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Emma Larkin, author of Finding George Orwell in Burma - our blogger for the week of 10/15

Fri, 10/12/2007

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Emma Larkin is our guest blogger during the week of October 15th. She wil be blogging about her recent trip to Burma (also known as Myanmar). If you have any questions for Emma Larkin, add a comment to any of her posts. Here is some information about Finding George Orwell in Burma:

Over the years the American writer Emma Larkin has spent traveling in Burma, she's come to know all too well the many ways this brutal police state can be described as "Orwellian." The life of the mind exists in a state of siege in Burma, and it long has. But Burma's connection to George Orwell is not merely metaphorical; it is much deeper and more real. Orwell's mother was born in Burma, at the height of the British raj, and Orwell was fundamentally shaped by his experiences in Burma as a young man working for the British Imperial Police. When Orwell died, the novel-in-progress on his desk was set in Burma. It is the place George Orwell's work holds in Burma today, however, that most struck Emma Larkin. She was frequently told by Burmese acquaintances that Orwell did not write one book about their country - his first novel, Burmese Days - but in fact he wrote three, the "trilogy" that included Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four. When Larkin quietly asked one Burmese intellectual if he knew the work of George Orwell, he stared blankly for a moment and then said, "Ah, you mean the prophet!"

In one of the most intrepid political travelogues in recent memory, Emma Larkin tells of the year she spent traveling through Burma using the life and work of George Orwell as her compass. Going from Mandalay and Rangoon to poor delta backwaters and up to the old hill-station towns in the mountains of Burma's far north, Larkin visits the places where Orwell worked and lived, and the places his books live still. She brings to vivid life a country and a people cut off from the rest of the world, and from one another, by the ruling military junta and its vast network of spies and informers. Using Orwell enables her to show, effortlessly, the weight of the colonial experience on Burma today, the ghosts of which are invisible and everywhere. More important, she finds that the path she charts leads her to the people who have found ways to somehow resist the soul-crushing effects of life in this most cruel police state. And George Orwell's moral clarity, hatred of injustice, and keen powers of observation serve as the author's compass in another sense too: they are qualities she shares and they suffuse her book - the keenest and finest reckoning with life in this police state that has yet been written.

About Emma Larkin

Emma Larkin is the pseudonym for an American journalist who was born and raised in Asia, studied the Burmese language at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, and covers Asia widely in her journalism from her base in Bangkok. She has been visiting Burma for close to ten years.

Finding George Orwell in Burma
Emma Larkin - Author
$15.00 | add to cart
Book: Paperback | 5.03 x 7.79in | 304 pages | ISBN 9780143037118 | 06 Mar 2006 | Penguin

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Thanks for your intellectual insights

Thanks Emma,

I am one of a hundred of a similar Winston Smiths in Burma you have found out.
As far as I know, you are probably the first Western scholar to relate three classic novels of George Orwell to the current situations in Burma.

Not only I appreciate Orwell's spiritual writings for Burma but I also appreciate
your intellectual insights of his erudite novels for spotlighting our Orwellian State. I also wish there can be funding for translating this book into Burmese and this can probably change the whole paradigm of people in the contemporary Burma.

You are also cordially invited to have a visit to my blog. Your comments are also most welcome.

http://www.burmakin.blogspot.com/

Regards,
Burmakin

Orwell

I am glad this is the blog of the week. Orwell thrills me. I agree with the Burmese Intellect Ah! the prophet is right. I would like to add that we as human beings have a choice. We can choose to be govern with a democracy or a totalitarian state. I choose democracy!