Results 131 to 140 of about 9,120 (171)
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Nationalism and nationalist parties: A comparison of the Flemish Volksunie and Vlaams Blok
Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 1997Nationalist movements are not necessarily unified and may be represented by multiple nationalist political parties. When such parties emerge, do they form along subnationalist lines of cleavage? If so, the two Flemish nationalist parties in Belgium should be different kinds of party, appealing to different types of constituency.
Marijke Breuning
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Nationalism and a Critique of European Integration: Questions from the Flemish Parties
2001Abstract Explores how Flemish nationalists raise questions about the impact of European integration on the cultural rights of their nation, the members of which have struggled for a century and a half to assert themselves against the political and cultural hegemony of French language interests in Belgium.
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The Social Bases of Flemish Nationalism
International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 1978exaly +2 more sources
The Hybridization of Flemish Identity: The Flemish National Heritage on the Contemporary Stage
Contemporary Theatre Review, 2010At a moment in time when Belgium, both as a signifier of a national identity and as a political construction, is more and more in crisis, a generation of young Dutch-speaking theatre artists, including Ruud Gielens, Raven Ruell and Chokri Ben Chikha, has begun to interrogate concepts of Flemish and Belgian identity by confronting these discursive ...
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Flemish versus Netherlandish: A Discourse of Nationalism
Renaissance Quarterly, 1998This essay shows how scholarship on fifteenth-century Flemish panel painting became intertwined with efforts at national identity-building in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Europe. Paintings such as Jan van Eyck's Ghent Altarpiece were not only dispersed across regional and national boundaries, but were intellectually appropriated for competing
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1998
A corollary of the Belgian Revolution of 1830 was that the new nation wanted to manifest itself in the cultural sphere. Some of the Belgian culture nationalists explicitly aimed at the development and full emancipation of the Flemish vernacular. They were responsible for starting the Flemish Movement which, initially, was a mere by-product of Belgian ...
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A corollary of the Belgian Revolution of 1830 was that the new nation wanted to manifest itself in the cultural sphere. Some of the Belgian culture nationalists explicitly aimed at the development and full emancipation of the Flemish vernacular. They were responsible for starting the Flemish Movement which, initially, was a mere by-product of Belgian ...
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A Lion for Flanders: Literature, Propaganda, and Flemish Nationalism
Journal of War & Culture Studies, 2015In Flanders, Belgium, public acts of national allegiance are often grounded in the political rhetoric of the Great War that was, and continues to be, promoted by several powerful symbols, most visibly the Flemish lion – the official symbol of Flanders and, in its alternate version, the separatist Flemish nationalist movement.
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Reconstructing Flanders. The representation of the nation in Flemish period drama
Communications, 2003To study the possible role of Flemish period drama in the formation of national identity, this article primarily analyses its textual representations. A qualitative content analysis of all period serials discloses a clear discourse about Flanders. Mostly based on literary sources, these serials portray the poor, rural Flanders of the early 20th century.
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