Formatted Contents Note: |
Introduction: Lessons Indians Can Teach American Studies about the Rule of Individuality -- Categorizing and Institutionalizing Indians and Individuals -- Carlisle as Individualizing Factory: Making Indians, Individuals, Workers -- Digesting "Indians": Assimilation as Individualizing -- Possessive and Domestic Individualizing: Treason to the Tribe -- Complexity, Critical Thinking, and Performance at Carlisle -- Pratt's Carlisle (1879-1904): Class, Race, Warfare -- Carlisle, Consumer Culture, and Loaded Cultural Relativism (1904-1918) -- Education for What? -- The School of Savagery: "Indian" Formations of Subjectivity and Carlisle -- Literary Indianizing: Discourses of Native Cultural Subjectivity -- Parodying Parroting: Faking Individual and Indian -- Multicultural Modernity Incorporated -- Modernist Multiculturalism: Lawrence, Luhan, and the White Therapeutic Indianizing of "Lost" White Individuality -- Toward Therapeutic Imperialism: Garland and the Modernizing of Digestion Management -- White Therapeutic Primitivism and the Indian Business: Environmental, Soulful, and Literary "Indians" -- Giving Them the Business: "Indians" in the Therapeutic and Modernist Marketplace -- Rhythmic Ethnomodernism: Luhan, Lawrence, Austin, and the Fantasy of Individualized Liberation in Tribal Scenes -- "Indians" in the Bloodstream: The Politics of Lawrence's Psychological Critique of American Individualizing -- Indians Inc.: Collier's New Deal Diversity Management -- Collier's Saviourism: Radical Polemicist against Individualizing. |