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Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928

Contributor(s): Adams, David Wallace (Author)

ISBN: 9780700629602

Publisher: University Press of Kansas

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Pub Date: May 29, 2020

Dewey: 373.22208997

LCCN: 2019045948

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.20" H x 9.00" L x 5.80" W ( 1.45 lbs) 472 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: A poignant and heartbreaking book that chronicles the infamous history of the U.S. government's efforts to indoctrinate, deculturize, and &ldbquo;Americanize" Native peoples through the use of boarding schools.

Brief description: David Wallace Adams is professor emeritus at Cleveland State University, and author of Three Roads to Magdalena: Coming of Age in a Southwest Borderland, 1890â "1990, also from Kansas.

Review Quotes:

"What a triumph! Adams has masterfully reworked, reinterpreted, and reframed an enlarged version of his classic book by drawing on new research by Indian and non-Indian scholars over the past twenty-five years. Education for Extinction is a foundational study for anyone interested in boarding schools, Indian education, and American history."--Clifford E. Trafzer, distinguished professor of history and Rupert Costo Chair in American Indian Affairs, University of California, Riverside

"For more than twenty years, Education for Extinction has been revered by scholars and students alike as the most comprehensive and highly respected book on the federal government's off-reservation Indian boarding school system. Now in a revised and expanded form, the book draws on newly uncovered archival materials and places this history within the growing literature of Indian education and boarding school studies. No other book on this topic comes close to its literary depth, scholarly rigor, or historical significance. It is and will forever be a foundational text in the field and will continue to enlighten and influence the way we understand this important era of US and American Indian history."--Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert, author of Hopi Runners: Crossing the Terrain between Indian and American

Praise for the first edition:

"Adams has achieved something remarkable here: he offers a great deal of information on an important and difficult historical topic while never losing sight of its human dimension. Persuasive and moving, his book is full of good stories that should appeal to the general public."--Brian Dippie, author of The Vanishing American: White Attitudes and U.S. Indian Policy

"A story worth reading and remembering, one that reveals the use of education as a weapon of war, a method of domination. A strong lesson in the potential for education to become part of a political and cultural arsenal."--American Journal of Education

"A poignant and heartbreaking book that chronicles the infamous history of the U.S. government's efforts to indoctrinate, deculturalize, and 'Americanize' Native peoples through the use of boarding schools. . . . This is a must-read book for all educators, especially for those who wish to work with students of color. As this book powerfully reminds us, education is an encounter, not a discovery."--Harvard Educational Review

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