
The Trouser People by Andrew Marshall
Sir George Scott was an 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. "Stepped on something soft and wobbly", he records in his bush diary one dark night. "Struck a match, found it was a dead Chinaman". George Scott was also a writer and photographer who spent a lifetime documenting the outlandish tribes who lived in Burma's wilderness - tribes like the Padaung "giraffe women" and the headhunting Wild Wa, who quaintly claimed to be descended from tadpoles. Scott also extended the Empire's untamed border with China, then famously widened the imperial goalposts in another way: he introduced football to Burma, where today it is a national obsession. A century later, Burma is a hermit nation misruled by a brutal military dictatorship. Its soldiers, like the British colonialists before them, are scathingly nicknamed "the trouser people" by the country's sarong-wearing civilians. Inspired by Scott's unpublished diaries, Andrew Marshall retraces the explorer's intrepid footsteps from the mouldering colonial splendour of Rangoon to the fabled royal capital of Mandalay, then up into the remote tribal heartland where Scott had his greatest adventures. Marshall recalls the opulent lives of the Western-educated chiefs who in Scott's time ruled hilltop fiefdoms half the size of England, and has his own encounter with the Wild Wa, who today run a huge drug-trafficking empire. Driven by the untold story of an extraordinary Scotsman, "The Trouser People" is an offbeat and thrilling journey through Britain's lost heritage - and a powerful expose to Burma's modern tragedy.
Burma, a forgotten country in recent years, is ruled by a vicious military juntaMarshall presents us with a little known Victorian adventurer who helped to establish colonial rule there. George Scott, writer and photographer, born in Scotland in 1851, spent much of his life in Burma and wrote a famous book called The Burman: His Life and Notions, published 1882, still in print a century later. He is also famous for having introduced football to Burma; Scott's students loved it for being 'just like fighting'. Marshall retraces the explorer's footsteps from Rangoon to the capital of Mandalay, then up into the remote tribal heartland. This excellent book also gives a sharp impression of modern day Burma and the repression of the inhabitants by the military dictatorship. I was fascinated by this first-class study of a little known land.
Andrew Marshall is a journalist who has lived and worked in Asia for 10 years. He is co-author of THE CULT AT THE END OF THE WORLD, an account of the Aum Supreme Truth doomsday cult and the rise of hi-tech terrorism. Most recently, he has been exploring Asia's remotest regions for various newspapers and magazines, including Esquire, Arena, The Times, South China Morning Post & the Sydney Morning Herald. He lives in Bangkok.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780670892372 |
| ISBN 10 | 0670892378 |
| Title | The Trouser People |
| Author | Andrew Marshall |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Penguin Books Ltd |
| Year published | 2002-01-31 |
| Number of pages | 320 |
| Prizes | Short-listed for Thomas Cook Travel Book Award 2003 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |