From the Boarding Schools
Apache Indian Students Speak
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Published:1st Apr '23
Should be back in stock very soon
Arnold Krupat’s From the Boarding Schools makes available previously unheard Apache voices from the Indian boarding schools. It includes selections from two unpublished autobiographies by Sam Kenoi and Dan Nicholas, produced in the 1930s with the anthropologist Morris Opler, as well as material by and about Vincent Natalish, a contemporary of Kenoi and Nicholas.
Natalish was one of more than one hundred Apaches taken from Fort Marion to the Carlisle Indian School by its superintendent, Captain Richard Henry Pratt, in 1887. A considerable number of these students died at the school, and many who were sent home for illness or poor health did not recover. Natalish, however, remained at Carlisle and graduated in 1899. He married, had a son, and lived and worked in New York. He also actively sought the release of his relatives and other Apaches held prisoner at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
Apache people have been telling and circulating stories among themselves for generations. But in contrast to their neighbors the Hopis and the Navajos, Apaches have produced relatively few written autobiographical narratives, and even fewer about their boarding school experiences. Supplementing the narratives with detailed cultural and historical commentary, From the Boarding Schools brings these lived experiences from the archives into current discourse.
"The strength of this work is Krupat's excavation of previously unpublished archival materials that give candid and unusual insight into the lives of young Apache men at the turn of the twentieth century. Krupat provides extensive explanations in footnotes and some interventions in the texts that offer valuable insights into their lives. . . . Krupat delivers a book that will be useful to historians and ideal for the classroom."—Jameson R. Sweet, Journal of Arizona History
“The federal Indian boarding schools are an increasingly important subject for both scholars and the general public. Apache autobiographical sources are rare, and so collecting them and making them available is an important contribution. From the Boarding Schools is written in an accessible style, which is a real strength of this book.”—John R. Gram, author of Education at the Edge of Empire: Negotiating Pueblo Identity in New Mexico’s Indian Boarding Schools
ISBN: 9781496234063
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
182 pages