Identifier,"Start Date / Time","End Date / Time",Title,Subtitle,Type,Description,Permalink,"Building Name",Room,"Location Name",Cost,Tags,Sponsors 87868-21647195,"2021-11-19 10:00:00","2021-11-19 11:00:00","The Clements Bookworm: Native American Boarding Schools as a Tool of U.S. Empire","Veronica Pasfield, PhD","Livestream / Virtual","Dr. Veronica Pasfield discusses her continuing research to understand the full purpose and force of federal Indian boarding schools. She asserts that the creation story of Carlisle Indian School must be rooted in missionary schools founded to prepare Kanaka Maoli for wage labor on their own Hawaiian homelands as well as in the captivity of Native children in the Southwest by a U.S. Army desperate to bring about the submission of Western tribes by any means necessary. While administrators touted assimilation as a benevolent enterprise, the archives show that Indian children were used as hostages to secure the extraction of tribal resources, and “schools” were used as an instrument for transforming indigenous peoples into a permanent underclass in their own homeland. Register for the link to join at myumi.ch/gjgzR This episode of the Bookworm is generously sponsored by the Alumni Association of the University of Michigan. *The Clements Bookworm is a webinar series in which panelists and featured guests discuss history topics. Recommended books, articles, and other resources are provided in each session. Inspired by the traditional Clements Library researcher tea time, we invite you to pull up a chair at our [virtual] table. Live attendees are encouraged to post comments and questions, respond to polls, and add to our conversation and camaraderie.*",https://events.umich.edu/event/87868,"Off Campus Location",,Virtual,,"american indian","William L. Clements Library"