Singing the Dutch: An Extended Imagological Approach to Constructions of “Dutchness” in Late Eighteenth-Century Political Songs

Publication date

2022-10-20

Authors

Vulto, RenéeORCID 0000-0002-7987-0839ISNI 000000050778014X

Editors

Edtstadler, Katharina
Folie, Sandra
Zocco, Gianna

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Throughout history, songs have been considered effective instruments to strengthen the formation of collective identities. Eighteenth-century Dutch songwriters engaged with this idea in their striving for national unity. Political songs from that period employ several tropes, and the music often reinforces such images through musical imagery and intertextual references. Moreover, the imagined identities voiced in the songs might have become embodied identities through the performative act of singing. Therefore, for an investigation of the construction of collective identities in songs, the imagological approach can be expanded to musical imagery and take into account cognitive theories explaining the effects of singing.

Keywords

song culture, intertextuality, communities, national identity, politics

Citation

Vulto, R 2022, Singing the Dutch: An Extended Imagological Approach to Constructions of “Dutchness” in Late Eighteenth-Century Political Songs. in K Edtstadler, S Folie & G Zocco (eds), New Perspectives on Imagology. Studia Imagologica, vol. 30, Brill, pp. 385-402. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004513150_021