The Evolution of American Karate From its arrival with returning World War II veterans to its reinvention through tournaments, full-contact fighting, and freestyle performance, American karate has carved out a unique place in martial arts history. What began as the import of Okinawan and Japanese traditions soon transformed into something distinctly American-eclectic, athletic, and unafraid to bend or break convention. This book traces that journey in full, exploring the pioneers who shaped the art: Robert Trias and his Shuri-Ryu foundation, Ed Parker and the birth of Kenpo, innovators like Joe Lewis, Bill Wallace, and Chuck Norris, and the bold controversies of Count Dante. It also highlights African-American and Latino contributors too often overlooked in mainstream accounts, showing how their influence helped shape both the culture and practice of American karate. The Evolution of American Karate reveals how competition, commercialization, and cross-training propelled the art forward, while raising important questions about authenticity, adaptation, and legacy. Is American karate still "karate," or has it become something entirely new? For martial artists, historians, and anyone who's ever stepped onto a dojo floor, this book offers a vivid, practitioner's-eye view of how karate took root in the United States and grew into a style that reflects the diversity, creativity, and fighting spirit of America itself.