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DUTCH AT BERKELEY The Dutch Studies Program was introduced as a permanent curriculum in the Department of German in autumn 1966. Because the Berkeley campus already had strong offerings in Dutch history, art history, and colonial studies, the introduction of Dutch language and literature was the final step in completing a rounded interdisciplinary curriculum in Dutch Studies.
In the last thirty years the library holdings in Dutch studies have increased to over 125,000 volumes, making Berkeley's Dutch collection the richest of any American university. In 1982 a second endowed chair was introduced, the so-called Peter Paul Rubens Chair for the History and Culture of the Low Countries. It was the first Flemish chair endowed in the United States by the government of the Flemish Community in Belgium. This enrichment of the Dutch Studies Program allowed a significant expansion of its course offerings by the annual appointment of outstanding faculty from Flemish universities as visiting professor for a semester. Participating universities are Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent, Hasselt and Leuven. Special agreements enable Master-students and/or fellows from UC Berkeley to do research at the Flemish Universities participating at the Rubens Project. Besides the addition of the Peter Paul Rubens, visiting faculty in a wide range of academic disciplines (literature, linguistics, history, art history, sociology, comparative literature, sociology, dramatic arts, cognitive science, ethnomusicology, journalism, etc.), the Low Countries have provided regular appointments of Dutch writers and artists who complemented existing course offerings. Writers such as Harry Mulisch, Cees Nooteboom, Gerrit Kouwenaar, Esther Jansma, Marga Minco, Bert Schierbeek, Renate Dorrestein, Hugo Brandt Corstius, Leon de Winter, Jessica Durlacher, Lieve Joris, Paul Verhaeghen, Jan Donkers and many others have been actively engaged in the Dutch Studies program. Representatives of film and stage, such as Hans Croisset, Agaath Wittemans, and Tine Ruysschaert have lent further energy and excitement to a truly interdisciplinary program. The Dutch Studies Program has distinguished itself over the years as one of the most active academic units on the Berkeley campus. One of the reasons is its biennial sponsorship of the distinguished "Berkeley Conference on Dutch Literature," which alternates with the "Berkeley Conference on Dutch Linguistics." These conferences draw the most distinguished specialists in their field and publish the papers in The Dutch Studies Program is an active participant in the Internationale Vereniging van Neerlandistiek (http://www.ivnnl.com), an international organization of professors of Dutch language, literature and culture that brings the academic world of the Netherlands and Flanders together with their extramural counterparts all over the world. Berkeley is also co-founder and an active contributor to the American Association for Netherlandic Studies (http://www.netherlandicstudies.org). Dutch Studies in Berkeley is actively supported by the Nederlandse Taalunie (http://taalunieversum.org), a Dutch-Flemish organization set up in 1980 by treaty between the Netherlands and Belgium. This Dutch Language Union promotes and finances projects relating to the Dutch language, literature, education and culture, both in and outside the Dutch-language area. The Dutch Studies Program is the touchstone of the Netherlands America University League of California (http://www.naul.org/), which sponsors lectures, concerts, readings and films of the highest caliber for the University and the general public. Each month a major event is featured. Since 2006 Dutch Studies has also been collaborating with one of the oldest Dutch-American organizations in the US, The Netherland-America Foundation (http://www.thenaf.org). |
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