Description
Drawing on children’s own accounts in letters, diaries, and other first-hand sources, Myriam Vučković reveals what Haskell’s students really thought about the boarding school experience. By examining the cultural encounters and contests that occurred there, she portrays indigenous youth struggling to retain a sense of dignity and Indian identity—and refusing to become passive victims of assimilation.
Vučković focuses on issues that directly affected the students, such as curriculum, health, gender differences, and extracurricular activities. She doesn’t flinch from the harsh realities of daily life: poor diet, overcrowding, inadequate medical care, and students forced to work to maintain school facilities and often subjected to harsh punishments. In response to this hostile environment, students developed a subculture of accommodation and resistance—sometimes using sign language as a way around the “English only” rule—that also helped break down barriers between tribes. Many found a positive experience in the education they received and discovered new sources of pride, such as the Native American Church, Haskell’s renowned football team, and its equally accomplished school band.
Haskell is the only former government boarding school to evolve into a four-year university and still boasts a unique intertribal character, providing a culturally diverse learning environment for more than 1,000 students from 150 tribes every year. The first in-depth study of the school from its founding through the first quarter of the twentieth century, Voices from Haskell is a frank look at its history, a tribute to its accomplishments, and a major contribution to studies of the Indian boarding school experience.
Book Information
ISBN 9780700636846
Author Myriam Vuckovic
Format Paperback
Page Count 352
Imprint University Press of Kansas
Publisher University Press of Kansas