“Forward without Fear provides a critical examination of the role of public education in Hawaiʻi’s territorial period. By showing how settler-colonial ideologies were enacted through education policy, Taira also shows how Native Hawaiians were never mere victims of public education but actively engaged, challenged, or used settler forms of education for their own visions of the future. This book will be required reading in Hawaiian history, history of education, and Indigenous studies, among other fields.”—Maile Arvin, author of Possessing Polynesians: The Science of Settler Colonial Whiteness in Hawai‘i and Oceania
“Forward without Fear offers new insights on the multiple ways populations receive, resist, and reimagine schools and schooling as sites of both liberation and oppression. By centering an intricate and much-needed conversation on settler colonialism within a discussion on education, this book is well positioned to be a must-read across fields.”—Mirelsie Velázquez, author of Puerto Rican Chicago: Schooling the City, 1940–1977