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Inappropriation: The Contested Legacy of Y-Indian Guides - Paperback

Inappropriation: The Contested Legacy of Y-Indian Guides - Paperback

9780826223210
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by Paul Hillmer (Author), Ryan Bean (Author)

In 1926, Harold Keltner, a YMCA Boys Work secretary from St. Louis, and Joe Friday, a member of the Canadian Ojibwe First Peoples, channeled white middle-class fascination with Native Americans into what became the Y-Indian Guides youth pro­gram, engaging over a half million participants across the nation at the height of its 77-year history. Intended to soften the stereo­typical stern father, the program traced a complicated thread of American history, touching upon themes of family, race, class, and privilege.

The Y-Indian Guides was a father-son (and later parent-child) program that encouraged real and enduring bonds through play and an authentic appreciation of family. While "playing Indian" seemed harmless to most participants during the pro­gram's heyday, Paul Hillmer and Ryan Bean demonstrate the problematic nature of its methods. In the process of seeking to admire and emulate Indigenous Peoples, Y-Indian Guide participants often misrepresented American Indians and reinforced harmful ste­reotypes. Ultimately, this history demonstrates many ways in which American culture undermines and harms its Indigenous communities.

Author Biography

Paul Hillmer is Professor Emeritus of History at Concordia University-St. Paul. He is the author of A People's History of the Hmong.

Ryan Bean is the YMCA Archives Program Director for the Kautz Family YMCA Archives at the University of Minnesota Libraries.
Number of Pages: 270
Dimensions: 0.7 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: August 29, 2024