Education at the Edge of Empire: Negotiating Pueblo Identity in New Mexico's Indian Boarding Schools

Education at the Edge of Empire: Negotiating Pueblo Identity in New Mexico's Indian Boarding Schools

Education at the Edge of Empire: Negotiating Pueblo Identity in New Mexico's Indian Boarding Schools

Education at the Edge of Empire: Negotiating Pueblo Identity in New Mexico's Indian Boarding Schools

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Overview

For the vast majority of Native American students in federal Indian boarding schools at the turn of the twentieth century, the experience was nothing short of tragic. Dislocated from family and community, they were forced into an educational system that sought to erase their Indian identity as a means of acculturating them to white society. However, as historian John Gram reveals, some Indian communities on the edge of the American frontier had a much different experience—even influencing the type of education their children received.

Shining a spotlight on Pueblo Indians’ interactions with school officials at the Albuquerque and Santa Fe Indian Schools, Gram examines two rare cases of off-reservation schools that were situated near the communities whose children they sought to assimilate. Far from the federal government’s reach and in competition with nearby Catholic schools for students, these Indian boarding school officials were in no position to make demands and instead were forced to pick their cultural battles with nearby Pueblo parents, who visited the schools regularly. As a result, Pueblo Indians were able to exercise their agency, influencing everything from classroom curriculum to school functions. As Gram reveals, they often mitigated the schools’ assimilation efforts and assured the various pueblos’ cultural, social, and economic survival.

Greatly expanding our understanding of the Indian boarding school experience, Education at the Edge of Empire is grounded in previously overlooked archival material and student oral histories. The result is a groundbreaking examination that contributes to Native American, Western, and education histories, as well as to borderland and Southwest studies. It will appeal to anyone interested in knowing how some Native Americans were able to use the typically oppressive boarding school experience to their advantage.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780295999661
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Publication date: 08/01/2016
Series: Indigenous Confluences
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 260
Sales rank: 683,641
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John R. Gram teaches at Southern Methodist University.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Foreword

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. The Economics of Education

2. The Consequences of Competition

3. Geographies of Imagination

4. Everyday Encounters

5. The Integrations of Worlds

Conclusion

Appendix

Notes

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

David Wallace Adams

"The Pueblo Indians of New Mexico were more than passive victims in the face of federal efforts to dispossess their children of their cultural identities. With issues of power, culture, and agency at its very center, Education at the Edge of Empire constitutes an important contribution to the literature on Indian boarding schools."

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