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'Without Destroying Ourselves': American Indian Intellectual Activism for Higher Education, 1915-1978

机译:“不破坏自己”:美洲印第安人高等教育知识激进主义,1915年至1978年

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摘要

This dissertation examines a long-term activist effort by American Indian educators and intellectual leaders to work for greater Native access to and control of American higher education. Specifically, the leaders of this effort built a powerful critique of how American systems of higher education served Native individuals and reservation communities throughout much of the twentieth century. They argued for new forms of higher education and leadership training that appropriated some mainstream educational models but that also adapted those models to endorse Native expressions of culture and identity. They sought to move beyond the failures of existing educational programs and to exercise Native control, encouraging intellectual leadership and empowerment on local and national levels. The dissertation begins with Henry Roe Cloud (Winnebago) and his American Indian Institute, a preparatory school founded in 1915 and dedicated to these principles. From there, the words and actions of key leaders such as Elizabeth Roe Cloud (Ojibwe), D'Arcy McNickle (Salish Kootenai), Jack Forbes (Powhatan-Renape, Delaware-Lenape), and Robert and Ruth Roessel (Navajo), are also examined to reveal a decades-long thread of Native intellectual activism that contributed to the development of American Indian self-determination and directly impacted the philosophical and practical founding of tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) in the 1960s and 1970s. These schools continue to operate in dozens of Native communities. These individuals also contributed to and influenced national organizations such as the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) and the National Indian Youth Council (NIYC), while maintaining connections to grassroots efforts at Native educational empowerment. The period covered in this history witnessed many forms of Native activism, including groups from the Society of American Indians (SAI) to the American Indian Movement (AIM) and beyond. The focus on "intellectual activism," however, emphasizes that this particular vein of activism was and is still oriented toward the growth of Native intellectualism and its practical influence in modern American Indian lives. It involves action that is political but also specifically educational, and thus rests on the input of prominent Native intellectuals but also on local educators, administrators, government officials, and students themselves.
机译:本论文考察了美洲印第安人教育者和知识分子领袖的长期维权人士努力,以争取更多的土著人获得和控制美国高等教育。具体来说,这项工作的领导者对美国的高等教育系统在整个20世纪的大部分时间里如何为土著人和保留社区服务提供了强有力的批评。他们主张采用新的高等教育形式和领导才能培训,这些形式既适合一些主流的教育模式,又适合那些模式,以支持土著人对文化和身份的表达。他们试图超越现有教育计划的失败,并实行土著人控制,鼓励在地方和国家层面的知识领导和授权。论文从亨利·罗伊·克劳德(Winnebago)和他的美洲印第安人学院开始,这是一所预科学校,成立于1915年,致力于这些原则。从那里开始,诸如伊丽莎白·罗伊·克劳(Ojibwe),达西·麦克尼克尔(Salish Kootenai),杰克·福布斯(Powhatan-Renape,特拉华州-莱纳佩),罗伯特和露丝·罗塞尔(Navajo)等主要领导人的言论和行动是我们还研究了揭示土著知识分子行动主义长达数十年的线索,这有助于美洲印第安人自决的发展,并直接影响了1960年代和1970年代部落学院和大学(TCU)的哲学和实践基础。这些学校继续在数十个土著社区中运作。这些人还为美国印第安人国民议会(NCAI)和全国印第安青年理事会(NIYC)等国家组织做出了贡献并产生了影响,同时保持了与基层教育在原住民教育权能方面的联系。在这段历史中,见证了许多形式的本土行动主义,包括从美洲印第安人协会(SAI)到美洲印第安人运动(AIM)等组织。然而,对“智力行动主义”的关注强调了这种行动主义的特殊脉络过去是,现在仍然是针对土著知识分子的发展及其在现代美洲印第安人生活中的实际影响。它涉及的是具有政治意义但也具有教育意义的行动,因此取决于杰出的土著知识分子的投入,也取决于当地教育者,行政人员,政府官员和学生本身。

著录项

  • 作者

    Goodwin, John A.;

  • 作者单位

    Arizona State University.;

  • 授予单位 Arizona State University.;
  • 学科 American history.;Native American studies.;Education history.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 282 p.
  • 总页数 282
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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