"Offers a balm against despair (and) provides an inspiring theoretical frame for those who continue to fight for indigenous control." --Tribal College Journal (of first edition)
"This second edition is essential reading for reckoning with the ongoing attempts to diminish Indigenous nations' languages and cultures through schooling." --Noelani Goodyear-Kaʻōpua, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
"To Remain an Indian" traces the footprints of Indigenous education in what is now the United States.
Native Peoples' educational systems are rooted in ways of knowing and being that have endured for millennia, despite the imposition of colonial schooling. In this second edition, the authors amplify their theoretical framework of settler colonial safety zones by adding Indigenous sovereignty zones. Safety zones are designed to break Indigenous relationships and impose relations of domination while sovereignty zones foster Indigenous growth, nurture relationships, and support life.
This fascinating portrait of Native American education highlights the genealogy of relationships across Peoples, places, and education initiatives in the 20th and 21st centuries. New scholarship re-evaluates early 20th-century "reforms" as less an endorsement of Indigenous self-determination and more a continuation of federal control. The text includes personal narratives from program architects and examines Indigenous language, culture, and education resurgence movements that reckon with the coloniality of U.S. schooling.
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