Abstract
Standard histories of Hawai'i record the demise and disenfranchisement of the native Hawaiian population. These histories draw upon publicly available data such as population statistics and government documents, the majority of which are in the English language. Historians and sociologists have commented on trajectories of assimilation in the decades following the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy and annexation to the U.S. at the end of the nineteenth century, touting the rise of English standard education as a cornerstone in social transformation.
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