Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Cultural Nationalism and the Rise of Dutch Studies
- 1 Matthijs Siegenbeek in Defence of Dutch
- 2 Barthold Hendrik Lulofs: A ‘Learned Dilettante’
- 3 Poet and Professor: Adam Simons
- 4 Johannes Kinker: A Kantian Philosopher Teaching Dutch Language, Literature, and Eloquence
- 5 Caught Between Propaganda and Science: Ulrich Gerhard Lauts, the Forgotten Father of Dutch Philology in Brussels
- 6 Pieter Weiland and his Nederduitsche Spraakkunst
- 7 Moralist of the Nation: Johannes Henricus van der Palm
- 8 ‘I am Revived as a Belgian’: The Work of Jan Frans Willems
- 9 Adriaan Kluit: Back to the Sources!
- 10 ‘Can Grander Skulls be Crowned?’: Jacob van Dijk’s Posthumous Literary History
- 11 Hendrik van Wijn: Pioneer of Historical Literary Studies in the Netherlands
- 12 The Founding Father of Dutch Literary History: Jeronimo de Vries
- Afterword: Gert-Jan Johannes
- Index
4 - Johannes Kinker: A Kantian Philosopher Teaching Dutch Language, Literature, and Eloquence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Cultural Nationalism and the Rise of Dutch Studies
- 1 Matthijs Siegenbeek in Defence of Dutch
- 2 Barthold Hendrik Lulofs: A ‘Learned Dilettante’
- 3 Poet and Professor: Adam Simons
- 4 Johannes Kinker: A Kantian Philosopher Teaching Dutch Language, Literature, and Eloquence
- 5 Caught Between Propaganda and Science: Ulrich Gerhard Lauts, the Forgotten Father of Dutch Philology in Brussels
- 6 Pieter Weiland and his Nederduitsche Spraakkunst
- 7 Moralist of the Nation: Johannes Henricus van der Palm
- 8 ‘I am Revived as a Belgian’: The Work of Jan Frans Willems
- 9 Adriaan Kluit: Back to the Sources!
- 10 ‘Can Grander Skulls be Crowned?’: Jacob van Dijk’s Posthumous Literary History
- 11 Hendrik van Wijn: Pioneer of Historical Literary Studies in the Netherlands
- 12 The Founding Father of Dutch Literary History: Jeronimo de Vries
- Afterword: Gert-Jan Johannes
- Index
Summary
Abstract
The cosmopolitan citizen and Kantian philosopher Johannes Kinker, who had played a leading role in many institutions and societies of the northern Netherlands, held the newly founded Dutch chair in Liège for more than a decade. The present chapter addresses the questions why he accepted this post, what his experiences were, and how he actually shaped the Dutch chair. Could he share his scholarly expertise on general language theory, philosophy, prosody and eloquence with his audience of students? By examining Kinker's correspondence and his, so far barely explored, lecture notes, I am able to present a clear view of his daily teaching practice in a French-speaking university town.
Keywords: Kantian philosophy, general language theory, language acquisition, codification, Dutch literature
Johannes Kinker: Lawyer, Literary Author, and Society Man
Who was Johannes Kinker (1764-1845) and why should we consider him one of the agents in the field of Dutch studies who deserves a chapter in the present volume? Arguing that he was the first professor to hold the chair in Dutch language and literature at the University of Liège seems a convincing, formal argument. In Kinker's case, however, I would like to add that his importance is not restricted to academic life and Dutch studies. Kinker was a multi-facetted and versatile spirit who participated intensively in social and cultural life and adopted an active stance in times of political turmoil. A revealing example of the latter is his poem Stille bemoediging na de inlijving van Holland in het Fransche keizerrijk (‘Quiet Encouragement after the Annexation of Holland into the French Empire’), which he wrote in response to Holland's occupation by the French. He starts this poem, which consists of twelve five-line stanzas, by stressing the relationship between fatherland or nation and language:
The fatherland exists, whatever fate may befall us!
As long as its beautiful language does not become lost;
As long as we still hear its sound and full linguistic power;
This evidently sounds like a strong voice of nationalism. At the same time, Kinker has been characterised as the foremost representative of the international Enlightenment around 1800 and as an advocate of universal cosmopolitism.
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- Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018