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As rigid and unforgiving as the boarding schools established for the education of Native Americans could be, the intellectuals who engaged with these schoolsincluding Mohegans Samson Occom and Joseph Johnson, and Montauketts David and Jacob Fowler in the eighteenth century, and Cherokees Catharine and David Brown in the nineteenthbecame passionate advocates for Native community as a political and cultural force. From handwriting exercises to Cherokee Syllabary texts, Native students negotiated a variety of pedagogical practices and technologies, using their hard-won literacy skills for their own purposes. By examining the materials of literacyprimers, spellers, ink, paper, and instructional manualsas well as the products of literacyletters, journals, confessions, reports, and translationsEnglish Letters and Indian Literacies explores the ways boarding schools were, for better or worse, a radical experiment in cross-cultural communication.Focusing on schools established by New England missionaries, first in southern New England and later among the Cherokees, Hilary E. Wyss explores both the ways this missionary culture attempted to shape and define Native literacy and the Native response to their efforts. She examines the tropes of 'readerly' Indianspassive and grateful recipients of an English cultural modeland 'writerly' Indiansthose fluent in the colonial culture but also committed to Native community as a political and cultural concernto develop a theory of literacy and literate practice that complicates and enriches the study of Native self-expression. Wyss's literary readings of archival sources, published works, and correspondence incorporate methods from gender studies, the history of the book, indigenous intellectual history, and transatlantic American studies.