Perspectives on the World Reflections of 2011-2012
The Faculty of Humanities
Humanities
A word from the Dean Preparing for the future. This could well be said to have been the theme for the 2011-2012 academic year. Leiden University formulated its response to the challenges that were set out in the Dutch government’s Strategic Agenda for Higher Education, Research and Science. New objectives were defined, for example in such areas as study success: objectives that will have to be achieved in the coming years. All in all, the profile of the University and its Faculties has now been given a much clearer definition. The Faculty of Humanities will focus on Dynamics of Diversity, a concept that encompasses the mobility of people, Professor W. van den Doel Dean
language, culture, ideas, art and institutions in a globalising world, and their interconnectivity through the ages. The Faculty is an international centre for the study of languages, cultures, arts and societies worldwide, in their historical contexts from prehistory to the present. In other words, the Faculty casts its net wide in terms of cultural, linguistic and geographical regions and in terms of historical periods. We employ in-depth linguistic, historical and cultural knowledge, focusing particular attention on the analytical and interpretive power of explicit and implicit comparison, within disciplinary and interdisciplinary frameworks of theory and method. In disciplinary terms, we apply a broad definition of the Humanities, drawing no absolute boundaries between the Humanities and such disciplines as Social Science and Law. Instead we seek synergy. On the basis of this profile, the Faculty contributes to the themes that typify the University’s chosen profile, namely the Global Interaction of Civilizations and Languages; The Asian Challenge; Health, Life and Biosciences; and Law, Democracy and Governance: Legitimacy in a Multilevel Setting. In focusing on this profile, we will apply ourselves to delivering exciting teaching programmes and carrying out innovative research projects. These aims apply not only to the future; today, too, all the Faculty’s seven institutes are engaged in exciting and innovative research. In this publication, four scientists and four master’s students talk about their current research projects. From Egyptian goddesses and a seventeenth-century print collection to Dutch asylum practice and Chinese twitter messages: you can read about eight examples of the groundbreaking work carried out by Leiden’s inspiring Humanities researchers. Together, their activities cover a field of study that encompasses all periods of human history and has the whole world as its domain. I hope you will enjoy reading Perspectives on the World. Wim van den Doel Dean
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Humanities at Leiden University Leiden’s Faculty of Humanities is an international centre for studying the world’s languages, cultures and nations. The Faculty’s research stretches from prehistoric times to the present day, and adopts a broad perspective that encompasses fields as diverse as religion, philosophy, literature, art and technology.
Multidisciplinary collaboration
philosophy in all its facets, in relation to the many disciplines
The Faculty of Humanities was formed in 2008. Merging the
taught at the University;
diverse departments to create the current institutes has enabled us to engage in collaboration at a multidisciplinary level and
• The Leiden University Institute for Religious Studies (LIRS) includes all religions within its range of expertise.
given us the opportunity to extend our scope beyond the limits of the former departments. The Faculty’s research activities are
The Faculty of Humanities is home to more than 4,500 students,
currently structured within seven institutes:
who are able to choose from no fewer than 26 BA programmes and 36 MA programmes, including research masters. In 2011, the
• The Academy of Creative and Performing Arts (ACPA) focuses on bringing together art and science; • The Leiden University Institute for Area Studies (LIAS)
Faculty’s 700 staff members were engaged in teaching and research
top researchers every year. Its prestigious VICI award, one of the
• Global Interaction of Civilizations and Languages
activities based on a turnover of some J 50 million. Between
largest personal scientific awards in the Netherlands, has been
• The Asian Challenge
September 2011 and June 2012, 65 students received their PhD.
awarded to a Leiden Humanities researcher eleven times since its
• Health, Life and Biosciences
inception in 2002. Last year, two Leiden Humanities researchers
• Law, Democracy and Governance: Legitimacy
combines thorough knowledge of language and culture with disciplinary approaches from the humanities, social sciences
World-class research
received VICI awards: Manon van der Heijden for her research on
and law;
The Faculty is ranked among the top five Arts and Humanities
women and criminality, and Mirjam de Bruijn for her research
• The Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society (LUCAS,
universities outside the English-speaking world. The quality of
on mobile communication in Central Africa. The contribution of
More about the Faculty of Humanities
formerly LUICD) covers the field of literature and literary
the Faculty’s research is recognised internationally, as witnessed
the Faculty of Humanities plays a key role in positioning Leiden
For more information about the Faculty, its programmes
studies, the history of art and material culture, and
by the fact that our researchers are regularly awarded signifi-
University among the top three recipients of VICI awards.
and institutes, see: hum.leiden.edu.
film and new media studies;
cant national and international research grants. An example is
in a Multilevel Setting
The recipients of scientific awards are listed at:
Professor Willem Adelaar, who last year was awarded an Advan-
Profile themes
hum.leiden.edu/research/hall-of-fame.
nineteenth in the 2012 QS World University Ranking for
ced Investigator Grant for excellent research by the European
In order to facilitate cutting-edge fundamental research at
A list of candidates who recently received their PhD
History, and number 1 outside the English-speaking world;
Research Council (ERC). He received this prize in recognition
national and international level, Leiden University has chosen
can be found at: hum.leiden.edu/research/PhDs.
• The Leiden University Centre for Linguistics (LUCL) brings
of his work on the Amerindian languages of Central and South
to focus on six profile themes from among eleven multi
Subsidies received by researchers are listed at:
America. Besides European subsidies, the Netherlands Organi-
disciplinary fields of research. The Faculty of Humanities
hum.leiden.edu/research.
sation for Scientific Research (NWO), too, finances a number of
is engaged in research relating to four of these themes:
• The Leiden University Institute for History (LUIH) was ranked
together all the Faculty’s linguistic research; • The Leiden University Institute for Philosophy (LUIPh) studies
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Boxes and boxes of an early modern stateswoman’s letters Ten years ago, Dr Nadine Akkerman began studying the letters of Elizabeth Stuart, seventeenth-century Queen of Bohemia. At that time Akkerman was carrying out research for her PhD in English literature; she hoped the letters would expose an interesting literary network from the period. Instead, she discovered a large number of letters that had little to do with art or culture but were more concerned with politics and warfare. As a result, Akkerman’s research subject proved to be an influential, early modern stateswoman. Nadine Akkerman (1978) has by now read around 1800 letters
literary networks, but that I was actually dealing with much more
from and to the ‘Winter Queen’, Elizabeth Stuart (1596-1662).
interesting material,’ Akkerman explains. ‘When I started, around
Elizabeth was the daughter of King James (VI of Scotland, I of
two hundred of Elizabeth’s letters had been found. I had hoped to
England); she married Frederick V, who became King of Bohemia
discover a few new ones, but I actually found a great many more.
in 1619. Within a year, however, the Bohemian army had been
And in these letters she only writes about war and the army, about
defeated and Elizabeth and her husband fled as exiles to The
spies and diplomats.’
Hague. Frederick died in 1632. Akkerman obtained her PhD based on a selection of the letters.
In other words, Elizabeth turned out to be highly politically
A collection of around six hundred, dating from the period
engaged. This goes against the clichéd image of a queen who
when Elizabeth was politically active during her widowhood,
liked romances and plays and cared more for her court with its
was published last autumn by Oxford University Press: The
monkeys and dogs than for her own children. In Akkerman’s
Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia, Volume
opinion, Elizabeth introduced the Republic to ‘a true royal court’.
II (1632-1642). Akkerman is currently a researcher and lecturer
‘She attracted painters, for example, and competed with other
at the Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society.
courts in terms of culture,’ Akkerman observes. ‘But at the same time Elizabeth was corresponding about political matters, trying
A politically engaged queen ‘It took a while before I realised I would not be unravelling
to mobilise armies and organising meetings of ambassadors.’
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Paleis Het Loo Nationaal Museum, Apeldoorn, on loan from the Oranje-Nassau Historical Assosciation, The Hague
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as: how does a text come into existence, who is writing it, who is
conduct this research. ‘Both the National Archives and the Royal
reading it, how was it circulated? And, of course, I look at the
Archives in The Hague are nearby, and Leiden University is the
rhetoric, which eventually fuses with the content. It is because
only Dutch university to have purchased the British State Papers
of this that the publication, apart from what it reveals about
(1509-1714) in digital format. We can now easily view these papers
Elizabeth herself, is of great historical value. It is also about the
while working in the lecture halls.’
oral and epistolary cultures of the period.’ Of course, Akkerman herself has not been inactive either. Two ‘Besides, Elizabeth had so many contacts that just about everyone
other parts of the trilogy about Elizabeth Stuart are due to be
who was of importance in the seventeenth century is mentioned,’
published later this year and next year. Her new research project
Akkerman continues. ‘The Thirty Years’ War plays a major role
will subsequently look at women spies in the early modern age.
in the correspondence, and there is also information in it about
‘There are already many books about the history of espionage,
the various military skirmishes. Anglophone researchers are in-
but women are conspicuously absent from them. I have found the
trigued, because in many of their court studies there are missing
names of so many women in the letters, however, that I now need
years in the accounts of the lives of people in exile.’
a database to record them all.’
Akkerman also spent a year studying and subsequently cracking the coded language she found in the letters. ‘A substitution system was used in which numbers stood for certain letters: important figures were also referred to in numeric code. By sharing the key to the code, the elite created their own language, leading to the development of political factions. In some letters, only parts were written in code, sometimes it was only the subject of the letter. You can then decipher the letter as if it were a kind of puzzle, while charting social networks at the same time. Other research ers can now use these systems for their work.’
Standard work In order to chart Elizabeth’s efforts, Akkerman searched through
Undiscovered research territories
boxes full of letters in British and German, as well as Swedish and
Having found through Elizabeth’s letters that particular
American archives, collecting material from 47 different locations.
women played a more influential role than was previously
She is very careful in maintaining a literary approach in analysing
thought, Akkerman is convinced that there is a whole field of
the documents. ‘I constantly take into account questions such
research still to be discovered. Leiden is an excellent place to
‘Elizabeth had so many contacts that just about everyone who was of importance in the seventeenth century is mentioned in her letters.’
Nadine Akkerman
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Dialects on “Twitter” Daan van Esch (1989) completed a Bachelor’s degree in Chinese Language and Culture. Now he is pursuing his Master’s in Chinese Studies, specialising in linguistics.
‘Last summer I travelled through rural areas in China. I was
the use of language in the messages, the computer processed away
dictionary are, in fact, often used throughout all of China. I also
intrigued by the vast differences in language. How great would
for twelve hours. Now you can easily browse through the mess
looked to see whether certain words may be associated with a
it be to do a few months of field work over there? Back in the
ages, and see when and where a message containing a particular
specific city, and ran a list of the five thousand most common
Netherlands I learned a new Chinese word, a dialect word. Over
word was written.’
words through the programme, to see if they occurred more in
here a Dutch language dictionary will note that a dialect word
certain places than others. Besides that, I made the data openly
comes from the Limburg area, for example, but in China the use
‘You should see this method as a new tool; it allows you to analyse
accessible via a website. Within an hour of sending the link to
of dialect is discouraged. A Chinese dictionary will say that a
a lot of data very quickly. First, I tried around a hundred dialect
a mailing list of colleagues, there were already two hundred
word is part of a dialect, but not which dialect. I wondered how
words; which showed that words which are listed as dialect in the
visitors to the website. I also received all sorts of emails in my
you would go about tracking the origins of such a word. The next
inbox. Since then I have received even more reactions, including
day I read about an American study that analyses Twitter to see
from researchers at Stanford. The results of my research show
which words are used more frequently in New York, compared
that this is indeed a good way of identifying dialect words,
to L.A., for instance. This type of research is often carried out on
but of course there are many more possibilities. This is
newspaper articles, but Twitter is closer to everyday language. On
just the start of a whole range of things we can do
Twitter, people don’t just write that they want more democracy;
with this data.’
they also write things like: “I can’t sleep”, and “She doesn’t even know I exist…” It occurred to me that this kind of study would
Van Esch speaks about his research with great passion and
also work for Mandarin.’
precision (he calculated how many metres of bookcases are needed to store all the messages in his database – easily 46).
‘It seemed like a fun experiment; I hadn’t thought of it as a dis-
By co-operating with other researchers and with the help of
sertation project at that point at all. Using Weibo, the Chinese
external funding, he hopes to be able to continue his work
version of Twitter, I obtained five million randomly selected
for some time. Technically it is possible to use messages in
messages. I then rented a kind of super-computer that can process
the database five minutes after they appear on Weibo.
this kind of data. After I had written software that could analyse
To him, that sounds fantastic.
Daan van Esch
‘Using Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter, I obtained a selection of five million messages that you can now browse online.’
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Literature of violence Yvonne Hassing (1950) did a Master’s in Philosophy of European Languages and Cultures (Philosophy of the Humanities). She had previously studied English, Linguistics and Translation Studies and worked as an English teacher.
‘As a teacher, I have always been greatly interested in literature.
have an in-built propensity for violence, according to contemp
Hassing enjoys the fact that her research both starts and finishes
I read José Saramago’s Blindness, which is about what happens
orary philosopher Fukuyama. The – at times – brutal behaviour
with literature. She does not really expect this dissertation to lead
when there is no central authority within a society. Groups are
of soldiers in war zones is an obvious example of this tendency.
to more extensive academic work; for her the most important
after each other’s blood, violence breaks out. How does that come
Linguist and experimental psychologist Pinker refers to the “rage
thing is that she has found answers to a number of questions that
about? Why does man have this tendency? Philosophers Hobbes
circuit”: people can go berserk and become addicted to violence
had been occupying her for a long time.
and Rousseau both believe that we need a form of government
and sadism. This is why I also drew on psychology. I related all
to guarantee safety. Hobbes argues that violence occurs because
these elements to events in the novels Blindness and William
of the struggle for land and food, and especially for power and
Golding’s Lord of the Flies.’
reputation, whereas for Rousseau, honour and recognition are the most important causes. Eventually, people who are not violent
‘My conclusion: literature is relevant in offering an explanation
by nature begin to turn to violence, too, to protect themselves.
for violence and war. It allows us to experience how anxious
What Hobbes and Rousseau failed to recognise, however, is that
people become when there is no government, how people can
man is also a social being. He doesn’t simply roam around by
become addicted to power and violence and how important
himself, shoot an animal when he is hungry and then continue
loyalty, compassion and self-control are within society. Through
on his way, alone.’
literature we can understand people’s dilemmas: should I fight or flee, or put up some resistance? Literature about history allows
‘I also started to look for proof of how this sort of thing occurs
us to share these experiences. It acts as a warning; we can learn
in real life by applying insights from archaeology and cultural
from it. In the past, life used to be relatively much more violent.
anthropology to my research. Both disciplines show that nomadic
The reason that levels of violence have decreased, according to
hunter-gatherers are in general less violent. The problems usually
Pinker, is that people have become more civilised and more
develop when people settle somewhere and start owning land.
intelligent. But literature also plays a role because having the
Actually, there has never been a situation in which people did not
opportunity to empathise with others helps us to become
live in groups. However, that does not mean that man does not
more tolerant.’
‘Literature is relevant in offering an explanation for violence and war. And empathising with others helps us to become more tolerant.’
Yvonne Hassing
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Christian tradition in the Middle East What do language and religion have to do with each other? A lot in some cases, as the research carried out by Professor Heleen Murre-van den Berg (1964) shows time and again. She herself studied Semitic Languages and has become increasingly involved in religious studies in the course of her career. With a new book – groundbreaking, according to some – about the early modern history of the Church of the East, she again takes language and language development as a starting point for studying and explaining religion. In so doing she is not only charting part of history; she is also helping us gain a better understanding of recent developments in the Middle East. In her PhD thesis, Murre-van den Berg described the transition of
context. Ruling religious leaders and their place in the community
Aramaic from a spoken to a written language, strongly influenced
are described, for instance. Political games were also played in the
by the work of missionaries. Her new book is about the Christian
colophons, because of the rivalry between leaders and villages.
minority population in the area encompassed by modern-day
All of this says something about that time: what was happening,
Iraq, between 1500 and 1850. ‘There are hardly any archives in
how did people look at the world and at the role of the Christian
culture came to a standstill, leading to isolation and decline. One
which we can do research, but a great many manuscripts have
minority in an Islamic society? My focus is on the language and
reason for this is that relatively few new texts seem to have been
been preserved. These are mainly liturgical texts, copied by
the dynamics within it; I look at who propagates what and what
written, and those that were don’t appear to introduce anything
scribes, who also left behind a printer’s mark, or a colophon,’ she
kind of texts are used for the different purposes. You could see the
new. The developments were indeed not rapid, but it is nonethe-
explains. It is these colophons that she is focusing on. ‘The scribe
colophons as a route into the culture of the Church of the East.’
less not a lost era. In fact, it was a crucial period for conveying the ancient Syrian Christian culture. Without the scribes in Northern
used a colophon to prove that the text was reliable. This means that there is a name, a date and a place; comparable to how we
Not a lost era
Iraq, many old texts would have been lost.’
sign things.’
The period has a different image from the way Murre-van
‘Besides, this Christian minority was much less isolated than was
den Berg would herself describe it, based on her research. ‘We
sometimes assumed. They had increasing contact with the Roman
Over the years, however, scribes began to include more and more
Westerners – in fact, Christians in the Middle East just as much
Catholic Church, for instance. Thanks to this, new ideas from
information. ‘All sorts of adjectives were added and the colophon
– have the tendency to write off this early modern period as one
Europe about religion, church and society reached Northern Iraq
became a genre in itself, which is valuable especially in a religious
in which people were lagging behind; one in which their own
‘Without the early modern scribes from Northern Iraq, many old texts would have been lost.’
relatively rapidly. You can find these outside influences in the texts.
Heleen Murre-van den Berg
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There was a schism within the minority population, for example:
where the focus is on such aspects as sociolinguistics. I myself
one group of people wanted this type of contact while another
work for the Institute for Religious Studies. The Faculty also
group was opposed to it.’
houses all the relevant language programmes. I know of nowhere
Asian successes in poverty reduction
else in the Netherlands where you can find this much expertise in
‘The’ Christians do not exist
one place.’
Conclusions about how different groups of Christians behaved at the time can be useful in explaining recent developments
Fifty years ago, both Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa suffered from severe poverty. While most Southeast Asian countries have since managed to achieve rapid growth, most African countries have not. When Professor David Henley (1963) realised that the Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV), where he had been working since 1993, had a sister institute in Leiden called the African Studies Centre (ASC) with the same kind of expertise on another region, he decided to start an international research programme on the development trajectories of the two regions.
in the Middle East. ‘We often talk about ‘the’ Christians in the Middle East, as if they live in enclaves, with no wider context,’ says Murre-van den Berg. ‘We either assume that these societies are highly sectarian, and fail to look at how different groups are related to one another, or we only see the general picture without paying attention to the differences. It’s a pitfall I try to avoid. A story with subtle differences of meaning is, of course, less easily translated into simple advice on the question of whether or not to invade Syria, for example. Whatever you answer to that question
‘Sometimes it’s easier to do things on an ambitious scale,’ Henley
has one of the best research libraries in the world for the region
is necessarily a political point of view. This is not science with
states. ‘It can immediately yield insights that you don’t get if
it specialises in.’
absolute results. So, what can I contribute? I can provide texts
you’re concentrating on an individual community or country.
and explanations about how we should look at Christians in Syria
With Tracking Development, as the research programme was
After gaining funding, Tracking Development included, initially,
today. Why do many of them support the Assad regime? Because
called, we were able to make extremely good use of the resources
eight PhD students and a dozen postdoc researchers, contributing
of uncertainty about the future, mainly: Assad is also part of a
and expertise we have in Leiden. The two institutes were involved
expertise on Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Nigeria,
minority population. But it also has to do with social class, region
in the same kind of questions and topics, building up the same
Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya. ‘We put students together in pairs
and old political alliances, so by no means all Christians feel
kind of area-specific, in-depth knowledge.
and had them travel to their counterpart countries, so they could acquire personal experience.’ Henley’s role has been to bring people
the same way about it. History helps us understand why certain Christians adopt certain positions.’
A joint endeavour
together, supervise, organise events, conferences, and discussions,
And so an ambitious project was born. It is Henley’s conviction
and also to write and edit publications, of which the last are still
Expertise
that this kind of comparative research has to be based on real
to appear.
Because Murre-van den Berg’s research interacts with so many
expertise, only obtainable by making it a joint endeavour. ‘Both
Heretiq
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institutes have people that have spent their whole professional
Corruption versus rural development
suitable place for her work. ‘We have the Institute for Area Studies
lives looking at their respective regions. And apart from the
The outcomes after five years of comparative research are rather
with its Middle East department and the Centre for Linguistics
people, there were also library resources: ASC, like KITLV,
poignant. ‘There’s a widespread assumption that the economic
academic disciplines, she believes that Leiden is a pre-eminently
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When asked what does work, Henley names three important
The difference probably has something to do with the fact that
preconditions for sustained economic growth with rapid poverty
the experience of colonialism involved a more traumatic rupture
reduction. Since the turn of the millennium, two of these have
with the past in Africa than it did in Southeast Asia.’
generally been met in both regions: sound macroeconomic management and economic freedom for small farmers and small
Nevertheless, the Tracking Development research programme
entrepreneurs. The most important difference between devel
deliberately did not concentrate on deep historical determinants
opment strategies in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa,
of developmental divergence. ‘We’ve been saying that it doesn’t
however, is the much greater priority given, especially in the
matter what the past was like; as long as you adopt the right
early stages, by the Asian governments to rural and agricultural
policies now, you can make a big difference quickly.’ Accordingly,
development. ‘The consistency of that contrast surprised me.
Henley is now taking his results to a wider audience. Already he
And it is extremely important for the future,’ Henley says.
has presented some of the results to the World Bank. In the near future he and his colleagues will take part in a number of inter-
Practical
national events intended to reach African policy makers, spreading
‘With few exceptions, African leaders are simply not very
the message about what works in development, and what doesn’t.
interested in smallholder agriculture. And so their efforts to achieve economic growth are very unlikely to benefit large numCasablanca1911
bers of poor people quickly.’ Why this indifference? Here we find ourselves in a speculative area, the professor warns. But he does have an opinion. ‘The Asian states were facing, or had recently faced, the threats of a communist take-over. The forces of the Left had drawn most of their support from the rural poor, so there was a strong incentive for the elite to do something about problems in Africa are strongly related to institutional failure and
the situation of this group.’
at least not nearly as true as is generally thought. Indonesia, for
‘But I don’t think that’s the whole story,’ he continues. ‘There’s
instance, at the period of its greatest success in poverty reduction
also a difference in world view at some deeper level. I’d say
was also one of the most corrupt countries in the world, according
African political elites are interested in transforming their
to the standard indices. In the aid literature and the practice of
societies, acquiring things that rich countries have: technology,
development co-operation, there is still an awful lot of emphasis
modernity, knowledge. Asian models of development are much
on good governance and the rule of law – things that didn’t have
more practical, not directed at an ideal image of the future.
anything to do with development success in Asia.’
This yields a much more inclusive development strategy.
futureatlas.com/blog
corruption. We concluded quite quickly that this is not true, or
‘Good governance and the rule of law didn’t have anything to do with development success in Asia.’
David Henley
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Print collection Daphne Wouts (1990) is taking two master’s programmes: Book and Digital Media Studies and the Research Master’s in Art and Literature. She has already completed a Bachelor’s in Art History and developed an interest in early-modern printing art and book history.
‘The book is also a bit of an encyclopaedia. The prints depict flora, fauna and people, and are pasted in a certain order. It might very well be that with this systematic ordering Thysius was trying to model a microcosm, drawing a parallel with creation as a
‘During my Book and Publishing minor I found a seventeenth-
he collected. For most of these prints we do not know who the
macrocosm. His aim was to understand the world better. Thysius
century scrapbook in the Leiden Thysiana Library. The Library
designer was, who made them, or when and where they were
was an intellectual, whose aim with his collections was to achieve
was established in 1653 as a bequest in the will of Johannes
published; Thysius unfortunately cut out the images along the
a humanistic ideal of knowledge. Human development and the
Thysius (1622-1653). Thysius was the son of a rich merchant, but
outlines, so that the captions are missing. That makes it difficult,
acquisition of knowledge are key aspects here. But I will only be
he lost both his parents while he was still young. Over the course
but also more fun. The print becomes a kind of puzzle. It means
able to draw real conclusions after I have carried out the study.
of his lifetime he assembled an extensive book collection. The
I have to search for stylistic clues, for instance. Sometimes I can
Which is what I will be doing next year.’
scrapbook that is central to my thesis – which I am going to
find part of a signature and I then search the reference works to
write next year on the basis of preliminary studies I carried out
see whose signature it could be.’
Over the past year Daphne has come to feel very much at home at Leiden University. She might do a PhD, but at this point she
this year – is an 85-page book in which Thysius pasted the prints ‘Once I have managed to decipher it all, I hope to be able to say
has no firm plans. Instead, she optimistically seizes whatever
more about Thysius as a collector and about the importance
opportunity comes her way. She might be just as happy in a
of the scrapbook within the collection culture of the Golden
museum or a print library.
Century. Thysius is primarily known as a collector of books, but among experts he does not have a great reputation as a print collector. He is thought not to have been passionate enough about print collecting. My goal is to get a more complete picture of who he was. In the preliminary study, I looked at how and why seventeenth century prints were collected and who collected them. I concluded that for Thysius, collecting prints was not an overriding ambition, as it was for many other collectors. Thysius collected prints as a personal passion; he was particularly inter ested in French prints and prints that belonged to the moralising genre. This interest can be seen in the scrapbook.’
‘The captions of the prints are missing. That makes it difficult, but also fun. It means the print becomes a kind of puzzle.’
Daphne Wouts
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Prophets of fate Sandra Ottens (1967) is taking the Egyptology research master’s, a follow-up on her bachelor’s in the same discipline, which she combined with a minor in Arabic. ‘I am very interested in religion and popular belief. My thesis is
‘In this overview I describe what is depicted; I note the date and
about the Hathors, seven goddesses of Ancient Egypt who proph
the accompanying text. My overview also includes a drawing or
esied fate. There are many depictions of these goddesses; they
a photograph, and a small map. I describe the clothing of the
appear in relief on the walls of temples and are mentioned in fairy
goddesses and their attributes: possibly a tambourine or a
tales and magic spells. Researchers have listed these depictions in
sistrum, a kind of rattle. I also study the context: what are the
the past, but the records are incomplete. When I was allowed to
goddesses doing and what is the occasion on which they are
join the professor of my programme early in 2012 on a trip to the
appearing? For instance, in temples the goddesses are often
excavation sites of the Dakhla oasis in Egypt, we discovered a new
present at the birth of a god. Sometimes they are also shown
stone block with a relief of a goddess playing the tambourine.
playing music or breast-feeding the child. Their basic function
Only the Hathors are known to have done that. I came across
is to bring good wishes for a long and happy life.’
more depictions of goddesses with tambourines, probably also Hathors, in another temple in Egypt. I now have a collection
‘Once I have finished collecting these examples, I will start
of sixty depictions.’
analysing them. I want to find out, for instance, how the goddesses
Egyptians feel about this. My conclusion was that fate is easily
are depicted. Egyptian artists liked to show every detail as clearly
manipulated in Egyptian culture. If you make sacrifices and
as possible. For them it was important that both the hands
exhibit good behaviour, you can give your fate a favourable
playing the tambourine were clearly depicted. This meant that the
turn. Other gods will then be willing to save you.’
arm positions of the figures shown were sometimes rather unnatural. This analysis is at least in part about the depictive style
Ottens submits modestly to the interview; it’s difficult to explain
of Ancient Egypt. Another example is that every Hathor has a
to a stranger what is so exciting about a ‘dead’ culture. Her own
different origin: Hathor of Dendera, of Thebes, or of somewhere
‘Egyptoblogy’, dedicated to her excavation exploits and other
else. But these are not always the same seven place names. There
Egypt-related activities, bears witness to her passion. She
is a lot of variation. These are probably places where there were
doesn’t know yet whether she wants to make it her career.
Hathor temples. The relationship of the Hathors to fate is also
But she will certainly continue to read and write about it,
very interesting. In one preliminary study I analysed how
and maybe teach it too.
Sandra Ottens
‘In the Dakhla oasis in Egypt we discovered a new stone block with a relief of a goddess playing the tambourine.’
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Humanities
Humanities
Unravelling the arguments in Dutch refugee practice
used. These arguments were the subject of Walaardt’s study. ‘I wanted to see whether there was a pattern: what were the decisive arguments, and did these arguments change throughout the time period covered by the study?’
Refugees with an identity Dutch immigration policy has for decades been the subject of vehement political debate. Dr Tycho Walaardt (1975) has witnessed the practice from different perspectives: he has worked as a volunteer for the Dutch Council for Refugees, as well as for the Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND) and the UNHCR in Ghana and Eritrea. He recently completed his five-year research project with a dissertation for which he studied nearly five hundred personal files. His conclusion: there is a gap between refugee policy and practice, which allows for the ‘quiet granting’ of asylum applications.
‘You can distinguish periods during which particular arguments play an important role,’ Walaardt continues. In buoyant economic times, for instance, the issue of the labour market is often used. In the late 1960s, for deserters from the Portuguese army their leftist image was a key factor. ‘These men were opposed to colonial warfare. According to public opinion, they were heroes.’ With the Christian families fleeing Turkey, the argument of humanitarianism entered the discussion. “These cases also involved
As every historian - Walaardt included - knows, it is unique to be
prepare for their procedure, whereas at the IND I only saw the
given the opportunity to analyse personal files. In many countries,
first step in the procedure. I missed the overview: I never heard
the use of this kind of source material is simply not permitted.
what happened to these people in the end.’
women and children; in the opinion of many, a vulnerable group.
The difference between this research and Walaardt’s work within refugee practice is that these files also show the outcome of the
The files contain letters to and from the courts, from neigh-
procedure. ‘At the Council for Refugees I helped asylum seekers
bours, friends and employers, children’s drawings made by little classmates, country reports and legal documents. Walaardt made a selection from the thickest files, because he was interested in the arguments used in lengthy procedures. ‘Many people’s applications are at first rejected, but in the end it turns out that a high proportion of them somehow manage to stay.’ Since the 1950s, the Dutch Refugee Act has formed the basis for Dutch immigration policy; it states that a refugee who has reasons to fear persecution in his country of origin may not be sent back. But since the refugee and the people responsible for making decisions in these cases often fail to agree on this issue, other arguments end up being
‘What is the point of these lengthy procedures if asylum seekers end up staying anyway?’
Tycho Walaardt
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Humanities
Humanities
Despite substantial lobbying by
empty meadows in Groningen and stories about the labour
the church, their cases went on
potential of asylum seekers,’ Walaardt comments.
for years. In the end, they were allowed to stay on humanitarian
The mismatch between policy and practice leaves some scope for
grounds: they had had to wait for
resolving difficult cases. The impossibility of deporting asylum
a long time, the women had been
seekers whose stories of persecution are (according to the civil
traumatised and the children
servants) implausible means the authorities are forced in certain
had become westernised.’ Due
cases to grant ‘quiet consent’. Walaardt is critical: ‘What is the
to the limited availability of
point of these lengthy procedures, if the asylum seekers end up
sources, the study only goes up to
staying anyway? Take, for example, the Somalis and Iraqis in
1994, but Walaardt sees the same
Ter Apel, who recently made it into the news. Experience teaches
arguments coming back in the
us that the odds of them being sent back are zero. I would say:
current debate. ‘Think of Mauro
why not look for a permanent solution sooner.’ This is where the
or Sahar: westernised children, with many sympathisers.’ There
‘honey pot effect’ argument always crops up. ‘But its existence has
has also been little change in the method of communication used
never been proved. Imagine that these Somalis and Iraqis were
by the defenders. ‘In the press, asylum seekers become individual
allowed to stay; in no way does this mean that there will suddenly
cases with an identity. This has always been a popular strategy;
be many more refugees from these countries, because it’s not at
as early as the 1950s there were campaigns with children’s faces.
all an obvious choice for people to just come here. The journey
Perspectives on the World
Portrait photography
If someone is or could be your neighbour, it changes the way
itself is a serious selection criterion.’
Reflections of 2011-2012
Hielco Kuipers
Faculty of Humanities
you look at the situation. To proceed with deportation in such
Design
cases, the IND or politicians have to be particularly sure of
With the Leiden Institute for History, that specialises in research
their grounds.’
in the field of migration history, as his home base, Walaardt
Editors
already has ideas for new research. He wants to investigate how
Jesca Zweijtzer
Quiet consent
the Dutch Embassy deals with visa applications. If he can get
Lise-Lotte Kerkhof
Graphic production
Walaardt also sees little change in the opposition’s arguments.
the funds, he will once again delve into the gap between policy
[Red.] voor tekst en taal, Edith Kroon
UFB / GrafiMedia
They focus, for instance, on housing: ‘refugees steal our cheap
and practice.
Interviews
September 2012
houses’. Or on the labour market, where refugees are viewed as
Schonewille Schrijft, Marie-Louise Schonewille
‘social benefits abusers’ or on the other hand, as competition
Interested in how civil servants manage to solve difficult cases?
for Dutch citizens. For some time now, the argument that ‘the
Walaardt’s dissertation, Geruisloos Inwilligen. Argumentatie en
Netherlands is full’ has also played a role. ‘These kinds of argu-
speelruimte in de Nederlandse asielprocedure, 1945-1994, was
Translation
ments are then disproved by the defenders with images of
published in April 2012 by Verloren.
Academic Language Centre, Faculty of Humanities
Ratio Design, Haarlem
025
The Faculty of Humanities PO Box 9515 2300 RA Leiden
Lipsius Building Cleveringaplaats 1 2311 BD Leiden
Telephone: 071 527 27 27 (Leiden University switchboard) hum.leiden.edu