Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance

This dissertation examines the process of domestication of American Indian children in government-controlled schools through art education. At the end of the nineteenth century, Thomas J. Morgan, Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1889-1893), and Estelle Reel, Superintendent of Indian schools (1898-19...

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Main Author: Lentis, Marinella
Other Authors: Parezo, Nancy J.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/203447
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2034472015-10-23T04:47:48Z Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance Lentis, Marinella Parezo, Nancy J. Lomawaima, K. Tsianina Williams, Robert J. Parezo, Nancy J. art education Drawing Native arts and crafts Sherman Institute American Indian Studies Albuquerque Indian School American Indian boarding schools This dissertation examines the process of domestication of American Indian children in government-controlled schools through art education. At the end of the nineteenth century, Thomas J. Morgan, Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1889-1893), and Estelle Reel, Superintendent of Indian schools (1898-1910), brought changes to the curriculum of Indian schools by introducing the teaching of elementary art and instruction in "Native industries" such as pottery, weaving, and basketry. I claim that art education was as an instrument for the `colonization of consciousness,' that is, for the redefinition of Indigenous peoples' minds through the instilment of values and ideals of mainstream society and thus for the maintenance of a political, economic, social, and racial hierarchy. Art education served the needs of the late-nineteenth century assimilationist agenda. I consider Morgan's and Reel's national mandates at the turn of the twentieth century and examine their rationales for including drawing and Native crafts in the Indian schools' curriculum. This knowledge of educational programs crafted at the bureaucratic level is applied to an analysis of art instruction in two selected institutions, the Albuquerque Indian School in New Mexico and the Sherman Institute in Riverside, California, from 1889 to 1917. I examine local responses to government policies and daily practices of Indian education at the micro level in order to provide specific information as to the organization, structure, and pedagogy of art instruction within a school day in these particular localities. Finally, I discuss how students' artworks were displayed in the context of exhibitions and national conventions as exemplary evidence of the progress toward civilization, but also of the instrumentality of an Anglo education in reaching this goal. As Indian policy changed, so did the art curriculum of Indian schools; while drawing continued until the mid-1910s Native arts and crafts began to disappear and were eventually discontinued. As activities that promoted independence and individual creativity, they began to undermine the government's agenda. From the early 1890s when it was first introduced into Indian schools to the mid-1910s when it lost its significance, art education was a tool for the assertion of America's hegemonic power. 2011 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/203447 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic art education
Drawing
Native arts and crafts
Sherman Institute
American Indian Studies
Albuquerque Indian School
American Indian boarding schools
spellingShingle art education
Drawing
Native arts and crafts
Sherman Institute
American Indian Studies
Albuquerque Indian School
American Indian boarding schools
Lentis, Marinella
Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance
description This dissertation examines the process of domestication of American Indian children in government-controlled schools through art education. At the end of the nineteenth century, Thomas J. Morgan, Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1889-1893), and Estelle Reel, Superintendent of Indian schools (1898-1910), brought changes to the curriculum of Indian schools by introducing the teaching of elementary art and instruction in "Native industries" such as pottery, weaving, and basketry. I claim that art education was as an instrument for the `colonization of consciousness,' that is, for the redefinition of Indigenous peoples' minds through the instilment of values and ideals of mainstream society and thus for the maintenance of a political, economic, social, and racial hierarchy. Art education served the needs of the late-nineteenth century assimilationist agenda. I consider Morgan's and Reel's national mandates at the turn of the twentieth century and examine their rationales for including drawing and Native crafts in the Indian schools' curriculum. This knowledge of educational programs crafted at the bureaucratic level is applied to an analysis of art instruction in two selected institutions, the Albuquerque Indian School in New Mexico and the Sherman Institute in Riverside, California, from 1889 to 1917. I examine local responses to government policies and daily practices of Indian education at the micro level in order to provide specific information as to the organization, structure, and pedagogy of art instruction within a school day in these particular localities. Finally, I discuss how students' artworks were displayed in the context of exhibitions and national conventions as exemplary evidence of the progress toward civilization, but also of the instrumentality of an Anglo education in reaching this goal. As Indian policy changed, so did the art curriculum of Indian schools; while drawing continued until the mid-1910s Native arts and crafts began to disappear and were eventually discontinued. As activities that promoted independence and individual creativity, they began to undermine the government's agenda. From the early 1890s when it was first introduced into Indian schools to the mid-1910s when it lost its significance, art education was a tool for the assertion of America's hegemonic power.
author2 Parezo, Nancy J.
author_facet Parezo, Nancy J.
Lentis, Marinella
author Lentis, Marinella
author_sort Lentis, Marinella
title Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance
title_short Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance
title_full Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance
title_fullStr Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance
title_full_unstemmed Art Education in American Indian Boarding Schools: Tool of Assimilation, Tool of Resistance
title_sort art education in american indian boarding schools: tool of assimilation, tool of resistance
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/203447
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