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- Volume 3, Issue 3, 2019
De Moderne Tijd - Volume 3, Issue 3, 2019
Volume 3, Issue 3, 2019
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JACOBUS JOSEPHUS EECKHOUT
More LessJACOBUS JOSEPHUS EECKHOUTA Belgian painter’s times in The Hague (1831-1844)
In 1831, shortly after the outbreak of the Belgian Revolution, the Belgian painter Jacob Joseph Eeckhout moved from Brussels to The Hague. As a supporter of King Willem I, he no longer felt at ease in his homeland. Eeckhout remained in the Netherlands until 1843 and played an important role in the cultural life of The Hague. This article analyzes the The Hague episode in Eeckhout’s life in the light of the political developments of that time. To what extent did notions of nationality and national identity play a role in his artistic views and career?
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EMIGRANTEN ROND HET ACHTER-HUIS VAN ANNE FRANK
More LessMIGRANTS AROUND ANNE FRANK’S ACHTERHUISThe story of Anne Frank, her family and her companions, hiding from persecution by the Nazi regime, is a well-known and – at a first glance – very Dutch one. The main divide between those in hiding and their helpers was that between being Jewish and being non-Jewish, which in those precarious times was of course the essential ‘divide’ imposed on the people of occupied Europe. But a closer look at the group of people around Anne seen from the perspective of migration and (national) identity produces different dividing lines and insights. Their life stories, converging in that one Amsterdam warehouse, ref lect many aspects of early twentieth-century European history.
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LEVEN(S) MET OBJECTEN
More LessLIVING WITH OBJECTSThe European elite of colonial Indonesia, its collections and identification around 1900
Many upper-class migrants from, and to, Dutch colonial Indonesia – often travelling back and forth – collected objects. By analysing the practice of collecting and the meaning these people ascribed to those artefacts, I will provide insight into the way personal, and eventually even collective, identities were formed. The manner in which objects were collected and displayed not only ref lected the self-image of their owners in colonial and Dutch society, but may also have been active inf luences in those processes of (self)identification. The collection of objects, and the meaning ascribed to them, ref lected the unequal power relations within colonial society, and simultaneously, was possible a strategy for marginalised people (such as European women) to liberate themselves from social inequality.
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‘GEMEEN VOLK’
Authors: Marguérite Corporaal & Tom Sintobin‘COMMON PEOPLE’Gypsies in European regional fiction
Regional fiction is a genre in which the tension between local and national cultures tends to play an important role. This article explores the representation of a category of characters that seems to escape that binary opposition: gipsies. More specifically, it analyzes six case studies from regional literature produced in Ireland and the Low Countries to find out whether we can speak of a transnational trope. Although the representation of gipsies in the case studies are different in several respects, there are also striking similarities. The most important one is that the gipsies are not just mere outsiders posing a threat to the regional community. Rather, paradoxically, they constitute a model for that local community regarding the preservation and regeneration of its own cultural values.
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