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DUTCH STUDIES: LITERATURE

DUTCH STUDIES: LITERATURE Dutch Studies LITERATURE By ELsA STRIETMAN, Lecturer in Dutch, University of Cambridge I. GENERAL It is a particular pleasure to welcome a work which combines contributions from scholars of Dutch in the Netherlands, Belgium and other countries; Modern Dutch Studies. Essays in Honour of Professor Peter King on the Occasion of his Retirement, ed. Michael Wintle, London, Athlone, x + 333 pp., pays tribute to this scholar who more than anyone else has made Dutch Studies abroad visible. The four parts of the book, Language and Translation, Literature, Social Sciences and the Visual Arts all reflect K.'s own interests. A selected bibliography of his work concludes the volume. Peter King and Michael Wintle, The Netherlands (World Bibliographical Series, 88), Oxford- Santa Barbara, California, Clio, 308 pp., is the first interdisciplinary bibliography ofEnglish-language materials in Dutch studies since W. Lagerwey's Guide to Netherlandic Studies: Bibliography. Although vari­ ous critics have pointed out lacunae, The Netherlands has all the makings of a standard source of information about Dutch studies. Dutch studies in Ghent occupy a particular place in the constellation of departments of Dutch all over the world. Precisely why and how that happened is explained by a number of distinguished http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

DUTCH STUDIES: LITERATURE

Mar 13, 1989

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90002985
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Dutch Studies LITERATURE By ELsA STRIETMAN, Lecturer in Dutch, University of Cambridge I. GENERAL It is a particular pleasure to welcome a work which combines contributions from scholars of Dutch in the Netherlands, Belgium and other countries; Modern Dutch Studies. Essays in Honour of Professor Peter King on the Occasion of his Retirement, ed. Michael Wintle, London, Athlone, x + 333 pp., pays tribute to this scholar who more than anyone else has made Dutch Studies abroad visible. The four parts of the book, Language and Translation, Literature, Social Sciences and the Visual Arts all reflect K.'s own interests. A selected bibliography of his work concludes the volume. Peter King and Michael Wintle, The Netherlands (World Bibliographical Series, 88), Oxford- Santa Barbara, California, Clio, 308 pp., is the first interdisciplinary bibliography ofEnglish-language materials in Dutch studies since W. Lagerwey's Guide to Netherlandic Studies: Bibliography. Although vari­ ous critics have pointed out lacunae, The Netherlands has all the makings of a standard source of information about Dutch studies. Dutch studies in Ghent occupy a particular place in the constellation of departments of Dutch all over the world. Precisely why and how that happened is explained by a number of distinguished

There are no references for this article.