Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 10 of 24 items for

  • Author or Editor: Janneke Weijermars x
  • Search level: All x
Clear All
The United Kingdom of the Netherlands (1815-1830) was a creation of the Congress of Vienna, where the map of Europe was redrawn following Napoleon’s defeat. Dutch language and literature were considered the essential tools to smoothly fuse the North and South – today, the Netherlands and Belgium respectively. King Willem I tried a variety of measures to stimulate and control literary life in the South, in an effort to encourage unity throughout his kingdom.

Janneke Weijermars describes the driving force of this policy and especially its impact in the South. For some authors, Northern Dutch literature represented the standard to which they aspired. For others, unification triggered a desire to assert their own cultural identity. The quarrels, mutual misunderstandings and subsequent polemics were closely intertwined with political issues of the day. Stepbrothers views the history of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands through a literary lens.

Abstract

The Flemish poet Prudens van Duyse (1804–1859) wrote an elegy about his deceased sister, Natalia (1842). He repeatedly rewrote, extended, and reprinted it, so the poem is transmitted in different versions. Van Duyse as well as contemporary reviewers and literary historians considered this poem an absolute highlight of his extensive oeuvre. Prudens van Duyse is considered to be a transition figure in Flemish literature: in several poems and prose texts he unfolded progressive views about literature that can be associated with the work of other romantic writers from Germany, the Netherlands, and France. Van Duyse argues that Flemish literature must be guided by imagination and the individual feelings of the author. This was a new insight in Flanders, because the literature of that time was largely dominated by rules prescribed by the chambers of rhetoric. This chapter examines to what extent the poet in Natalia adhered to the prevailing norms for mourning poetry of the time, or whether he implemented the renewal that he proposed in his own poetic texts.

In: Grief, Identity, and the Arts
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834
In: Stepbrothers: Southern Dutch Literature and Nation-Building under Willem I, 1814-1834