Description
Book SynopsisContends that the constructs of public education and citizenship in the struggle to constitute a US national identity are inseparable from the simultaneous emergence of transatlantic constructs of an education citizen along transnational and transracial lines.
Trade Review“Digging deeply into sources across centuries of time and mobilizing an impressive array of disciplines, Petra Munro Hendry not only recovers the early history of education in Louisiana from obscurity but discovers a profound and timely meaning in it. From richly detailed and compelling stories told about a diverse cast of people, readers learn up-close how they built intercultural public spaces through a transatlantic circuit of pedagogy that consistently challenged exclusionary constructs of empire and nation-state.
Reimagining the Educated Citizen does nothing less than chart a much-needed alternative pathway for understanding the history of education in the United States.”—Daniel H. Usner, Holland N. McTyeire Professor of History, Vanderbilt University
"
Reimagining the Educated Citizen is a must read. It masterfully illustrates the continued movement and creolization of people in the transatlantic world and unequivocally demonstrates the centrality education played, as both a tool of freedom and oppression, amid this mass movement and struggle to define what it meant to be enlightened, equal, worthy, and free."—Christopher Span, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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Reimagining the Educated Citizen offers a new perspective on the history of education within the transatlantic world, using New Orleans as the point of intersection for indigenous, African, European, and ultimately Afro Creole people. . . . Hendry is clearly attuned to the gendered and racial dimensions of the story she is telling. With a focus on New Orleans, the experiences of both dominant and underrepresented groups inhabit this fascinating narrative.”—Mary Niall Mitchell, University of New Orleans
Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
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Introduction: Practicing History
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Chapter One: Transatlantic Educational Spaces: Remapping the Word and the World
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Chapter Two: Counter-Enlightenment Pedagogical Ruptures: The Ursulines in Colonial Louisiana
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Chapter Three: Remapping the “Unthinkable:” The Haitian Revolution, White Citizenship, and the Common School Movement
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Chapter Four: A Curriculum of Imagination: Counter-Public Spaces in the Age of Segregation, 1841-1868
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Chapter Five: The New Orleans Tribune and The Crusader: Interracial Community-Based Texts
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index