Dutch literature and culture in an age of transition
Autoren
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Introduction / Jessica Durlacher: The Right Words: Reflections on Holocaust Writings by Survivors and Victims. A Daughter Speaks Out / Wiljan van den Akker, Gillis Dorleijn: Rise and Decline of Modern Dutch Literature: A Formidable Paradox / Geert Buelens: Peace through War and Revolution: Socialism, Nationalism, and Internationalism in Flemish, Dutch, and French Literature of the Great War / Jane Fenoulhet: The Power of Narrative: Gendered Narratology and Anna Blaman’s Op leven en dood / Lotte Jensen: Between Text and Context: An Interpretation of Three Patriotic Plays by Anna P. Muller-Westerman / Inez Hollander: Between Memory and Myth: Thematic Connections Between the Novels of the American South and the Dutch East Indies / Mary G. Kemperink: Technology and Fin-de-siècle Dutch Literature, 1890–1910 / Marleen de Vries: Why Eighteenth-Century Dutch Literature is so Rebellious: About Canons and Politics / Reinier Salverda: “For Justice And Humanity”. Multatuli and Pramoedya Ananta Toer: Dutch-Indonesian Literary, Historical, and Political Connections / Louise Viljoen: Three Travelers in Insulinde: A Comparative Reading of Travel Books by C. Louis Leipoldt, Aletta Jacobs, and Emiel Hullebroeck / Rolf Wolfswinkel: Gerhard Durlacher: The Pain of Memory / The Agony of Forgetting / An van Dienderen: Collectivity on Screen: Multiliteracy in a Community Project in Brussels