaido judo kendo kenpo and karate Contents 1 Background 2 Japanese martial arts 2 1 Karate 2 2 Judo 3 Non Japanese martial arts 4 Outside martial arts 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingBackground EditKata originally were teaching and training methods by which successful combat techniques were preserved and passed on Practising kata allowed a company of persons to engage in a struggle using a systematic approach rather by practising in a repetitive manner the learner develops the ability to execute those techniques and movements in a natural reflex like manner Systematic practice does not mean permanently rigid The goal is to internalize the movements and techniques of a kata so they can be executed and adapted under different circumstances without thought or hesitation A novice s actions will look uneven and difficult while a master s appear simple and smooth 2 Kata is a loanword in English from the 1950s in reference to the judo kata due to Jigoro Kano and from the 1970s also of karate kata but the word has come to be used as a generic term for forms in martial arts in general or even figuratively applied to other fields 3 Japanese martial arts EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Japanese martial arts practice kata is often seen as an essential partner to randori training with one complementing the other However the actual type and frequency of kata versus randori training varies from art to art In iaido solo kata using the Japanese sword katana comprises almost all of the training Whereas in judo kata training is de emphasized and usually only prepared for dan grading In kenjutsu paired kata at the beginners level can appear to be stilted At higher levels serious injury is prevented only by a high sensitivity of both participants to important concepts being taught and trained for These include timing and distance with the kata practised at realistic speed This adjustability of kata training is found in other Japanese arts with roles of attacker and defender often interchanging within the sequence 4 Many martial arts use kata for public demonstrations and in competitions awarding points for such aspects of technique as style balance timing and verisimilitude appearance of being real Solo training of kata is the primary form of practice in some martial arts such as iaido Karate Edit Main article Karate kata The most popular image associated with kata is that of a karate practitioner performing a series of punches and kicks in the air The kata are executed as a specified series of approximately 20 to 70 moves generally with stepping and turning while attempting to maintain perfect form There are perhaps 100 kata across the various forms of karate each with many minor variations The number of moves in a kata may be referred to in the name of the kata e g Goju Shiho which means 54 steps The practitioner is generally counselled to visualize the enemy attacks and his responses as actually occurring and karateka are often told to read a kata to explain the imagined events Kata can contain techniques beyond the superficially obvious ones The study of the meaning of the movements is referred to as the bunkai meaning analysis of the kata 5 One explanation of the use of kata is as a reference guide for a set of moves Not to be used following that set pattern but to keep the movements filed After learning these kata this set of learned skills can then be used in a sparring scenario particularly without points The main objective here is to try out different combinations of techniques in a safe environment to ultimately find out how to defeat your opponent Koshiki no kata by Kano l and Yamashita r Recently with the spread of extreme martial arts or XMA a style of kata called CMX kata has formed These kata are performed in tournaments and include gymnastics related elements such as backflips cartwheels and splits These kata can also be performed with weapons such as the bō staff Judo Edit Main article Judo kata Judo has several kata mostly created in the late 19th century by Kano Jigoro the founder of judo The judo kata involve two participants Judo kata preserve a number of techniques that are not permitted in competition or in randori including punches kicks and the use of the katana and other weapons The study of kata is usually begun typically at around the green belt level The most commonly studied judo kata is Nage no kata which consists of fifteen throwing techniques The Katame no kata is composed of pinning techniques chokes and joint locks Kime no kata is a long kata consisting of self defense techniques against both unarmed attacks and attacks with swords and knives 6 7 Aka with stick 4 Winds Non Japanese martial arts EditWhile the Japanese term is most well known in the English language forms are by no means exclusive to Japan They have been recorded in China as early as the Tang dynasty and are referred to in Mandarin as taolu citation needed South and Southeast Asian martial arts incorporate both preset and freestyle forms In silat these are referred to as jurus and tari respectively Malay folklore credits the introduction of forms to the Buddhist monk Bodhidharma 8 In Korean martial arts such as taekwondo and Tang Soo Do the word hyung or hyeong is usually employed though in some cases other words are used citation needed The International Taekwon Do Federation uses the word tul while the World Taekwondo Federation uses the word poomsae or simply the English translations pattern or form citation needed Taekwondo patterns have multiple variations including Palgwe and the more popular Taeguk forms used by the WTF Forms are included in certain taekwondo competitions and are a key element of gradings citation needed In Sanskrit forms are known either as yudhan combat form or pentra tactical deployment citation needed Other Asian martial arts refer to forms by various terms specific to their respective languages such as the Burmese word aka the Vietnamese quyen and the Kashmiri khawankay citation needed In the Historical European martial arts and their modern reconstructions there are forms plays drills and flourishes citation needed Outside martial arts EditFor other uses see Kata disambiguation More recently kata has come to be used in English in a more general or figurative sense referring to any basic form routine or pattern of behavior that is practised to various levels of mastery 9 In Japanese language kata though written as 方 is a frequently used suffix meaning way of doing with emphasis on the form and order of the process Other meanings are training method and formal exercise The goal of a painter s practising for example is to merge their consciousness with their brush the potter s with their clay the garden designer s with the materials of the garden Once such mastery is achieved the theory goes the doing of a thing perfectly is as easy as thinking it 10 Kata is a term used by some programmers in the Software Craftsmanship 11 movement Computer programmers who call themselves Software Craftsmen 12 will write Kata 13 small snippets of code that they write in one sitting sometimes repeatedly 14 often daily in order to build muscle memory and practise their craft 13 In 1999 the term was used by Dave Thomas co author of the book The Pragmatic Programmer 15 The concept was implemented by Laurent Bossavit and Emmanuel Gaillot who talked about it at XP2005 in Sheffield UK 16 Following this conference Robert C Martin described the concept and initial usages in his article The Programming Dojo 17 One of the things that characterize an organization s culture is its kata its routines of thinking and practice 18 Edgar Schein suggests an organization s culture helps it cope with its environment 19 and one meaning of kata is a way to keep two things in sync or harmony with one another A task for leaders and managers is to create and maintain the organizational culture through consistent role modeling teaching and coaching which is in many ways analogous to how kata are taught in the martial arts Toyota Kata is a 2009 management book by Mike Rother aiming to establish a routine for establishing a continuous improvement process 20 See also EditEtude Practice learning method Procedural memoryReferences Edit World junior and cadet championships 2005 Rosenbaum Michael Kata and the Transmission of Knowledge in Traditional Martial Arts YMAA Publication Center Boston 2004 Rother Mike 2010 Toyota Kata Managing People for Improvement Adaptiveness and Super Results New York McGraw Hill Education pp 15 18 ISBN 978007163523 3 Classical Japanese Warrior Training Methods The Kata www shinmunenryu org Retrieved 28 February 2018 Karate Okinawan Kobudo and Kendo Kata videos Forms of Judo Kata Judo Info www judoinfo com R GROULS WXS NL Kata nage karame gonosen itsutsu kime no video movie film armlock judo Judoschool Jan Snijders Oirschot Bladel Deurne Gemert www judo snijders nl Zainal Abidin Shaikh Awab and Nigel Sutton 2006 Silat Tua The Malay Dance Of Life Kuala Lumpur Azlan Ghanie Sdn Bhd ISBN 978 983 42328 0 1 Shook John Managing to Learn Lean Enterprise Institute 2008 p 32 DeMenthe Boye Lafayette Kata The Key to Understanding and Dealing with the Japanese Tuttle Publishing 2003 pp 1 3 The Software Craftsmanship Movement Martin Micah Steensma Kelly May 28 2013 Performing Code Katas 8th Light 8thlight com a b What s all this Nonsense about Katas Clean Coder sites google com November 21 2009 PragDave Dave Thomas December 30 2013 CodeKata How It Started CodeKata codekata com Hunt Andrew Thomas Dave 1999 The Pragmatic Programmer Addison Wesley ISBN 020161622X The Coder s Dojo A Different Way to Teach and Learn Programming XP2005 in Sheffield UK The Programming Dojo Ichijo Kazuo and Nonaka Ikujiro Knowledge Creation and Management New Challenges for Managers Oxford University Press 2006 page 25 Schein Edgar Organizational Culture and Leadership A Dynamic View Jossey Bass 1985 p 57 Toyota Kata Lean Culture Building UT Center for Industrial Services cis tennessee edu Retrieved 2 April 2022 Further reading EditMartin Robert C 2011 The Clean Coder A Code of Conduct for Professional Programmers Pearson Education ISBN 9780137081073 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kata amp oldid 1125875021, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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