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To win the Indian heart : music at Chemawa indian school  Cover Image Book Book

To win the Indian heart : music at Chemawa indian school

Summary: Since 1879, Indian children from all regions of the United States have entered federal boarding schools - institutions designed to assimilate them into mainstream society. Chemawa Indian School in western Oregon, one of the nation's oldest and the longest still in continuous operation, is an emblem of a system that has intimately impacted countless lives and communities. In To Win the Indian Heart: Music at Chemawa Indian School, Melissa Parkhurst records the history of the school's musical life. She explores the crucial role music was meant to play in the total transformation of Indian children, and the cultural recovery and resiliency it often inspired instead. Parkhurst chronicles the complex ways in which students, families, faculty, and administrators employed music, both as a tool for assimilation and, conversely, as a vehicle for student resistance - a subject long overlooked in literature on Indian education and the assimilation campaign. Combining oral histories of Chemawa alumni with archival records of campus life, the book examines the prominent forms of music making at Chemawa - school band, choirs, private lessons, pageants, dance, garage bands, and powwows. Parkhurst traces the trajectory of federal Indian policy, highlighting students' creative responses and the ways in which music reveals the inherent contradictions in the U.S. government's assimilation practices.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780870717383 (alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 0870717383 (alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 9780870717390 (e-book)
  • Physical Description: print
    236 pages ; 23 cm.
  • Publisher: Corvallis : Oregon State University Press, [2014]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note: Introduction -- 1. The origins of Chemawa Indian School, and why music mattered -- 2. "Chemawa always had a huge band": the school band as a social barometer -- 3. A hegemonic tool redeemed? Chemawa's voices and choirs -- 4. Private lessons: for all or the talented few? -- 5. Staging the past, preparing for the future: theater and pageantry -- 6. Dance: from exacting prohibitions to an integral part of campus life -- 7. Rocking the Northwest: Chemawa's garage bands -- 8. Powwow: Chemawa students dancing, drumming and hosting -- 9. After school: keeping the music going.
Subject: Chemawa Indian School History
Off-reservation boarding schools Oregon Salem History
Indians of North America Education Oregon Salem Hsitory
Indians of North America Oregon Salem Songs and music
Music Instruction and study Oregon Salem

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Northwest Indian College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lummi Library E 97.6 .C3 P37 2014 284056 Stacks Available -

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