Forward without Fear: Native Hawaiians and American Education in Territorial Hawai'i, 1900?1941
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781496236166
ISBN10:1496236165
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:242 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:440 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 1 photograph, index
700
Category:

Forward without Fear

Native Hawaiians and American Education in Territorial Hawai'i, 1900?1941
 
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Cloth Over Boards
 
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GBP 58.00
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Short description:

Derek Taira argues that during the territorial period many Hawaiians neither subscribed nor succumbed to public schools’ aggressive efforts to assimilate and Americanize but instead engaged with American education to envision and support an alternate future.

Long description:
During Hawai‘i’s territorial period (1900–1959), Native Hawaiians resisted assimilation by refusing to replace Native culture, identity, and history with those of the United States. By actively participating in U.S. public schools, Hawaiians resisted the suppression of their language and culture, subjection to a foreign curriculum, and denial of their cultural heritage and history, which was critical for Hawai‘i’s political evolution within the manifest destiny of the United States.

In Forward without Fear Derek Taira reveals that many Native Hawaiians in the first forty years of the territorial period neither subscribed nor succumbed to public schools’ aggressive efforts to assimilate and Americanize them but instead engaged with American education to envision and support an alternate future, one in which they could exclude themselves from settler society to maintain their cultural distinctiveness and protect their Indigenous identity. Taira thus places great emphasis on how they would have understood their actions—as flexible and productive steps for securing their cultural sovereignty and safeguarding their future as Native Hawaiians—and reshapes historical understanding of this era as one solely focused on settler colonial domination, oppression, and elimination to a more balanced and optimistic narrative that identifies and highlights Indigenous endurance, resistance, and hopefulness.
 

Forward without Fear provides a critical examination of the role of public education in Hawai?i’s territorial period. By showing how settler-colonial ideologies were enacted through education policy, Taira also shows how Native Hawaiians were never mere victims of public education but actively engaged, challenged, or used settler forms of education for their own visions of the future. This book will be required reading in Hawaiian history, history of education, and Indigenous studies, among other fields.”—Maile Arvin, author of Possessing Polynesians: The Science of Settler Colonial Whiteness in Hawai‘i and Oceania