De Negentiende Eeuw 2009, nr. 4

De Negentiende Eeuw 33 (2009) 4

Marianne Braun‘Die groote, machtige vereeniging “vrouw”’. De Vrije Vrouwenvereeniging: van civil society naar publieke sfeer 193-212

Abstract (EN)
‘That great, powerful association called “woman”’. The Vrije Vrouwenvereeniging (Free Women’s Association): from civil society to public sphere.This article explores the position of the Vrije Vrouwenvereeniging in Dutch civil society at the end of the nineteenth century. Its scope is confi ned to the group’s early years. This association for the advancement of women was both part of the broader movement for social justice and – because its program was devoted to promoting one sex – an oppositional group inside the movement. Although ‘quiet propaganda’ was the association’s original intention, it soon found itself engaged in political debate and action in the public sphere, partly due to the personality of its president Wilhelmina Drucker.
Wilma van Giersbergen‘Zij hebben er zooveel plaisier in […] dat men eene speld hoort vallen, als de zaal vol is’. Vincent van Gogh en het tekenonderwijs op de Rijks-HBS te Tilburg, 1866-1868 213-236

Abstract (EN)
‘They enjoyed themselves so much […] that one could have heard a pin drop, when the art room was full’. Vincent van Gogh and the drawing lessons at the State High School in Tilburg, 1866-1868.From September 1866 till March 1868 Vincent van Gogh attended the State High School in Tilburg, where Constant Huijsmans gave him lessons in the principles of drawing, including how to use drawing materials and how to in coordinate the hand and eye. Vincent copied geometrical models, fruit, jugs, and fl oral and architectural ornaments and learned the basics of perspective and how to measure proportions. However, when he decided to became an illustrator in 1880, he had yet to learn all the principles of drawing in spite of Huijsman’s lessons on these subjects. Huijsman’s teaching seems to have been lost on the young van Gogh.
Gerard HooykaasHet Koninklijk Instituut en de Koninklijke Akademie 237-247

Abstract (EN)
The Dutch Royal Institute and the Royal Academy of Sciences.In his voluminous study De stem van de wetenschap (The Voice of Science), Klaas van Berkel gives a learned and panoramic view of the Dutch Royal Institute and the Royal Academy of Sciences in the nineteenth century. While the author’s profound analysis is often critical, it is possible to come to quite different conclusions.
Boekzaal der geleerde wereld 248-255

  • Lou Spronck, Theodoor Weustenraad (1805-1849) en de ‘Percessie van Scherpenheuvel’. Hilversum: Verloren, 2009. (Joep Leerssen)
  • Wouter van der Veen, Van Gogh: A Literary Mind. Literature in the correspondence of Vincent van Gogh. Zwolle: Waanders Publishers / Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum, 2009 (Van Gogh Studies 2). (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Walter A. Buijn, Arabeske of gedachte. Een muziekesthetische tegenstelling in Nederland 1820-1914. Diss. UvA. Amsterdam: Vossiuspers UvA – Amsterdam University Press, 2007. (Ton van Kalmthout)
  • Ans. J. Veltman-van den Bos & Jan de Vet, Par Amitié. De vriendenrol van Petronella Moens. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2009. (Marc van Zoggel)
  • Rudo den Hartog, Groet Molletje van mij. Alexander Mollinger (1836-1867), een Utrechtse schilder op de drempel van de Haagse school. Vianen: Optima, 2008. (Lieske Tibbe)
De Negentiende Eeuw 2009, nr. 2

De Negentiende Eeuw 33 (2009) 2

Arianne Baggerman‘Zo een vrijheid begeer ik nimmer meer te beleven’. Het witwassen van het verleden in Nederlandse ego-documenten (1800-1850) 73-95

Abstract (EN)
‘I desire never again to experience that kind of freedom’. Absolving the past in Dutch autobiographies (1800-1850).The way Dutch autobiographers looked back on their lives changed much in the period between 1750 and 1850. In this period a new consciousness of history developed in which the gap between past, present and future was widened. Autobio graphies from this so-called Sattelzeit contain new ideas, such as an emphasis on the irreversible character of the past. Nostalgia, however, is scarce, at least compared with French autobiographies, according to Peter Fritszche, who mainly studied writing by French emigrants. Several reasons are discussed for this unique development in the Netherlands. First, there was no large wave of emigra tions after 1795, and consequently less longing for a lost past among Orangists. Secondly, the Batavian Revolution had lead to a French occupation that everyone, including former revolutionaries, wanted to forget.
Jan Hein FurnéeStand der wetenschapNaar een integrale geschiedenis van de negentiende-eeuwse stad. Vijftien stadsbiografieën in perspectief 96-122

Abstract (EN)
Towards an integrated history of the nineteenth-century city. A review of fifteen Dutch urban biographies.Over the last twenty years, the writing of modern urban biographies has been one of the core activities of Dutch urban historians. Focusing on the analysis of the nineteenth century city in fi fteen major urban biographies, this review discusses their selection of themes, composition and style, but also explores new possibilities to enhance the synthetic potential of urban historiography. The article argues that in the next few years more attention might be paid to the stimulating role of urban government, especially in economic and cultural development; to the contested creation of class and gender relations in the fi eld of leisure; and to the multifaceted character of urban space: as a structure, a built environment and a socially constructed site of daily experience.
Boekzaal der geleerde wereld 123-128

  • G.J. Johannes, Dit moet u niet onverschillig wezen! De vaderlandse literatuur in het Noord-Nederlands voortgezet onderwijs 1800-1900. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2007. (Berry Dongelmans)
  • Saskia Pieterse, De buik van de lezer. Over spreken en schrijven in Multatuli’s Ideën. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2008. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Peter Thoben, Suze Robertson 1852-1922. Schilderes van het harde en zware leven. Eindhoven: Museum Kempenland, 2008. (Jan Jaap Heij)
  • Auke van der Woud, Sterrenstof. Honderd jaar mythologie in de Nederlandse architectuur. Rotterdam: 010, 2008 (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Hans Rooseboom, De schaduw van de fotograaf. Positie en status van een nieuw beroep, 1839-1889. Leiden: Primavera Pers, 2008. (Lieske Tibbe)
De Negentiende Eeuw 2009, nr. 1: 'De waarde van kennis'

De Negentiende Eeuw 33 (2009) 1: ‘De waarde van kennis’

Marlite HalbertsmaDe waarde van kennis 1-3
De Negentiende Eeuw 2008 4

De Negentiende Eeuw 32 (2008) 4

Louis SaalminkXavier Marmier, Nederlandse poëzie in vertaling en Hieronymus van Alphen 239-252

Abstract (EN)
Xavier Marmier, Dutch poetry in translation and Hieronymus van Alphen.In 1841 Xavier Marmier published his Letters on Holland (Lettres sur la Hollande). Marmier wrote travel literature and carried out translations, for instance, from German into French. His fi nal judgment on Dutch literature is not favourable, mostly because he thought Dutch poetry lacked passion. Nevertheless, in 1836 he had already published The friend of small children (L’ami des petits enfants), a children’s book of short stories in prose, which included translations from the very successful poems for children by the Dutch author Hieronymus van Alphen. A few years earlier these poems had also been translated into French verse by Auguste Clavareau, born in Luxemburg, who was convinced that Dutch literature should be known in other countries as well. His translations, however, were mostly bought by Dutch readers.
Minte Kamphuis‘Een spreekend voorbeeld’. Contact en transfer bij socialisten in Nederland en België rond 1880 253-270

Abstract (EN)
‘A vivid example’. Contact and transfer between socialists in the Netherlands and Belgium around 1880.This article explores how research on international contacts may contribute to the study of transfers, taking as a case-study the trip of the former Dutch clergyman and socialist leader Ferdinand Domela Nieuwenhuis to the Belgian city of Ghent in 1879. Current research on transfers focuses mainly on the international exchange of ideas but research on the practical side of transfers shows there are other important factors – such as personal contact, friendship and status – that may be overlooked when focusing solely on ideas. This is demonstrated in the way Domela Nieuwenhuis and the early Dutch socialists made use of their international contacts.
Leen DresenVan Schollevaarseiland tot Naardermeer. Veranderende toekomst beelden over het verdwijnen van de natuur uit Nederland, 1860-1900 271-293

Abstract (EN)
From Schollevaarseiland to Naardermeer. Changing visions of the disappearance of nature in the Netherlands, 1860-1900.From 1860 onwards various authors reported in Dutch magazines about fi eld trips to a natural phenomenon that they took to be on the brink of extinction in the Netherlands. Seeing this large colony of nesting birds, living in a wetland lake between the cultivated areas of Holland and Utrecht, was a rare last chance of seeing wildlife as it would have been in the undisturbed marshlands of ancient Holland. Reporters like the academic zoologist Pieter Harting, the landscape painter Willem Roelofs and the secondary school teacher J.A. Bientjes all published their experiences for a general audience. Readers were urged to visit this spectacle soon, before the ongoing process of land reclamation drained the lake. By following these published reports over time, we can see changes in the appreciation of the idea that the last remnants of this ‘original’ natural landscape would soon disappear.
Marleen Brock‘Onder den rook van de hoofdstad’. De verbeelding van stad, platteland en natuur in de reeks Van vlinders, vogels en bloemen van E. Heimans en Jac.P. Thijsse 294-310

Abstract (EN)
‘Underneath the smoke of the Capital’. The representation of city, nature and countryside in the series Van vlinders, vogels en bloemen [About butterflies, birds and flowers] by E. Heimans and Jac.P. Thijsse.Because of the widespread fin-de-siècle belief in an opposition between the dirty, immoral city and the healthy countryside, one would expect this to be the dominant theme in Heimans and Thijsse’s Van vlinders, vogels en bloemen [About butterflies, birds and flowers] (1894-1901), a series of biology books written for children to encourage them to discover the wonders of nature outside the city walls. Surprisingly, Heimans and Thijsse focus on the similarities between city and nature. They believe in an undefi ned metaphysical force that controls the harmonic development of all life, both in city and nature. In their eyes only the city man has the scientifi c and cultural knowledge to fully appreciate and understand the beauty of nature.
DNE 2008 3

De Negentiende Eeuw 32 (2008) 3: ‘Religie’

André HanouSporen van een Kant-debat in 1807 161-178

Abstract (EN)
Traces of a Kant debate in 1807.A deadly explosion in Leiden (1807) inspired observers to speculate about the meaning of the disaster. Some orthodox Calvinist preachers knew for certain: human sinfulness lay at the bottom of this disaster. This opinion brought freethinkers and Kantians into the fray. They discussed the basis of morality, the worth of Christendom and Kantian philosophy. The Calvinist minister Van Voorst welcomed a public debate and change to defend his kind of Christendom. He tried, in a series of meetings with Kantians (Witsen Geysbeek, Strick van Linschoten, Helmers, Kinker), to persuade them to accept his views. With no succes. Focusing on these debates, this article presents unknown texts and developments, in a later phase of the Dutch Enlightenment (1805-1810).
Hanneke HoekstraHet gestorven kind. Het verdriet van Hendrik de Cock en de Afscheiding van 1834 179-201

Abstract (EN)
The deceased child. Hendrik de Cock’s grief and the Secession of 1834.In the abundant historiography on the 1834 schism of the Dutch Reformed (state) Church, the act of rebellion of the young, orthodox minister Hendrik de Cock has been considered inevitable, whether from a religious or a class perspective. This essay however, foregrounds a biographical element. It concentrates on the sudden death of De Cock’s three-year-old daughter, which affected his state of mind and inspired the courage that enabled him to commit this radical act. This essay points to the examples of the English martyrs of the Glorious Revolution, whose translated biographies de Cock avidly read. These biographies ‘framed’ his religious universe and assigned meaning to his loss.
Jimmy KoppenKatholicisme, liberalisme en vrijmetselarij in onafhankelijk België. Kanttekeningen bij de herderlijke brief van 28 december 1837 202-215

Abstract (EN)
Catholicism, Liberalism and Freemasonry in independent Belgium. Comments on the pastoral letter of 28 December 1837.During the 1830’s, Belgian Freemasonry joined hands with Liberalism in order to oppose clerical dominance. At the same time, Freemasonry tried to come to terms with its own past: especially in Ghent, the Masonic lodges were stil affiliated with the Great East of the Netherlands. In order to stop this Orangist influence, in 1837 the Belgian counterpart established its own lodge, La Fidélité. This act caused an immediate reaction. The Belgian bishops issued a pastoral letter in which they severely condemned every Catholic who was also a Freemason. As a consequence, the Grand Master Goswin de Stassart was forced to give up his political functions, while his deputy, Pierre-Théodore Verhaegen, seized the opportunity to continue to politicize the Masonic Lodges. The pastoral letter had achieved the opposite of its authors’ intentions.
Remieg AertsStand der WetenschapVan beginselstrijd naar verwevenheid. Nieuwe perspectieven op religie, politiek en wetenschap in de
negentiende eeuw 216-230

Abstract (EN)
From struggle over principles to interconnectedness. New perspectives on religion, politics and science in the nineteenth century.This article reviews recent Dutch scholarship on religion, civil society, politics, and science in the nineteenth century. Over the last 25 years, church and religion as relevant factors in society, have not received the scholarly attention they deserve. The grand narrative of nineteenth-century history traditionally highlights the struggle of church and religion with the growing forces of state and science. Recent scholarship, however, focuses on the persistent relevance of religion to nation building, social and humanitarian action, and scientific debate. Far from being expelled from the spheres of politics and science, religious matters continued to effect processes of nation-building and reached accomodation with scientific and philosophical developments.
Boekzaal der geleerde wereld 231-238

  • Jenny Reynaerts, m.m.v. Mattie Boom, Wessel Krul e.a., Der weite Blick. Landschaften Haager Schule aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam. München: Bayerischen Staatsgemäldesammlungen / Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2008. (Jan Jaap Heij)
  • Jan de Hond, Verlangen naar het Oosten. Oriëntalisme in de Nederlandse cultuur, ca. 1800-1920. Leiden: Primavera, 2008. (Joep Leerssen)
  • Maartje Janse, De afschaffers. Publieke opinie, organisatie en politiek in Nederland 1840-1880. Amsterdam: Wereldbibliotheek, [2007]. (Ton van Kalmthout)
  • Marije Vellekoop en Roelie Zwikker, Vincent van Gogh Tekeningen 4. Arles, Saint-Rémy & Auvers-
    sur Oise
    . Zwolle: Waanders, 2007. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Van de liefde die vriendschap heet. Briefwisseling Willem Kloos – Albert Verwey, 1881-1925. Bezorgd door Rob van de Schoor en Ilona Brinkman. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2008. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Marinus van Hattum e.a. (red.), Een eeuw rare kostgangers. Vereniging Het Bilderdijk-Museum 1908-2008. Amstelveen: EON, 2008. (Berry Dongelmans)
  • Louis van Tilborg, Van Gogh en de zonnebloemen. Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum, 2008. (Lieske Tibbe)
Civil Society

De Negentiende Eeuw 32 (2008) 2: ‘Civil Society’

Maartje JanseTowards a History of Civil Society 104-121

Abstract (EN)
Although Dutch historians seem hesitant to use it, when analysing associational life and political development in the long 19th century the concept of civil society is preferable to that of public sphere, because civil society includes those citizens who, for a long time, did not participate in political life in the narrow sense, such as women and working-class men. Following a review of Stefan Hoffmann’s Civil Society: 1750-1914 (2006), some suggestions are made as to how Dutch history fits into this book, and how a history of civil society can be conceived, researched, and written.
Henk te VeldeCivil Society and Dutch History 122-125

Abstract (EN)
Dutch historians do not consider civil society as a separate social world, but as part of a society where the state has had a benevolent role. Unlike Tocqueville they do not consider societies as a safeguard that prevented democratization from turning into dictatorship of the majority. Moreover, the liberal concept of civil society supposes a sharp distinction between state and society, but Dutch socialist and religious political parties acted as a link between the two. They became the nucleus of a world of ‘pillarized’ organizations which formed an intermediate level between state and citizen, but often had a clear connection to the state.
James KennedyA Response to Hoffmann on Civil Society 126-131

Abstract (EN)
Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann’s work on civil society is important and stimulating because of its international focus, and because it fundamentally questions the facile relationship between voluntary associations and liberal democracy. At the same time, Hoffmann, in stressing international similarities, downplays the role of national or regional actors (such as the state) which help account for the different effects of civil society that Hoffmann notes. Religion, too, as a variable factor in the development of civil society receives short shrift.
Ronald RommesBoeren, burgers en buitenlui. De ‘geest der associatie’ op het platteland 132-135

Abstract (EN)
Farmers, townspeople and countryfolk. The ‘spirit of association’ in the countryside.The countryside was not some kind of wilderness, inhabited by an undifferentiated mass of uncivilized peasants. Circumstances and mentality could differ from region to region and from village to village. In several Dutch villages leading groups took the initiative to found reading societies and recital societies quite early, and they had farmers among their members.
Natalie ScholzVereinskultur, Demokratie und die Frage der Gefühle. Überlegungen im Anschluss an Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmanns Civil Society 136-139

Abstract (EN)
Associational life, democracy, and the question of emotions. Remarks in response to Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmanns Civil Society.This contribution takes a closer look at the role of emotions in order to examine the significance of associations during the nineteenth century. What happened to their supposed capacity to ‘enlarge the citizens’ heart’? Is it true that the culture of sensibility was gradually replaced by one in which men, in particular, were expected to control their feelings and what would that mean for cultural effects of associations?
Johanna RoelevinkA Few Thoughts concerning Sociability in the Early Nineteenth Century in the Netherlands 140-142

Abstract (EN)
In the Netherlands the rise of civil society in the guise of the 19th century ‘herensociëteiten’ is strongly connected with the political strife between patriots and orangists in the late 18th century. Secondly a strong undercurrent of theocratic thought in Dutch Calvinism should be taken into account when assessing the divide between public and private, the more so because classical education was not apt to lead to a rift between the two.
Stefan-Ludwig HoffmannResponse. Colonial Civil Society 143-147

Abstract (EN)
The tension between democracy and civil society is central for an understanding of ninteenth century ideas and practices of civil society in Europe. This becomes even more apparent if we include colonialism in our framework for historical analysis.
Boekzaal der geleerde wereld 148-157

  • ‘Loffelijke verdiensten van de archeologie’. C.J.C. Reuvens als grondlegger van de moderne Nederlandse archeologie. Red.: E.H.P. Cordfunke, M. Eickhoff, R.B. Halbertsma, P.H.D. Leupen en H. Sarfatij, Hilversum: Verloren, 2007. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Lodewijk Napoleon en de kunsten in het Koninkrijk Holland. Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek, deel 56/57 (2005-2006). Redactie Eveline Koolhaas-Grosfeld e.a. Zwolle: Waanders Publishers,
    2007. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Salvador Bloemgarten, Hartog de Hartog Lémon, 1755-1823. Joodse revolutionair in Franse tijd. Amsterdam: Aksant, 2007. Bart Wallet, Nieuwe Nederlanders. De integratie van de joden in Nederland, 1814-1851. Amsterdam: Bert Bakker 2007. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • A.J.C. van Leeuwen, Pierre Cuypers, architect (1827-1921). Zwolle: Waanders/Amersfoort-Zeist: Rijksdienst voor Archeologie, Cultuurlandschap en Monumenten, 2007. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Ria Laanstra en Suzanne Veldink, Vluchten in schoonheid. De Prerafaëlieten en Nederlandse kunstenaars rond 1900. Harderwijk/Den Haag: D’jonge Hond/Museum Mesdag, 2008. (Anne van Buul)
  • Tussen roem en vergetelheid. Terug naar de negentiende eeuw. Speciaalnummer van Filter. Tijdschrift
    over vertalen
    . Jaargang 14, afl. 3. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2007. (Berry Dongelmans)
  • C.E.G. ten Houte de Lange & A.D. de Jonge, Het dubbele namen boek. Van Van der Aa Criellaert
    tot Zwigtman van Noppen […]. Een overzicht van samengestelde achternamen en van
    Griekse en Latijnse namen
    . Amsterdam: Balans, 2007. (Berry Dongelmans)

De Negentiende Eeuw 32 (2008) 1: ‘Reizende ideeën’

Henk te VeldeRedactioneel 1-2
Joep LeerssenBomen hebben wortels, mensen hebben benen, ideeën hebben vleugels. Een introductie 3-14

Abstract (EN)
Trees have roots, people have legs, ideas have wings. An introduction.Taking a philological field trip in 1837 by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben as an example, this essay demonstrates how the rise of medievalism and national philology in the Netherlands was not a homegrown development, but a result of Dutch-Flemish, Flemish-German and Dutch-German cross-currents. The sample case is used to demonstrate various approaches in transnational history. Polysystem theory, Cultural Transfer, histoire croisée, innovation-diffusion modelling and Actor-Network Theory are all useful correctives to infrastructural determinism. But the implict capacity of culture to communicate and disseminate itself beyond its context of origin (already reflected in the ninth-century manuscript discovered by Hoffmann on his field trip) should be recognized as a fundamental starting point in all historical research.
Nico RanderaadDe statistische reizen van Jan Ackersdijck 15-26

Abstract (EN)
The statistical travels of Jan Ackersdijck.This contribution analyzes the different stages of the scientific travels of Jan Ackersdijck (1790-1861), professor of law, history, statistics, and political economy at the Universities of Liège and Utrecht. Prior to the late 1840s, the journeys of Ackersdijck fit in with the model of traditional, eighteenth-century scientific travelling, also known as ars apodemico. In the last 15 years of his life however, he participated in a number of international scientific congresses. These congresses were a new form of knowledge exchange, that significantly expanded in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Christian BertramIsaac Warnsinck, Karl Friedrich Schinkel en de hervorming van de Nederlandse architectuur rond 1840 27-36

Abstract (EN)
Isaac Warnsinck, Karl Friedrich Schinkel and the reform of Dutch Architecture around 1840.Isaac Warnsinck (1811-1857), a young Dutch architect, visited Germany on a grand tour through Europe in 1838-1839. During this journey, architectural history captured his attention, as he searched for inspiration for a new, genuinly Dutch architecture. With other Dutchmen, he shared the view that this Dutch architecture had to be an amalgam of tradional Dutch soberness and a new need for architectural representation after the secession of Belgium from the Netherlands in 1831. Warnsinck found this kind of ‘quiet grandeur’ in the buildings of the Prussian architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, whom he visited in Berlin. Back home, Warnsinck tried to introduce the Prussian model into the Netherlands.
Jozef VosTastbare betrekkingen. De introductie van het brailleschrift in Nederland 37-51

Abstract (EN)
Tangible ties. The introduction of the Braille system in the Netherlands.In 1837 the Braille system was introduced at the Institute for the Education of the Blind in Amsterdam. In the long run the use of Braille made all kinds of printed matter accessible to blind people, thus becoming an important means for their social and intellectual integration. The quick spread of Braille resulted from the vast international network of institutions for the blind, which made a lively exchange of educational experiences possible. Until about 1890 however, the Braille system, in the Netherlands as in other countries, was primarily used for writing. Only after the improvement of printing techniques and the establishment of special libraries Braille became the main method for reading too.
Wessel KrulGeïmporteerde cultuurmodellen. C. Busken Huet, J. van Santen Kolff en het voorbeeld van het buitenland 52-66

Abstract (EN)
Foreign examples, 1865-1880. Proposals to modernize Dutch culture according to a French or German model in the writings of C. Busken Huet and J. van Santen Kolff.The reduction of the Netherlands to a minor European power after 1830 resulted in a protracted crisis in the Dutch sense of national identity. In the 1860s and 1870s several writers proposed a modernisation of the arts and public opinion in the Netherlands according to a cultural model derived from one of the neighbouring countries. C. Busken Huet insisted on following the centralized and authoritarian model of the French Second Empire, whereas J. van Santen Kolff looked at the combination of nationalism and ‘realism’ (which in his opinion included Wagnerian symbolism) current in contemporary Germany. Disappointed by the indifference with which their proposals were received, they finally left the Netherlands and settled in the respective countries they endorsed as examples. Although their remedies were not fully applied, both writers did make a major contribution to the renewal of cultural life in Holland.
Christianne Smit‘O, tint’le ook in ons dat hoog gevoel!’ De weldadige hand der Toynbee-beweging 67-85

Abstract (EN)
‘O, may the same, noble feeling excite us, too!’ The benevolent hand of the Toynbee-movement.In the range of initiatives that were started to solve the ‘social question’ in the last quarter of the 19th century, the social program developed at Toynbee Hall in London became a source of inspiration for reformers all over the world. For many reformers this kind of social work – offering education and civilisation, based on personal contact – seemed the right answer to solve the distinction between the classes. Often inspired by a visit to Toynbee Hall, a network of Dutch reformers (m/f) eagerly transferred the idea to the Netherlands, creating a specific Dutch version of an international ideal.
Helleke van den BraberInternationaal theaterverkeer aan het einde van de 19e eeuw. De casus Marie Kalff 86-100

Abstract (EN)
International theatre traffic in late nineteenth century. The case of Marie Kalff.Dutch theatre culture has always been internationally oriented. In the nineteenth century, theatre artists from the Netherlands keenly kept up with the latest trends on the stages of Paris and Berlin, and established ties with actors, directors and managers from abroad. Still, this international exchange rarely proceeded without difficulties. The Dutch actress Marie Kalff, who between 1899 and 1903 served as a mediator between Dutch and French theatre culture, made several attempts to introduce French symbolist theatre in the Netherlands. She failed. Only years later, other intermediaries, oriented towards England and Germany rather than France, succeeded in putting symbolism on the map.
De Negentiende Eeuw 2007, nr. 3

De Negentiende Eeuw 31 (2007) 3

Boekzaal der geleerde wereld 198-213

  • Marjan van Heteren, Guido Jansen, Michel van de Laar e.a., Willem Roelofs, 1822-1897. De adem der natuur. Bussum: Thoth, 2006. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Jan Bank en Marita Mathijssen, red., Plaatsen van herinnering. Nederland in de negentiende eeuw. Amsterdam: Bert Bakker, 2006. (Berry Dongelmans)
  • Arti Ponsen en Ed van der Vlist, red., Het fataal evenement. De buskruitramp in 1807 in Leiden. Leiden: Gingko, 2007. (Leidse historische studies 4). (Berry Dongelmans)
  • Sibrand P. Martens en Simon Vuyk, red., Ik heb het groote doel mijner Aardsche bestemming bereikt. De brieven van student Marten Martens (1794-1798) en zijn leven als doopsgezind predikant, schoolopziener, vertaler en dichter in Friesland (1798-1852). Hilversum: Verloren, 2005. (Manuscripta Mennonitica 4). (Ellen Krol)
  • Peter van Velzen, De ongekende ministeriële verantwoordelijkheid. Theorie en praktijk, 1813-1840. Nijmegen: Wolf Legal Publishers, 2005. (Henk te Velde)
  • Auke van der Woud, Een nieuwe wereld. Het ontstaan van het moderne Nederland. Amsterdam: Bert Bakker, 2006. (Lieske Tibbe)
  • Jan Oosterholt, De bril van Tachtig. Het beeld van de 19e-eeuwse Nederlandse dichtkunst. Amsterdam: Stichting Amsterdamse Historische Reeks, 2005. Amsterdamse historische reeks – kleine serie 45. (Jan Rock)
  • Hans Vandevoorde, De spiegel van Achilleus. Karel van de Woestijne en de allegorie. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2006. (Leo Jansen)
  • Nop Maas, Seks!… in de negentiende eeuw. Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2006. (Kalmthout Ton van)
  • Nelleke Bakker, Rudolf Dekker en Angélique Janssens, red., Tot burgerschap en deugd. Volksopvoeding in de negentiende eeuw. Hilversum: Verloren, 2006. (Maartje Janse)
  • Jeroen van Gessel, Een vaderland van goede muziek. Een halve eeuw Maatschappij tot bevordering der toonkunst (1829-1879) en het Nederlandse muziekleven. [Utrecht]: Koninklijke Vereniging voor Nederlandse Muziekgeschiedenis, 2004. (Ton van Kalmthout)
  • Corrie van Eijl, Al te goed is buurmans gek. Het Nederlandse vreemdelingenbeleid, 1840-1940. Amsterdam: Aksant, 2005. (Boudien de Vries)
  • Jan de Bruijn, Het boetekleed ontsiert de man niet. Abraham Kuyper en de Lintjesaffaire (1909-1910). Amsterdam: Bert Bakker, 2005. (Jan Drentje)
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