411 search results for “modern nederlandse letterkunde” in the Student website
-
Remco BreukerFaculty of Humanities
-
Sarah SchraderFaculty of Archaeology
-
Crystal EnnisFaculty of Humanities
-
Digital guest lectures for high school students: ‘It is an art to appeal to them properly’
How do you make lobbying and rhetoric both challenging and understandable for high school students? Professor Jaap de Jong found the answer in climate activist Greta Thunberg. Together with his colleague Arco Timmermans, he developed a digital guest lecture on how to present a convincing story.
-
Nadine Akkerman’s Spycraft reviewed in several publications
Nadine Akkerman's book Spycraft, which she co-wrote with historian of science Pete Langman, has garnered top publications, with reviews featured in The Telegraph, Literary Review, The Spectator, History Today, and the Times Literary Supplement.
-
and Sexual Violence: Reflections on Methodologies for Trauma in Early Modern France
Lecture, Research Seminar Medieval and Early Modern History
-
Professionals on the Move: the Language Sector and Migrant Agency in Early Modern Europe
Lecture, Research Seminar Medieval and Early Modern History
-
and Inky Fingerprints: Collaborative and Mediated Authorship in Early Modern English Manuscripts
Conference
-
Was There Indeed a Decline of Ambiguity in Islamic Modernity? Deathbed Emotions as a Case Study
Lecture | LUCIS What's New?!
-
Online database with two hundred local chronicle texts launched: A few years ago that wouldn’t have been possible'
Too expensive groceries, diseases suddenly breaking out: from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, hundreds of people documented the world around them in chronicles. A significant number of these texts have been digitised in recent years. Professor of Early Modern Dutch History and project leader…
-
Grotian Law and Modernity at the Dawn of a New Age - International Conference
Conference
-
Wouter Linmans: 'The Netherlands did see World War II coming'
On 10 May 1940, the Netherlands was taken completely by surprise by the attack of the German army. Wasn’t it? In his dissertation, Wouter Linmans debunks the idea that the Second World War took the Netherlands by surprise. ‘From 1935 onwards, all major political parties wanted to invest in the military.’…
-
Bram IevenFaculty of Humanities
-
Simon van der StratenFaculty of Archaeology
-
Whose Language Is It, Anyway? Mapping Arabic in Modern Hebrew Literature
Middle East Studies Lecture
-
Bo WangFaculty of Humanities
-
Judith BosnakFaculty of Humanities
-
Dick van BroekhuizenFaculty of Humanities
-
Ton HarmsenFaculty of Humanities
-
Jessie Morgan-OwensFaculty of Humanities
-
Minke Jonk-ThuongFaculty of Humanities
-
Koen van der LijnFaculty of Humanities
-
Hans HulshofFaculty of Humanities
-
Rolf BremmerFaculty of Humanities
-
Olf PraamstraFaculty of Humanities
-
Gabriel InzaurraldeFaculty of Humanities
-
Boyao ZhangFaculty of Humanities
-
Luz RodriguezFaculty of Humanities
-
Sarah BadwyFaculty of Humanities
-
Yra van DijkFaculty of Humanities
-
Paul HoftijzerFaculty of Humanities
-
Adriaan van der WeelFaculty of Humanities
-
Seraina RenzFaculty of Humanities
-
Mathijs PetersFaculty of Humanities
-
Louise MüllerFaculty of Humanities
-
Fernanda Korovsky MouraFaculty of Humanities
-
Pim van der HelmFaculty of Humanities
-
Thomas BragdonFaculty of Humanities
-
Yasasmala WidyalankaraFaculty of Humanities
-
Nina JaspersFaculty of Archaeology
-
Elodie HiryczukFaculty of Humanities
-
Anne van DamFaculty of Humanities
-
Dettje BakkerFaculty of Humanities
-
Li-Fan LeeFaculty of Humanities
-
Jakub SindelarFaculty of Humanities
-
Nathaniel MartinFaculty of Science
-
Salem RitenourFaculty of Humanities
-
Lun JingFaculty of Humanities
-
Dimitris KastritisFaculty of Humanities
-
Michael RowlandFaculty of Humanities
