Monday, March 10, 2014

Forgot to post...residential schools


I finished this one...oh, a month ago? Still to come, shortly: Heteronormativity/constructing knowledge about sex and gender, and native/newcomer relations. After that, land/treaties, indigenous resistance, indigenous methodologies, gender and indigenous peoples. For this one, my aim was brevity, as I can write forever on this topic.


The key differences in these complementary monographs stem from their motivations. Tsianina Lomawaima, partly inspired by her father’s experiences at the Chilocco Indian School, has written an oral history of this school that focuses on students’ memories to emphasize life at school, rather than policy. John Milloy’s work was drawn from his contribution to the Royal Commission on Aboriginal People, and thus largely uses records from residential schools and the government agencies and churches that formed them. This resulted in his quite exhaustive history of residential schools in Canada, showing how government actions and inactions, in collaboration with churches, formed and maintained a harmful system. Margaret Jacobs has pulled out maternalism as an ideology that underpinned the removal and institutionalization of indigenous children. In her transnational study, she follows maternalism as a thread that pulls together the work of reformers, children’s experiences of having their bodies and sexualities policed, the scrutiny placed on indigenous mothers, and resistance to child removal, among many other facets of these institutions and the people who built, maintained, and were incarcerated within them. Ultimately, Jacobs points to intimacy as a critical element of institutionalization; by removing indigenous children, she argues, maternalist social reformers reconfigured children’s and parents’ intimacies with one another and with their land, undermining indigenous land claims. Milloy makes similar arguments, noting that residential schools aimed to install European “meanings” to change children’s ontology (37) while operating on a misguided presumption that they were “parenting” indigenous children.