Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena

Bringing History Home: Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena Three Dutch-language monographs published in 2008-2009 by Ulbe Bosma, Lizzy van Leeuwen and Gert Oostindie in the context of the interdisciplinary research programme Bringing History Home, present a history of identity polit...

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Main Author: S. Legêne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2011-01-01
Series:BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojstest.minions.amsterdam/article/view/5726
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spelling doaj-62fa23137e064789923bb047dfee03bb2021-10-02T15:01:51ZengOpen JournalsBMGN: Low Countries Historical Review0165-05052211-28982011-01-011262Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural ArenaS. LegêneBringing History Home: Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena Three Dutch-language monographs published in 2008-2009 by Ulbe Bosma, Lizzy van Leeuwen and Gert Oostindie in the context of the interdisciplinary research programme Bringing History Home, present a history of identity politics in relation to ‘postcolonial immigrants’. This term refers to some 500,000 people who since 1945 arrived in the Netherlands from Indonesia and the former Dutch New Guinea, Suriname or the Antillean islands in the Caribbean. Bosma traces the development of postcolonial immigrant organizations. In interaction with government policies, these organizations moved from mere socioeconomic emancipation struggles to mere cultural identity politics. Van Leeuwen takes such cultural identity politics as the starting point for her analysis of Indo-Dutch and Dutch Indies cultural initiatives and the competing interests at stake in the Indies heritage discourse. Oostindie discusses these developments in terms of community development and change within Dutch society at large. He introduces the notion of a ‘postcolonial bonus’. In postcolonial Netherlands, this bonus was available to immigrants on the grounds of a shared colonial past. Today, this bonus is (almost) spent. The review discusses the three monographs, as well as the coherence of Bringing History Home as a research programme. Legêne argues, that notwithstanding valuable research outcomes, the very category of postcolonial immigrants does not constitute a convincing category of analysis. https://ojstest.minions.amsterdam/article/view/5726Cultural historyColonial politicsAnthropologyIdentity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Legêne
spellingShingle S. Legêne
Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena
BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
Cultural history
Colonial politics
Anthropology
Identity
author_facet S. Legêne
author_sort S. Legêne
title Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena
title_short Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena
title_full Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena
title_fullStr Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena
title_full_unstemmed Bringing History Home. Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena
title_sort bringing history home. postcolonial immigrants and the dutch cultural arena
publisher Open Journals
series BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review
issn 0165-0505
2211-2898
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Bringing History Home: Postcolonial Immigrants and the Dutch Cultural Arena Three Dutch-language monographs published in 2008-2009 by Ulbe Bosma, Lizzy van Leeuwen and Gert Oostindie in the context of the interdisciplinary research programme Bringing History Home, present a history of identity politics in relation to ‘postcolonial immigrants’. This term refers to some 500,000 people who since 1945 arrived in the Netherlands from Indonesia and the former Dutch New Guinea, Suriname or the Antillean islands in the Caribbean. Bosma traces the development of postcolonial immigrant organizations. In interaction with government policies, these organizations moved from mere socioeconomic emancipation struggles to mere cultural identity politics. Van Leeuwen takes such cultural identity politics as the starting point for her analysis of Indo-Dutch and Dutch Indies cultural initiatives and the competing interests at stake in the Indies heritage discourse. Oostindie discusses these developments in terms of community development and change within Dutch society at large. He introduces the notion of a ‘postcolonial bonus’. In postcolonial Netherlands, this bonus was available to immigrants on the grounds of a shared colonial past. Today, this bonus is (almost) spent. The review discusses the three monographs, as well as the coherence of Bringing History Home as a research programme. Legêne argues, that notwithstanding valuable research outcomes, the very category of postcolonial immigrants does not constitute a convincing category of analysis.
topic Cultural history
Colonial politics
Anthropology
Identity
url https://ojstest.minions.amsterdam/article/view/5726
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