Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Cultural Nationalism and the Rise of Dutch Studies
- 1 Matthijs Siegenbeek in Defence of Dutch
- 2 Barthold Hendrik Lulofs: A ‘Learned Dilettante’
- 3 Poet and Professor: Adam Simons
- 4 Johannes Kinker: A Kantian Philosopher Teaching Dutch Language, Literature, and Eloquence
- 5 Caught Between Propaganda and Science: Ulrich Gerhard Lauts, the Forgotten Father of Dutch Philology in Brussels
- 6 Pieter Weiland and his Nederduitsche Spraakkunst
- 7 Moralist of the Nation: Johannes Henricus van der Palm
- 8 ‘I am Revived as a Belgian’: The Work of Jan Frans Willems
- 9 Adriaan Kluit: Back to the Sources!
- 10 ‘Can Grander Skulls be Crowned?’: Jacob van Dijk’s Posthumous Literary History
- 11 Hendrik van Wijn: Pioneer of Historical Literary Studies in the Netherlands
- 12 The Founding Father of Dutch Literary History: Jeronimo de Vries
- Afterword: Gert-Jan Johannes
- Index
10 - ‘Can Grander Skulls be Crowned?’: Jacob van Dijk’s Posthumous Literary History
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Cultural Nationalism and the Rise of Dutch Studies
- 1 Matthijs Siegenbeek in Defence of Dutch
- 2 Barthold Hendrik Lulofs: A ‘Learned Dilettante’
- 3 Poet and Professor: Adam Simons
- 4 Johannes Kinker: A Kantian Philosopher Teaching Dutch Language, Literature, and Eloquence
- 5 Caught Between Propaganda and Science: Ulrich Gerhard Lauts, the Forgotten Father of Dutch Philology in Brussels
- 6 Pieter Weiland and his Nederduitsche Spraakkunst
- 7 Moralist of the Nation: Johannes Henricus van der Palm
- 8 ‘I am Revived as a Belgian’: The Work of Jan Frans Willems
- 9 Adriaan Kluit: Back to the Sources!
- 10 ‘Can Grander Skulls be Crowned?’: Jacob van Dijk’s Posthumous Literary History
- 11 Hendrik van Wijn: Pioneer of Historical Literary Studies in the Netherlands
- 12 The Founding Father of Dutch Literary History: Jeronimo de Vries
- Afterword: Gert-Jan Johannes
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Jacob van Dijk (1745-1828), an enlightened ‘amateur’, had completed his Treatise on the Origin, Progress and Contemporary State of Dutch Literature(Verhandeling) in 1792. The treatise won the prize contest of a Rotterdam literary society, but as van Dijk refused to make some alterations it wasn’t published in his lifetime. His Treatise offers a vision of Dutch literary history that is in accordance with the late eighteenth century. At first sight van Dijk adheres to the vision of continuous and linear development in Dutch literary history. But this continuity is blurred by a strong a correlation between civil liberty and literary bloom. In that sense it is a politically engaged discourse.
Keywords: amateur, literary society, continuous and linear development, civil liberty, literary bloom, politically engaged discourse
Introduction
The very first history of Dutch literature was already outdated by the time it was finally published. The author, Jacob van Dijk (1745-1828), had completed his Verhandeling over den oorsprong, voortgang en tegenwoordigen staat der Nederduitsche dichtkunst (‘Treatise on the origin, progress and contemporary state of Dutch poetry) in 1792, but the treatise had to wait until 1832 before it appeared in print. During the forty years that van Dijk's literary history remained on the shelves, books had been published by authors who had more right to the claim of being the father of Dutch literary history. In forty years time, van Dijk had disappeared from the centre stage of Dutch literature and from memory, to the extent that ‘in 1826, and even before that, our literary experts ranked him among our deceased Authors’. Within the same forty years the Republic had changed into a Kingdom. In 1792, after the invasion of the Prussians and the counterrevolution, the country had the aspect of a divided nation; in 1832, shortly after the Belgian Uprising, the division had finally come to an end, but the nation was still in ruins and once more in shock.
Oddly enough, it was van Dijk's demise in 1832 that made the publication of the Treatise possible. After his death, van Dijk's life and work received some attention, in one form or another.
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- Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018