Trouser People: Burma in the Shadows of the Empire - Andrew Marshall

Trouser People: Burma in the Shadows of the Empire

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
256 Seiten
2012
River Books (Verlag)
978-616-7339-18-4 (ISBN)
13,65 inkl. MwSt
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The Trouser People is an offbeat, thrilling and unforgettable journey through Britain's lost heritage and a powerful expose of Burma s modern tragedy.
An unforgettable adventure story of two journeys, one hundred years apart, into the untravelled heart of Burma. Part travelogue, part history, part reportage, The Trouser People is an enormously appealing and vivid account of Sir George Scott, the unsung Victorian adventurer who hacked, bullied and charmed his way through uncharted jungle to help establish British colonial rule in Burma. Born in Scotland in 1851, Scott was a die-hard imperialist with a fondness for gargantuan pith helmets and a bluffness of expression that bordered on the Pythonesque. But, as Andrew Marshall discovered, he was also a writer and photographer of rare sensibility. He spent a lifetime documenting the tribes who lived in Burma's vast wilderness and is the author of The Burman , published in 1882 and still in print today. He also not only mapped the lawless frontiers of this "geographical nowhere" - the British Empire's eastern-most land border with China - but he widened the imperial goalposts in another way: he introduced football to Burma, where today it is a national obsession.
Inspired by Scott's unpublished diaries, Andrew Marshall retraces the explorer's intrepid footsteps from the moldering colonial splendor of Rangoon to the fabled royal capital of Mandalay. In the process he discovers modern Burma, a hermit nation misruled by a brutal military dictatorship, its soldiers, like the British colonialists before them, nicknamed "the trouser people" by the country's sarong-wearing civilians. Wonderfully observed, mordantly funny, and skillfully recounted, 'The Trouser People' is an offbeat and thrilling journey through Britain's lost heritage and a powerful expose of Burma's modern tragedy.

Andrew Marshall is a British journalist living in Bangkok, Thailand, who specialises in Asian topics. Marshall is co-author of 'The Cult at the End of the World', a study of the Aum Shinrikyo and is a contributor to many daily and weekly publications.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 25.4.2012
Zusatzinfo 30 b&w
Sprache englisch
Maße 142 x 210 mm
Themenwelt Reisen Reiseberichte Asien
ISBN-10 616-7339-18-X / 616733918X
ISBN-13 978-616-7339-18-4 / 9786167339184
Zustand Neuware
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