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Instrumental Indians

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An examination of how settler colonialism shaped the thinking of America’s leading philosopher of democracy and education, John DeweyJohn Dewey is regarded as a towering figure in the history of Am...
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  • 31 March 2026
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An examination of how settler colonialism shaped the thinking of America’s leading philosopher of democracy and education, John Dewey

John Dewey is regarded as a towering figure in the history of American philosophy, widely remembered by educators as an advocate for experiential and child-centered pedagogy, as evidenced by the mantra “learning by doing.” At first blush, such ideas appear to a share strong resonance with Indigenous ways of teaching and learning. After all, Native educators have long emphasized the importance of hands-on learning drawn from close relationships to place. This resemblance begs the question: What might Dewey have learned from Indigenous people?

Instrumental Indians shows that, despite such affinities, Dewey wrote a great deal about Indians as he imagined them rather than as they are. He did so through the lens of the frontier discourse, a pervasive cultural mythology that represented Indigenous people as savage foils and background actors in the settlement of a frontier across North America. Consequently, Dewey’s imagined Indians became both instrumental and instrumentalized in his philosophy, a paradox that reduced Indigenous people to mere evidence for his pragmatism rather than as a contemporary constituency who might have benefited from its application. By instrumentalizing Indians, Dewey’s contributions to American philosophy were made under the shadow of US settler colonialism.

As Matthew Villeneuve demonstrates, Dewey’s disregard for his Indigenous contemporaries was far from harmless. His career coincided with the height of the federal Indian boarding school system, an era when Native families were subjected to the violence of imposed schooling. Where Dewey failed to offer a critique of such antidemocratic schools, a contemporary of his, Oneida philosopher of education Laura Cornelius, succeeded. In 1920, Cornelius offered an Indigenous theory of democracy and education, an alternative the US government failed to pursue. In Instrumental Indians, Villeneuve provides the first comprehensive account of Dewey’s relationship to Indigenous people—one that challenges the philosopher’s place in the canon of democratic education.

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Price: $45.00
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Intellectual History of the Modern Age
Publication Date: 31 March 2026
ISBN: 9781512829433
Format: eBook
BISACs: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Educators, History of education, PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Pragmatism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigenous Studies, EDUCATION / History, Pragmatism, Biography: philosophy and social sciences
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"Instrumental Indiansis a monumental achievement. Matthew Villeneuve does not simply indict Dewey for his lifelong instrumental treatment of Indigenous people. He shows how we need to fundamentally rethink Dewey’s pragmatism in light ofthis history."

"Matthew Villeneuve has done a great service for Indigenous educators and philosophers interested in Dewey’s pragmatism and educational philosophy.Instrumental Indiansillustrates that at almost every step in his distinguished career, Dewey’s miseducativeview of American Indians was a product of his intellectual entrapment in the frontier discourse. Nevertheless, Villeneuve also notes that a good share of his philosophy, when freed from that discourse, might still prove useful when viewed through Indigenous experiential philosophies and decolonized. This book will be required reading for all educators, philosophers, and historians of philosophy."

"Instrumental Indians presents a convincing and provocative case for how and why Dewey’s ‘pioneering pragmatism’ impacted (and still impacts) America’s understanding of Indigenous Americans. I can’t think of another study so full of philosophical insight and methodological originality."
Matthew Villeneuve (Turtle Mountain Ojibwe descent) is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.