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E-raamat: Language, Literature and the Construction of a Dutch National Identity (1780-1830)

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In exploring the birth of a Dutch identity between 1780 and 1830, this book integrates nationalism studies with literary and linguistic history by highlighting scholarly study of the Dutch language as a factor in the creation of the national identity. These early scholars promoted the Dutch language during a time of political upheaval, when citizens needed something to feel proud of. This book examines the impact individual agents had on a crucial stage in the Dutch nation-building process.
 
Acknowledgements 7(2)
Introduction: Cultural Nationalism and the Rise of Dutch Studies 9(16)
Gijsbert Rutten
Ton van Kalmthout
1 Matthijs Siegenbeek in Defence of Dutch
25(24)
Gijsbert Rutten
2 Barthold Hendrik Lulofs: A `Learned Dilettante'
49(24)
Francien Petiet
3 Poet and Professor: Adam Simons
73(24)
Rick Honings
4 Johannes Kinker: A Kantian Philosopher Teaching Dutch Language, Literature, and Eloquence
97(22)
Marijke van der Wal
5 Caught Between Propaganda and Science: Ulrich Gerhard Lauts, the Forgotten Father of Dutch Philology in Brussels
119(26)
Wim Vandenbussche
6 Pieter Weiland and his Nederduitsche Spraakkunst
145(22)
Jan Noordegraaf
7 Moralist of the Nation: Johannes Henricus van der Palm
167(20)
Ellen Krol
8 `I am Revived as a Belgian': The Work of Jan Frans Willems
187(18)
Janneke Weijermars
9 Adriaan Kluit: Back to the Sources!
205(24)
Lo van Driel
Nicoline van der Sijs
10 `Can Grander Skulls be Crowned?': Jacob van Dijk's Posthumous Literary History
229(24)
Peter Altena
11 Hendrik van Wijn: Pioneer of Historical Literary Studies in the Netherlands
253(24)
Ton van Kalmthout
12 The Founding Father of Dutch Literary History: Jeronimo de Vries
277(20)
Lotte Jensen
Afterword 297(8)
Gert-Jan Johannes
Index 305
Rick Honings is Scaliger Professor Special Collections at Leiden University and a specialist in nineteenth-century Dutch and Dutch Indies literature. In 2018 he published Star Authors in the Age of Romanticism: Literary Celebrity in the Netherlands, the international edition of his monograph De dichter als idool: Literaire roem in de negentiende eeuw (2016). In 2021, he co-edited De postkoloniale spiegel: De Nederlands-Indische letteren herlezen. Currently, he works with a research team on the NWO Vidi project Voicing the Colony: Travelers in the Dutch East Indies, 1800-1900. He is editor-in-chief of the journal Indische Letteren. Gijsbert Rutten is a senior researcher in historical sociolinguistics at the Leiden University Centre for Linguistics.