Educational Pasts, Enduring Colonial Presents

Abigail Boggs
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Abstract

Abstract Taking Indigenous sovereignty as at once axiomatic and constitutively strategic, this article argues that it is necessary to expand the chronology and disrupt the geographic certitude through which the history and present of US higher education and its internationalization are conventionally understood. Colleges and universities in the British colonies and what became the United States, including Harvard, William & Mary, and Dartmouth, were founded and funded with the intention that they would function as a vital technology through which the nation-state and white Christian culture would reproduce and secure themselves, their possessions, and their futures. This project was to be accomplished through the assimilation and at times incorporation of people, often youth, from polities understood as fundamentally other from that of their instructors and benefactors. Assessments of the extent to which such projects were effectuated vary, but it is well established that contemporary universities and colleges are conceptually and financially rooted in colonial educational projects that targeted Indigenous students for incorporation and assimilation. In an era when many of these same institutions are making substantial, if inadequate, efforts to contend with their historical origins, it is necessary to move beyond acknowledgment of these histories and contend, instead, with how such projects materially and epistemologically underwrite the basic functions of the most well-resourced and prestigious higher education institutions of the present.
教育的过去,持久的殖民礼物
本文认为,原住民主权既是公理,又是构成战略,有必要扩大时间顺序,打破传统上理解美国高等教育及其国际化历史和现状的地理确定性。英国殖民地和后来的美国的学院和大学,包括哈佛大学,威廉大学;玛丽学院和达特茅斯学院,成立和资助的初衷是它们将成为一种重要的技术,通过这种技术,民族国家和白人基督教文化将会繁衍并确保他们自己,他们的财产和他们的未来。这个项目是通过同化和有时结合人们来完成的,通常是年轻人,他们的政治被理解为根本不同于他们的导师和捐助者。对这些项目实施程度的评估各不相同,但可以确定的是,当代大学和学院在概念上和财政上都植根于以土著学生为目标的殖民教育项目,以便将其纳入和同化。在这个时代,许多这样的机构正在做出实质性的努力,如果不充分的话,与他们的历史起源抗争,有必要超越对这些历史的承认,而是与这些项目如何在物质上和认识论上保证当前资源最充足和最负盛名的高等教育机构的基本功能进行抗争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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