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News / Asia

Study Buddy (Challenger): Japanese swordmakers forge new fan base

This page is for students who want to take their reading comprehension to the next level with difficult vocabulary and questions to test their inference skills
byYoung Post, Agence France-Presse
Published: 10:15pm, 08 Mar 2026
Length: 591 words
Study Buddy (Challenger): Japanese swordmakers forge new fan base

Sparks fly as swordsmith Akihira Kawasaki steadies steel over an anvil while his apprentice hammers the metal to forge katana blades at Kawasaki’s workshop in Misato, Saitama prefecture, Japan. Photo: AFP

Read the following text and answer the quiz below.

[1] Sparks illuminate the soot-covered studio of Japanese swordsmith Akihira Kawasaki as his apprentice hammers red-hot steel, showcasing a millennium-old craft now enjoying a resurgence in popularity. Despite the rapidly greying, shrinking population of blademakers in Japan, their fine steel swords, known as katana, are amassing a new generation of fans, particularly younger women.

[2] Driving the sword boom of the last decade has been video game Touken Ranbu, where swords take on the form of handsome men, with more recent hits like US series Shogun and anime Demon Slayer also feeding the trend. “It’s really encouraging to see more young people who genuinely love swords and engage with them so deeply,” 57-year-old Kawasaki told Agence France-Presse.

[3] Katana buffs “used to be exclusively male”, he said, with “these old men dismissive or quite scornful of younger people showing interest, condescendingly telling them: ‘You don’t know nearly as much about swords as we do.’” The 2015 release of Touken Ranbu has since turned some of its fans into serious admirers of the katana, the lightweight but extremely sharp Japanese sword with a curved blade.

[4] Among them is Minori Takumi, 25, who began poring over blades showcased at museums after getting into the game as a teen. Her devotion changed her life when she joined the Bizen Osafune Sword Museum in western Japan’s Setouchi city as a full-time curator. In addition, the success of Demon Slayer has seen DIY buffs and craftsmen worldwide post YouTube videos recreating some of its characters’ outlandish katana, racking up millions of views.

[5] Despite the boom, swordsmiths themselves are far from thriving. Their numbers nationwide have halved to around 160 from nearly 40 years ago, with many in their 70s or 80s, according to the All Japan Swordsmith Association. Young recruits are scared away in part by the unpaid mandatory apprenticeship that lasts at least five years, explained Tetsuya Tsubouchi, who heads the association’s business unit.

[6] From repeatedly whacking steel with a heavy hammer to sitting sweat-drenched by a hearth for hours, the daily grind of blademaking is also not for the faint-hearted. But more fundamentally, “you can barely make ends meet” as a swordsmith today, with prices kept low by disdain for newly crafted swords among the industry’s old guard and collectors, 66-year-old Tsubouchi said. “The view still exists within our industry that ancient swords are the best,” he said.

[7] Kawasaki’s work is an exception, with his pieces selling for tens of thousands of dollars. As well as Touken Ranbu fans seeking replicas of their favourite katana, practitioners of martial arts such as Iaijutsu value their practicality as weapons, he said.

[8] But what he really wants is the katana recognised as a “masterpiece” of contemporary art. Not all of his fellow swordsmiths see their work this way. Some are content to produce quality products “but never exercise creativity”, he said. As long as this mindset prevails, the contemporary katana will continue to be undervalued, Kawasaki warned. “Unless we declare ourselves artists of steel, I doubt swordsmiths will ever be properly recognised.”

Source: Agence France-Presse, February 11

Content provided by British Council

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