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Literary Cultures and Public Opinion in the Low Countries, 1450-1650

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In the early modern Low Countries, literary culture functioned on several levels simultaneously: it provided learning, pleasure, and entertainment while also shaping public debate. From a ditty in ...
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  • 09 June 2011
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In the early modern Low Countries, literary culture functioned on several levels simultaneously: it provided learning, pleasure, and entertainment while also shaping public debate. From a ditty in Dutch sung in the streets to a funeral poem in Latin composed to be read for or by intimate friends, from a play performed for a prince to a comedy written for pupils – literary texts and performances often dealt with highly controversial topics of religion or politics, on a local or national, but also on a supranational scale. This volume sets out to analyse the role and function of literary culture in the formation of early modern public opinion, and proposes ways in which a modern scholar might approach early modern works of literature and other traces of literary culture to explore early modern public opinion making. The cases presented in this volume bring the Dutch and Latin literary cultures of the Low Countries in the focus of international debates on the history of public opinion.
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Price: $181.00
Pages: 326
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date: 09 June 2011
ISBN: 9789004206168
Format: Hardcover
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"The editors, [...] expose their theme and define its terms, concepts, and limits in a substantial introduction. [...] The eight essays [...] are interesting [...]." – Willem Frijhoff, Erasmus University Rotterdam, in: Renaissance Quarterly 65/4 (Winter 2012), pp. 1311-1313 [DOI: 10.1086/669438]
"Een prachtig boek. [...] Deze rijke en inspirerende bundel plaatst de Nederlandse letterkunde in een nieuw licht en opent een geheel nieuw onderzoeksveld. Relatief onbekende teksten, maar ook ruim bestudeerde klassiekers, kunnen opnieuw tegen het licht van de publieke opinie worden gehouden." – Jeroen Salman, in: Vooys 30/1 (2012), pp. 97-100
Jan Bloemendal, Ph.D (1997), is Professor of Neo-Latin Studies at the University of Amsterdam and senior fellow of the Huygens Institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has published on early modern drama, Neo-Latin poetry and poetics, and Erasmus.

Arjan van Dixhoorn, Ph.D. (2004), is postdoc of the Flemish Research Foundation at the Department of History, Ghent University, and co-ordinator of the international network Performative Literary Culture. He has published on early modern Dutch culture and the history of public opinion and civil society.

Elsa Strietman is Senior Lecturer in Dutch at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow, Tutor and Vice President of Murray Edwards College, Cambridge. She has published on rhetoricians' drama.