Education at the Edge of Empire

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESSISBN: 9780295994772

Negotiating Pueblo Identity in New Mexico's Indian Boarding Schools

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By John R. Gram, Foreword by Theodore Jojola
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
520 g
Pages:
260

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Description

John R. Gram teaches at Southern Methodist University.

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

"Scholars interested in Indian boarding schools, particularly as they compare to one another, will learn from this book, as will those who are interested in the intersecting ecologies of colonization and schooling. Gram's book, moreover, illustrates how education, particularly that of children, is a phenomenon that communities hold in a paramount position that need not be contained within the school itself." - Andrea Lawrence (History of Education Quarterly) "[N]ot your typical book about Indian schools. . . . Gram demonstrates a deeper complexity of the boarding school experience and its relationship to several dynamically active communities. . . . This book is well researched through multiple collections and draws on the existing scholarship in ways that show a keen intelligence and great synthesis while incorporating rich primary source materials, many of them gathered from the Santa Fe Indian School. It is amazingly approachable, phenomenally thorough, and easily teachable." - Brian S. Collier (Western Historical Quarterly) "Gram provides a nuanced view of the power relationship between the Santa Fe and Albuquerque US government boarding schools and the New Mexico Indians these schools served from the 1880s into the 1930s." (Choice) "[A]ccessible and interesting. . . . Education at the Edge of Empire is a wonderful addition to the literature of off-reservation boarding schools." - Andrae Marak (Journal of American History) "This book offers a fascinating and unexpected view of the Indian boarding experience. It is a welcome addition to Native American historiography and should be of interest to anyone who values a deeper understanding of the way in which Pueblo people in New Mexico were able to make an institution dedicated to destroying their way of life work instead for them." - Rick Hendricks (Southwestern Historical Quarterly) "The author does well to illustrate the unique and compelling relationship between Pueblo communities of the Southwest and the two boarding schools that served so many of their children, the Albuquerque Indian School (AIS) and the Santa Fe Indian School (SFIS). . . . Gram's study of AIS and SFIS provides not only a useful addition to the literature on American Indian boarding schools, but a valuable illustration of the limitations of imperial efforts toward Native people in a borderlands setting." - John A. Goodwin (American Indian Culture and Research Journal) "Adds new layers of complexity. . . . Gram aptly demonstrates how the nexus of national and local politics provided Pueblo people with opportunities to exact change from school officials. Gram's development of a political economy of Indian education stands among the most important contributions of this book." - Kevin Whalen (Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth)

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