The Dutch Rediscover the Dutch-Africans (1847–1900) : Brother Nation or Lost Colony? (European Expansion and Indigenous Response)

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The Dutch Rediscover the Dutch-Africans (1847–1900) : Brother Nation or Lost Colony? (European Expansion and Indigenous Response)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 308 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9789004521223
  • DDC分類 968.04

Full Description

Were the Dutch-Africans in southern Africa a brother nation to the Dutch or did they simply represent a lost colony? Connecting primary sources in Dutch and Afrikaans, this work tells the story of the Dutch stamverwantschap (kinship) movement between 1847 and 1900. The white Dutch-Africans were imagined to be the bridgehead to a broader Dutch identity - a 'second Netherlands' in the south. This study explores how the 19th century Dutch identified with and idealised a pastoral community operating within a racially segregated society on the edge of European civilisation. When the stamverwantschap dream collided with British military and economic power, the belief that race, language and religion could sustain a broader Dutch identity proved to be an illusion.

Contents

General Series Editor's Preface

Acknowledgements

List of Abbreviations, Notes on Currency Values and Translation

Relevant Dates

1 Brother Nation or Lost Colony - Dutchness Re-imagined

 Introduction

 Theoretical Context

 Kinship

 Nation and Identity

 Imperialism

 Nationalism

 Cultural Nationalism

 Colony

 Colonial Nationalism

 Language

 Language, Literature and National Identity

 The View from Europe

 Imperialism and Colonialism in the Southern African Bridgeheads

2 Dutch Writing about the Dutch Role in Southern Africa

 Southern Africa in General Dutch Historiography

 Provincialism or Comparativism

 Dutch Imperialism in the Late Nineteenth Century?

 Re-thinking the Relationship between the Dutch and Their Former Colonies

 Religion and National Identity

 Kinship with the Dutch-Africans - Myth or Reality?

 Conclusion

3 The Dutch Look Back: The Birth of the Kinship Movement

 Introduction

 The Netherlands between 1795 and 1875 - a Period of Upheaval

 Looking Back to Past Glory

 Dutch National Identity

 The Liberal Decades

 A Colony Lost - the View from Europe

 Two groups of Dutch-Africans

 Stamverwantschap—the Early Years—1840 to 1875

 Ulrich Gerhard Lauts

 Lauts Takes the Initiative

 Lauts Lobbies the Dutch Parliament

 Lauts' Legacy

 The Dutch Government Mid-1850s - Tentative Engagement

 Jacobus Stuart

 Child Migration 1855-1870

 The links sustained by education

 Hendrik Hamelberg - the Importance of Personal Experience

 Conclusion

4 'There Exists a Second Netherlands'

 Introduction

 The Role of the Dutch Protestant Churches among the Dutch-Africans

 Dutch Newspapers and Burgers

 Burgers, the Man and His Vision

 Burgers' Vision Reinforced by a Treaty and by Hamelberg

 The Unmaking of Burgers

 A Dopper Pastor Pours Cold Water on Enthusiasm

 Dutch-Africans Attacked from 'the left'

 Metropoles Compared

 The imperious British Attitude Towards the Dutch Regarding Southern Africa

 The Imbalance in Shipping and Communications

 Stamverwantschap Faces the Assertion of British power

 Conclusion

5 Dutch Reaction to the Annexation of the Transvaal

 Introduction

 A measured Initial Response to the Annexation

 Pleasure over Burgers' Demise

 Sand River Convention - Sovereignty and Slavery

 Slavery in the Transvaal Republic- the Evidence

 The Dutch Respond to British Claims

 Dutch Supporters Characterise the Allegations as Propaganda

 Neo-Calvinist Development of the Kinship Ideology

 Dutch Reactions Harden and Protest Begins

 Dutch-Africans don't Deserve Our Support - Another Liberal View

 The Dutch Government Responds - the Neutrality Policy

 The Dutch 'Official Mind' Remains Neutral

 Conclusion

6 Transvaal Rebellion Succeeds: Greater Influence for Stamverwantschap

 Introduction

 The Vision Survives - Excitement Builds

 New Symbols of Dutchness

 Harting's Seminal Publication

 Liberal Appeals to Reason and Fairness

 A Prominent Liberal Looks Back in Anger

 Neutrality Trumps Stamverwantschap Again in Parliament

 Attacking Neutrality in the Lower House

 A New Figure in the Stamverwantschap Movement

 Women and the Stamverwantschap Movement

 The Creation of the Nederlandsche Zuid-Afrikaansche Vereeniging

 Harting's Vision

 Conclusion

7 Rebuilding the Broken Link - the Jonkman Report

 Introduction

 Institutionalised Stamverwantschap - Initial Difficulties

 The Liberals Require Direct Contact

 The Jonkman Mission - A Divide Exposed

 The Jonkman Visit

 Nostalgia

 Dutch Migration Needed

 Connecting with Colonial Society

 In the Oranje Vrijstaat

 In Kruger's Republic

 Colonial Nationalism Identified

 Jonkman's Assessment of S. J. du Toit

 Jonkman's Published Conclusions

 Lessons from the Jonkman Report

 Conclusion

8 President Kruger visits: Dutch Capital Markets Fail Him

 Introduction

 Dutch National Press and English Anti-Boer Propaganda

 Divisions in the Dutch Welcoming Party

 Receptions for the Deputation

 Controversy at Plancius - Kuyper's Speech

 A purpose and Identity for Calvinist Christians in Africa

 A Liberal Response

 A Declining Role for Kuyper

 Inter-governmental Links with the Dutch-Africans Not Yet Established

 Sobering Impact of Jorissen's Dismissal

 Jorissen's Bold Plan

 Investing in the Stamverwanten - a Bad Start by the Koch Brothers

 Testing the Dutch Capital Markets

 Background to Dutch Capital Raising

 Harting Appeals for Support for the Capital Raising

 Investors' Questions - Meeting at the Odeon

 Sovereign Risk?

 Sovereign Risk Fears Stronger than Kinship

 1884 - a Reality Check for the Stamverwantschap Movement

 Beyond 1884 - NZASM Funds, Builds and Operates the ZAR Railways

 Conclusion

9 Emigration to Southern Africa - Touchstone for Kinship?

 Introduction

 Part 1: Nineteenth-Century Dutch Emigration in a Northern European Context

 Part 2: How the Dutch Failed Their Stamverwanten

 Conclusion

10 Educating the Dutch-Africans: A Civilising Mission, or Cultural Imperialism?

 Introduction

 Stamverwantschap as a Vehicle for Cultural Betterment

 Introducing Three Missionaries for Dutch Culture

 Conclusion

11 Stamverwantschap Imagined through Language and Literature

 Introduction

 Language as the Conduit for Expansion of National Identity

 'A Message to the Dutch People'

 Mixed Messages from the Stamverwanten

 What Dutch Adults Were Reading

 Cor Pama Collection

 Adult Fiction and Poetry

 Bitterness and Accusations

 Stories for Children

 Dutch Caricatures and Cartoons

 Romance and Heroism

 Poetry, Literary Criticism and the Boer as Symbol

 Myth or an Artistic Reaction to Reality?

 Conclusion

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

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