"A scout must always be prepared at any moment to do his duty, and to
face danger in order to help his fellow-men."
A startling amalgam of Zulu war-cry and imperial and urban myth, of
borrowed tips on health and hygiene, and object lessons in woodcraft,
Robert Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys (1908) is the original
blueprint and 'self-instructor' of the Boy Scout Movement. One of the
all-time bestsellers in the English-speaking world, this primer of
'yarns and pictures' constitutes probably the most influential manual
for youth ever published. Yet the book is at the same time a roughly
composed hodge-podge of jingoist lore and tracker legend, padded with
lengthy quotations from adventure fiction and Baden-Powell's own
autobiography, and seamed through with the multiple anxieties of its
time: fears of degeneration, concerns about masculinity and
self-restraint, and invasion paranoia.
Elleke Boehmer's edition of Scouting for Boys reprints the original
text and illustrations, and her fine introduction investigates a book
that has been cited as an authority by militarists and pacifists,
capitalists and environmentalists alike.