
British Scouting in Colonial Hong Kong, 1910-1919
Paul Kua
This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
This book deals with the history of the first decade of Hong Kong Scouting. It is divided into six chapters. Chapter One, Boy Scouts requested and Boys' Brigade introduced. Chapter Two, Baden-Powell...
Location:
United States
Networks:
Paul Kua
Digital Voice Archie G
Scouting in Hong Kong, 1910-2010
Propius Press
English Audiobooks
INAudio Audiobooks
Description:
This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice. This book deals with the history of the first decade of Hong Kong Scouting. It is divided into six chapters. Chapter One, Boy Scouts requested and Boys' Brigade introduced. Chapter Two, Baden-Powell visited and Boys' Brigade disbanded. Chapter Three, Scout Troop formed and Nationality restrictions imposed. Chapter Four, Cub Packs started and Scouts Association enlarged. Chapter Five, Girl Guiding launched and Scouts Association wound up. Chapter Six, Founding-year Myth created and Centennial anniversary celebrated. In these early years, citizenship training meant preparing only a small number of British boys for God and the empire. Militarism, religion, sectarianism, and nationalism all mattered. Racial exclusion through British nationality requirements and cadet enrollment rules, age-based inclusion through Wolf Cubs, and gendered treatment through later and segregated training for girls in Guiding all acted together to create differentiated experiences for youth in Scouting, defined broadly to include Guiding. The Scout Movement prides itself as an international brotherhood, free of racism. Yet race, assuming the veil of nationality restrictions, excluded most Chinese and many Portuguese boys from Hong Kong Scouting in its first decade. The Scout Movement teaches duty to God. Yet religion or rather Christian sectarian prejudices retarded the start and hastened the end of Hong Kong Scouting. The Scout Movement supposedly prepares boys to become good soldiers. Yet war provided an excuse first for excluding many boys from Hong Kong Scouting, and later for winding up the Boy Scouts Association in the colony. In short, a particular vision of nationality, empire, religion and war informed a hesitant start of Hong Kong Scouting, a rather exclusionary approach to enrollment and an early demise of the movement in these pre-World War One years. Duration - 1h 32m. Author - Paul Kua. Narrator - Digital Voice Archie G. Published Date - Wednesday, 01 January 2025. Copyright - © 2024 Paul Kua ©.
Language:
English
Introduction
Duration:00:04:24
Chapter One, Boy Scouts Requested (March 1910) and Boys' Brigade introduced (May 1910).
Duration:00:14:35
Chapter Two, Baden-Powell visited (April 1912) and Boys’ Brigade disbanded (March 1913).
Duration:00:10:47
Chapter Three, Scout Troop formed (September 1913) and nationality restrictions imposed (August 1914).
Duration:00:28:33
Chapter Four, Cub Packs started (Fall 1914) and Scouts Association enlarged (October 1915).
Duration:00:10:35
Chapter Five, Girl Guiding launched (January 1916), Scouts Association wound up (August 1916).
Duration:00:14:00
Chapter Six, Founding-Year Myth created (1961 to 2000s) and Centennial anniversary celebrated (2010 to 2011).
Duration:00:05:29
Concluding Remarks.
Duration:00:04:28