'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek

Irony, nationalism, and the Oera Linda book The Oera Linda book is a curious enigma which came to light in the Dutch town of Den Helder in 1867. It is an ambiguous literary text which can be read in two different ways: On the one hand as a nonsensical parody on the tradition of Friesian fantastic...

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Main Author: G. Jensma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2002-01-01
Series:BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bmgn-lchr.nl/article/view/4140
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spelling doaj-b13f9e0ae4724235abde62f3422554f82021-10-02T18:13:14ZengOpen JournalsBMGN: Low Countries Historical Review0165-05052211-28982002-01-011173'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boekG. Jensma Irony, nationalism, and the Oera Linda book The Oera Linda book is a curious enigma which came to light in the Dutch town of Den Helder in 1867. It is an ambiguous literary text which can be read in two different ways: On the one hand as a nonsensical parody on the tradition of Friesian fantastic historiography, and on the other as a much more serious allegory of the nineteenth-century conflict between liberal theological modernism and orthodoxy. The attribution of this anonymous text to the Minister/ Poet François HaverSchmidt (1835-1894) subsequently shows how an ironic style of thinking and writing can be a by-product of modernisation. In the case of HaverSchmidt and his Oera Linda book, this irony is working in two spheres, viz. that of regional identity and that of religion. In both cases, HaverSchmidt's irony is the result of a strongly felt tension between tradition and modernity, between the desire to believe in a fantastic, non-critical nationalist historiography or in the existence of a wonder-working God on the one hand, and on the other a commitment to the knowledge that such things can no longer exist in a modern world. https://bmgn-lchr.nl/article/view/4140NationalismImage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G. Jensma
spellingShingle G. Jensma
'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek
BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Nationalism
Image
author_facet G. Jensma
author_sort G. Jensma
title 'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek
title_short 'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek
title_full 'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek
title_fullStr 'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek
title_full_unstemmed 'Geen Fries spot met zijn land'. Nationalisme, ironie en het Oera Linda-boek
title_sort 'geen fries spot met zijn land'. nationalisme, ironie en het oera linda-boek
publisher Open Journals
series BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
issn 0165-0505
2211-2898
publishDate 2002-01-01
description Irony, nationalism, and the Oera Linda book The Oera Linda book is a curious enigma which came to light in the Dutch town of Den Helder in 1867. It is an ambiguous literary text which can be read in two different ways: On the one hand as a nonsensical parody on the tradition of Friesian fantastic historiography, and on the other as a much more serious allegory of the nineteenth-century conflict between liberal theological modernism and orthodoxy. The attribution of this anonymous text to the Minister/ Poet François HaverSchmidt (1835-1894) subsequently shows how an ironic style of thinking and writing can be a by-product of modernisation. In the case of HaverSchmidt and his Oera Linda book, this irony is working in two spheres, viz. that of regional identity and that of religion. In both cases, HaverSchmidt's irony is the result of a strongly felt tension between tradition and modernity, between the desire to believe in a fantastic, non-critical nationalist historiography or in the existence of a wonder-working God on the one hand, and on the other a commitment to the knowledge that such things can no longer exist in a modern world.
topic Nationalism
Image
url https://bmgn-lchr.nl/article/view/4140
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