Mastering Yang Style Taijiquan
Mastering Yang Style Taijiquan book cover

Mastering Yang Style Taijiquan

Paperback – May 9, 2006

Price
$16.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
264
Publisher
Blue Snake Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1583941522
Dimensions
6.03 x 0.62 x 8.96 inches
Weight
15.2 ounces

Description

About the Author Louis Swaim lives and practices in Oakland, California. He has also translated an earlier taijiquan manual, Yang Chengfu: The Essence and Applications of Taijiquan (North Atlantic Books, 2005). He received his master’s degree in Chinese history, Mandarin, and Classical Chinese at U.C. Berkeley, and did additional language study at the Inter-University Program for Chinese Language Studies. He has been a taijiquan practitioner for over thirty years.

Features & Highlights

  • Your go-to illustrated guide to the practices, history, and philosophy of the popular Yang style of taijiquan
  • Fu Zhongwen's classic guide offers the best documentation available of the Yang style of taijiquan. The superbly detailed form instructions and historic line art drawings are based on Fu’s many years as a disciple of Yang Chengfu, taijiquan’s legendary founder. Also included are concise descriptions of fixed-step, moving-step, and da lu push hands practices. Additional commentary by translator Louis Swaim provides key insight into the text’s philosophical language and imagery, further elucidating the art’s cultural and historical foundations.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(130)
★★★★
25%
(54)
★★★
15%
(33)
★★
7%
(15)
-7%
(-15)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

A great resource for those studying Yang Style Tai Chi.

I love this book. It's chock-full of great information about the study of Tai Chi. The price is very reasonable, too. Don't expect to learn how to perform the Yang Style form from the drawings of Yang Cheng Fu, though. Make sure you get a teacher. But as a thorough reference work this is fantastic. Just the glossary alone is worth the $12 I paid.

And if you're already studying Yang Style, the drawings are a treasure and will help you understand better what it must have been like to see the great man do the form.

There are also some terrific essays as well as remarkable photos of Yang Cheng Fu and his students and family, including one where he's riding in what looks like an early 1930's convertible.
13 people found this helpful
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good text to own

This book is excellent to own in any Tai Chi Chuan collection for Yang style. Fu Zhongwen was one of Yang Cheng Fu's top students. you will however find alternative movements that vary from other Yang sets. This is typical of Yang style however since there was many transitions from the founder Yang Lu Chan to his grand son and beyond. Either way the book is excellent and long as you keep the martial perspective with any Yang set you will gain from proper posture.
9 people found this helpful
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Good fundamentals, Good Basic Form

This book provides a rather detailed look at an earlier Yang Long Form than is often taught today - some practice points during specific postures have been discarded in more modern forms in Yang Style, and it was good to review and decide for myself which points to include. The diagrams can be a bit confusing sometimes, and the movements are not as explicit as I would prefer - but in a way, that's a good thing - figure it out for yourself based upon the fundamental principles and decide what feels right to you.

I would recommend any practitioner not to use this book alone to study Taijiquan, but it is a very helpful reference (I've studied Taijiquan for 5 years.)
7 people found this helpful
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Traditional Yang Style

My tai chi instructor uses this combination of postures for his advanced class. Having learned the 24- and 48-posture forms (in another publication), I am ready to learn the 108.

The only drawback of this book are the illustrations of the postural moves, and that is not really the fault of the book itself. I have seen the original photos from which this book's diagrams are taken, and they would not be much more help. You really need an instructor to teach them. All books of this sort are better as aids once the sequence of postures have been learned.

The explanation of the energetics of tai chi is excellent.
5 people found this helpful
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RECOMMENDED - a good guide for the intermediate practitioner

This book is a translation of Fu's step-by-step description of the Yang style Tai Chi form as it was taught to him. Each technique is described in detail, along with illustrations and notes for the student. The ONLY problem I have with this book is that instead of presenting the material in a linear fashion as Fu's original, the reader is required to flip back and forth when referring to material already presented (so I docked one star for this cheapness/ laziness). There is also a brief overview of push hands, and what I believe to be a more faithful translation of the Tai Chi Classics - more closely capturing the poetic beauty of the original Chinese.
5 people found this helpful
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Tai Chi classic

Second copy I have bought
For Prof Tayam’s Tai Chi class—first one I bought for my daughter also taking class.
Excellent diagrams /pictures.
Wish there were associated videos on u-tube—-though it is older book—
3 people found this helpful
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Tai Chi Classic

Should be included in any Tai Chi library. Not a beginners book, but a great book if you have some basic Tai Chi experience.
3 people found this helpful
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A Classic! Master Yang Chengfu as presented by Fu Zhongwen

I am a student of Tai Chi basically to learn self discipline, focus, and handle stress. My goal is to be a Master of myself - and it is important to me to understand the fundamentals and fine tuning of the art to get the best I can from it. This book is beautiful and complete in that sense. The narrative sets out exactly how it is to be done. It is easy to read and the drawings by Fu Zhongwen are self explanatory and help one develop an understanding of the subties of the movements. When you understand the "principals" and "rhythm" it all falls into place.
3 people found this helpful
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Best TaiJi Book on Yang Style You'll Ever Find

This is a book written by Fu Zhongwen in the 1950's, which is actually him finishing the works of his father Yang Chengfu. They are the inheritors of the Yang family name and this book is a super in depth and developed take on the 85 posture yang style taiji form. This book is honestly the best martial arts book I've ever purchased in my life. You can find a video on youtube of Fu Zhongwen's son, Fu Cheng Yuan, performing, this 85 posture form. It looks simple enough, but crack this book and you'll see just how deep each movement is.
2 people found this helpful
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on your way to becoming a master

everyone wants to be a master. Some insights here
2 people found this helpful