2019
DOI: 10.1177/016146811912100805
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Selective Memory: California Mission History and the Problem of Historical Violence in Elementary School Textbooks

Abstract: Background/Context Across the nation, people living in the United States are embroiled in conflict over the meaning of its past. Many of the most fervent conflicts relate to acts of historical violence: war, enslavement, conquest, and colonization among them. Elementary school students commonly study the early colonization of the land now known as the United States, the nation's Revolutionary and Civil Wars, and other periods of history that historians describe as rife with violence. In the field of California… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In an analysis of the 'mission project' undertaken in public schools in California over a month-long period, educational scholar Harper Keenan (2019: 19) finds both an erasure and a distortion of the brutality of this period that 're-naturalizes colonization as an unquestionably rational way of reorganizing the world'. Keenan's in-depth analysis of the textbooks utilised and case study of the mission unit of one fourth-grade class, required in all California public elementary schools, found that 'the representation of that violence disproportionately presents California Indians as perpetrators and the Spanish as victims, a framing incongruous with the historical record' (Keenan, 2019: 19; see also .…”
Section: Teaching the Indigenous Past And Presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In an analysis of the 'mission project' undertaken in public schools in California over a month-long period, educational scholar Harper Keenan (2019: 19) finds both an erasure and a distortion of the brutality of this period that 're-naturalizes colonization as an unquestionably rational way of reorganizing the world'. Keenan's in-depth analysis of the textbooks utilised and case study of the mission unit of one fourth-grade class, required in all California public elementary schools, found that 'the representation of that violence disproportionately presents California Indians as perpetrators and the Spanish as victims, a framing incongruous with the historical record' (Keenan, 2019: 19; see also .…”
Section: Teaching the Indigenous Past And Presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an analysis of the 'mission project' undertaken in public schools in California over a month-long period, educational scholar Harper Keenan (2019: 19) finds both an erasure and a distortion of the brutality of this period that 're-naturalizes colonization as an unquestionably rational way of reorganizing the world'. Keenan's in-depth analysis of the textbooks utilised and case study of the mission unit of one fourth-grade class, required in all California public elementary schools, found that 'the representation of that violence disproportionately presents California Indians as perpetrators and the Spanish as victims, a framing incongruous with the historical record' (Keenan, 2019: 19; see also . Building on scholarship by Tuck and Gaztambide-Fernández (2013: 78), who identify 'the settler colonial curricular project of replacement' of Indigenous peoples, Keenan (2019: 9) states that the 'school curriculum serves to replenish the idea that colonisers and their descendants are entitled to land by controlling or erasing Indigenous knowledge'.…”
Section: Teaching the Indigenous Past And Presentmentioning
confidence: 99%