ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月23日 22時04分


In 1955, Hong Kong was bustling with schools that taught a range of kung fu styles, including one method that uses a daunting weapon known as the 9-dragon trident. That same year, after losing several street fights with local gang members, @brucelee, who was then 14, took up kung fu. After perfecting moves like his one-inch punch and leaping kick under the tutelage of a grand master, @brucelee became an international star, introducing #kungfu to the world in films like 1973’s “Enter the Dragon.” Decades later, cue the dragon’s exit. The kung fu culture that #BruceLee helped popularize is in decline. Hong Kong’s streets are safer, and its real estate is among the world’s most expensive, making it difficult for training studios to afford rents. With a shift in martial arts preferences — Thai boxing and judo are popular — the rise of video games and a perception that kung fu just isn’t cool, longtime martial artists worry that kung fu’s future is bleak. @lamyikfei photographed a child imitating a statue of @brucelee in #HongKong.


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