«The United Houma Nation of Louisiana was doubly disadvantaged. As Indians, they were denied access both to schools intended for white children and to those set aside for African-Americans. Working closely with elders and others, Nicholas Ng-A-Fook tells their story of educational exclusion and…their [subsequent appropriation of] a colonial institution for their own purposes. Ng-A-Fook is at his best in sensitively and respectively evoking the Houma perspective, using conversations with informants to open up a remarkable window into a way of life and worldview. An Indigenous Curriculum of Place provides an incisive, highly readable critique of the racial segregation long associated with the American South from an indigenous perspective while also holding out hope for equitable schooling grounded in relevant curriculum.» (Jean Barman, Professor Emeritus at the University of British Columbia, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada)
«Years ago when Nicholas Ng-A-Fook first came to the Houma community he asked to hear our stories. ‘What stories do you want to hear?’ we asked, and his answer was, ‘what stories do you want to tell?’ Thus began a relationship between an academic and an indigenous people that I believe can be used as a pattern for such relationships. The years he spent learning about us were also years he spent using his talents and abilities to assist the Houma people. Not only does this work document the struggles of the Houma people for educational opportunities, but also provides a testament to the commitment Nicholas Ng-A-Fook has made to the United Houma Nation.» (Michael T. Mayheart Dardar, Vice-Principal Chief of United Houma Nation)
«The rich oral history narratives of the Houma people brought to life in this book reveal how one of Louisiana’s oldest indigenous peoples continues to struggle to define themselves against and within colonial ideologies. By situating the Houma within a larger historical, cultural, economic, and political context, this book ‘unsettles’ the dominant Euro-centric narrative of educational history. Nicholas Ng-A-Fook’s compelling portrait of the Houma brings out of the shadows stories of resistance, accommodation, and resilience. Woven throughout is the author’s own self-reflexive gaze to unpack the power relations embedded within research. Interweaving ethnographic and oral history methodologies, historical research, intensive field work, and postcolonial theory, this is a much-needed contribution to the fields of curriculum studies, cultural studies, history of education, and social foundations, as well as qualitative research.» (Petra Munro Hendry, St. Bernard Endowed Professor, Louisiana State University)
«The United Houma Nation of Louisiana was doubly disadvantaged. As Indians, they were denied access both to schools intended for white children and to those set aside for African-Americans. Working closely with elders and others, Nicholas Ng-A-Fook tells their story of educational exclusion and…their [subsequent appropriation of] a colonial institution for their own purposes. Ng-A-Fook is at his best in sensitively and respectively evoking the Houma perspective, using conversations with informants to open up a remarkable window into a way of life and worldview. An Indigenous Curriculum of Place provides an incisive, highly readable critique of the racial segregation long associated with the American South from an indigenous perspective while also holding out hope for equitable schooling grounded in relevant curriculum.» (Jean Barman, Professor Emeritus at the University of British Columbia, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada)
«Years ago when Nicholas Ng-A-Fook first came to the Houma community he asked to hear our stories. ‘What stories do you want to hear?’ we asked, and his answer was, ‘what stories do you want to tell?’ Thus began a relationship between an academic and an indigenous people that I believe can be used as a pattern for such relationships. The years he spent learning about us were also years he spent using his talents and abilities to assist the Houma people. Not only does this work document the struggles of the Houma people for educational opportunities, but also provides a testament to the commitment Nicholas Ng-A-Fook has made to the United Houma Nation.» (Michael T. Mayheart Dardar, Vice-Principal Chief of United Houma Nation)
«The rich oral history narratives of the Houma people brought to life in this book reveal how one of Louisiana’s oldest indigenous peoples continues to struggle to define themselves against and within colonial ideologies. By situating the Houma within a larger historical, cultural, economic, and political context, this book ‘unsettles’ the dominant Euro-centric narrative of educational history. Nicholas Ng-A-Fook’s compelling portrait of the Houma brings out of the shadows stories of resistance, accommodation, and resilience. Woven throughout is the author’s own self-reflexive gaze to unpack the power relations embedded within research. Interweaving ethnographic and oral history methodologies, historical research, intensive field work, and postcolonial theory, this is a much-needed contribution to the fields of curriculum studies, cultural studies, history of education, and social foundations, as well as qualitative research.» (Petra Munro Hendry, St. Bernard Endowed Professor, Louisiana State University)