Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)

Els Witte, The nationhood concept in the Southern press on the eve of the Belgian Rebellion (August 1829-July 1830) To ascertain the extent of awareness of Belgian nationhood in the Southern opposition on the eve of the 1830 Rebellion, the author analyses articles that influenced public opinion in...

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Main Author: Els Witte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2006-01-01
Series:BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bmgn-lchr.nl/article/view/4823
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spelling doaj-8aa27531df9045738b2367593a60cb672021-10-02T18:13:13ZengOpen JournalsBMGN: Low Countries Historical Review0165-05052211-28982006-01-011212Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)Els Witte Els Witte, The nationhood concept in the Southern press on the eve of the Belgian Rebellion (August 1829-July 1830) To ascertain the extent of awareness of Belgian nationhood in the Southern opposition on the eve of the 1830 Rebellion, the author analyses articles that influenced public opinion in the leading opposition newspapers and in one government newspaper during the period in which the opposition was becoming increasingly vociferous. In this way, the chief players in the Revolution who wrote in these papers made their presence felt. The nationhood concept, embedded in its semantic sphere, is examined in no less than 4,200 paragraphs using the well-known position analysis developed by V. Morin.   Although the nationhood concept as such comes across as being strongly ideologized and politicised in the analysis, the Belgian nation is scarcely given any consideration. Nor is the idea of separation accorded any real prominence, and there is certainly no question of abolishing the kingdom. Nevertheless, an identity is built up from the concepts of the North, Holland, Hollanders versus the South, and Belgium and the Belgians. By accentuating the Southern grievances, the Belgian identity simply emerges strengthened from the discussion in the press. https://bmgn-lchr.nl/article/view/4823Identity (ethnic and national)press
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Els Witte
spellingShingle Els Witte
Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Identity (ethnic and national)
press
author_facet Els Witte
author_sort Els Witte
title Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
title_short Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
title_full Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
title_fullStr Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
title_full_unstemmed Het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de Belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
title_sort het natiebegrip in het zuidelijke krantendiscours aan de vooravond van de belgische opstand (augustus 1829-juli 1830)
publisher Open Journals
series BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
issn 0165-0505
2211-2898
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Els Witte, The nationhood concept in the Southern press on the eve of the Belgian Rebellion (August 1829-July 1830) To ascertain the extent of awareness of Belgian nationhood in the Southern opposition on the eve of the 1830 Rebellion, the author analyses articles that influenced public opinion in the leading opposition newspapers and in one government newspaper during the period in which the opposition was becoming increasingly vociferous. In this way, the chief players in the Revolution who wrote in these papers made their presence felt. The nationhood concept, embedded in its semantic sphere, is examined in no less than 4,200 paragraphs using the well-known position analysis developed by V. Morin.   Although the nationhood concept as such comes across as being strongly ideologized and politicised in the analysis, the Belgian nation is scarcely given any consideration. Nor is the idea of separation accorded any real prominence, and there is certainly no question of abolishing the kingdom. Nevertheless, an identity is built up from the concepts of the North, Holland, Hollanders versus the South, and Belgium and the Belgians. By accentuating the Southern grievances, the Belgian identity simply emerges strengthened from the discussion in the press.
topic Identity (ethnic and national)
press
url https://bmgn-lchr.nl/article/view/4823
work_keys_str_mv AT elswitte hetnatiebegripinhetzuidelijkekrantendiscoursaandevooravondvandebelgischeopstandaugustus1829juli1830
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