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An Indigenous Curriculum of Place

The United Houma Nation’s Contentious Relationship with Louisiana’s Educational Institutions

by Nicholas Ng-A-Fook (Author)
©2007 Textbook XIV, 232 Pages
Series: Complicated Conversation, Volume 25

Summary

The longest desegregation lawsuit in American history, involving Louisiana’s political, judicial and educational institutions, was recently settled. Like many African-American communities in the south, members of the United Houma Nation did not have access to "White" systems of public education, or to African-American schools, until the mid-1960s. This book illustrates how the Louisiana state apparatus historically dictated educational exclusion through its infamous Jim Crow policies of racial segregation. Utilizing a combination of ethnography, historiography, and oral history methods, its research narratives are specifically concerned with the life histories of United Houma Nation elders who experienced firsthand the complexities and difficulties of institutional racism.
An Indigenous Curriculum of Place is essential reading for curriculum scholars, teachers, and community leaders. The narratives in this book not only have the potential to teach us about alternative ways of knowing, but also to understand the limits of our colonized worldviews.

Details

Pages
XIV, 232
Year
2007
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433100147
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433100130
Language
English
Keywords
Education, History, Louisiana Bildungspolitik Rassendiskriminierung Indianer Geschichte Education History Louisiana
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2007. XIV, 232 pp., num. il.

Biographical notes

Nicholas Ng-A-Fook (Author)

Nicholas Ng-A-Fook received his doctorate in curriculum and instruction at Louisiana State University, after which he began working with the United Houma Nation. He is currently Assistant Professor of Curriculum Theory at the University of Ottawa.

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Title: An Indigenous Curriculum of Place