Re-membering Culture

Erasure and Renewal in Hmong American Education

2024
Author:

Bic Ngo

The untold stories of resilience in Hmong American education

Re-membering Culture is an exploration of the intricate dynamics of cultural memory and education that sheds light on the process of structured forgetting within the American education system. Underscoring the agency of the Hmong American community through ethnographic research, Bic Ngo shares their practices of (re)storytelling, resurgence, and refusal to illuminate how the critical consciousness fostered by re-membering serves as a powerful tool in confronting white hegemonic ideologies in education.

Re-membering Culture is a deep exploration of the intricate dynamics of cultural memory and education, centering the experiences of Hmong American students and educators. Arguing that the school, as a product of coloniality, perpetuates the marginalization and erasure of non-Western epistemologies, author Bic Ngo sheds light on the subtle yet impactful process of structured forgetting within the American education system. This politics of forgetting, in turn, contributes to the fragmentation of Hmong cultural heritage, identity, and community.

Based on a high school in an urban center with a considerable Hmong immigrant community, Ngo’s work draws on extensive ethnographic research with Hmong American community leaders, school administrators, parents, teachers, staff, and high school students to understand how they navigate the terrain of Western pedagogy while attempting to retain and preserve Hmong knowledge systems. Exploring a range of school experiences, Ngo traverses students’ challenges in balancing school with family life and the everyday cultural racism encountered in the classroom as well as grassroots efforts to preserve culture, including the establishment of a Hmong Cultural Club.

Highlighting these experiences and voices, Ngo provides a nuanced understanding of the challenges Hmong Americans face within an assimilationist society while contesting the dominant anti-immigrant narratives of refugee suffering and poverty. Through these practices of (re)storytelling, resurgence, and refusal, she underscores the agency of the Hmong American community, illuminating how the critical consciousness fostered by re-membering serves as a powerful tool in confronting white hegemonic ideologies in education.

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Bic Ngo is professor of culture and teaching in the College of Education and Human Development at the University of Minnesota. She is author of Unresolved Identities: Discourse, Ambivalence, and Urban Immigrant Studies.

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