News from UCL Dutch
- Royal Visit from HM Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands
- Van Gogh Competition by the Royal Academy of Arts
- Public Lecture Isabel Hoving
- Dutch Crossing: recognition for a journal examining a global influence
- Professor Jane Fenoulhet appointed to the Raad voor de Nederlandse Taal
- Book launch: Literary history of the Low Countries, and celebration of 90 years of Dutch at UCL
- Royal decoration bestowed on professor Jane Fenoulhet
- Kader Abdolah at UCL Dutch
- Public lecture by Marita Matthijsen
- Presentation of the book Settela by Dutch author Aad Wagenaar
- New Open Educational Resources project
- Nationale Gedichtendag (National Poetry Day) in the Netherlands and Flanders 2009
- Go Dutch! at the Free Word Centre
- Scholarships for Postgraduate Study in Dutch Cultural Studies
- Follow UCL Dutch on YouTube EDU and iTunes University!
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 34.2 (July 2010)
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 34.1 (March 2010)
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 33.2 (October 2009)
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 33.1 (April 2009)
- New monograph investigating fundamental questions of Translation
- New textbook for Intensive Dutch published by UCL Dutch
- Making the Personal Political: New book on Dutch women writers
- Professor Theo Hermans elected member of the Flemish Academy
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 34.3 (November 2010)
- Going Dutch in London : UCL will be hosting the Dutch Student Day 2010/11
- Joost Zwagerman Writer in Residence at UCL Dutch in 2010/11
- ’Nomadic Literature’: Prof. Jane Fenoulhet’s Inaugural Lecture on 4 Nov 2010
- New Open Educational Resources project in Digital Humanities
- Dutch Crossroads: Living and writing in a society in turmoil (J. Zwagerman)
- Dutch Research Seminar: Translating Political Novels, 26 Jan 2011
- Book Launch ‘Mobility and Localisation in Language Learning’ on 20 Jan 2011
- Dutch Research Seminar: Football in two Dutch cities 1910–20, 9 Feb 2011
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 35.1 (March 2011)
- Painless Introduction to Open Educational Resources (8 Feb 2011)
- Online beginners and advanced Dutch language courses starting in March
- Sports and Leisure history seminar: Football in Rotterdam (23 May 2011)
- Dutch Crossing and the European Reference Index for the Humanities
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 35.2 (July 2011)
- Visit the department and get a taste of Dutch on the UCL Open Day (30/06/11)
- London Low Countries History – Research Seminar Series 2011/12
- Abdelkader Benali will be Dutch Writer in Residence at UCL 2011/12
- Anglo-Netherlands Society Annual Awards for students of Dutch
- Dutch/Flemish Society (UCL Union) – activities and events 2011/12
- Susan Stein's Play on Etty Hillesum at UCL on 21 November 2011, 6.30pm
- Ulrich Tiedau elected as UCML area studies representative
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 35.3 (November 2011)
- Excellent employment prospects for graduates with Dutch
- Twitter hangout on 11 January: All about Dutch literature
- Podium discussion with Abdelkader Benali and Hisham Matar (26 Jan)
- Knowledge Transfer and Enterprise Champion for 2012 (OA/OER)
- 2011 ACLS Early Careers Researcher Essay Prize for Dirk Schoenaers
- Impact in modern languages workshop at the IGRS (3 Feb 2012)
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 36.1 (March 2012)
- Double Dutch! A free Festival in Hyde Park (28 Feb 2012)
- Jacques Presser (1899–1970) between history and literature, 25 May 2012
- Postgraduate bursary MA Language, Culture, History (Dutch Studies pathway)
- Bite-Sized Lunchtime Lecture on Dutch Football in the early 20th century
- ISI Web of Knowledge Impact Factor for Dutch Crossing
- Speak to the Future - in Dutch :) New website launched
- Public engagement workshop programme at the Wallace Collection
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 36.2 (July 2012)
- London Low Countries History – Research Seminar Series 2012/13
- Poetry & Translation: Leonard Nolens and Paul Vincent (26 Sep 2012)
- Dutch-English Literary Translation Workshop (10–13 September 2012)
- Wolfson Postgraduate Scholarships in the Humanities
- High Impact Literature from the Low Countries Tour 14–19 January 2013
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 36.3 (November 2012)
- Journeys East Main Library
- Talks on Dutch Art and Diversity at the Wallace Collection
- What is experimental fiction? Lars Bernaerts visiting scholar 2013
- New Group for Alumni of the UCL Dutch department on Linked-In
- Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 37.1 (March 2013)
- In memoriam Marta Baerlecken (1909-2007)
- What is experimental fiction? Masterclass with Lars Bernaerts (Brussels)
- Amsterdam's Culture – Reflections from the Red Light District (8 May 2013)
- Ester Naomi Perquin
- Reference cultures in Europe – Major European research grant awarded
Reference cultures in Europe – Major European research grant awarded
Published: Apr 29, 2013 10:29:49 AM
Live Poetry Event with Prize-winning Dutch Poet Ester Naomi Perquin (30 May)
Published: Apr 23, 2013 5:22:23 AM
Amsterdam's Culture – Reflections from the Red Light District (8 May 2013)
Published: Apr 16, 2013 12:44:12 PM
What is experimental fiction? Masterclass with Lars Bernaerts (Brussels)
Published: Apr 10, 2013 12:56:41 PM
Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies 37.1 (March 2013)
Published: Mar 6, 2013 9:37:00 PM
Certificate of Dutch as a Foreign Language (CNaVT) examinations 2013
Published: Mar 5, 2013 12:53:00 PM
Podium discussion with Abdelkader Benali and Hisham Matar (26 Jan)
7 January 2012
A panel discussion with Abdelkader Benali (Netherlands) and Hisham Matar (Libya) chaired by Jo Glanville (Index on Censorship)
Abdelkader Benali (Dutch Writer in Residence at UCL, author of Wedding by the Sea, and journalist) and Hisham Matar (author of In the Country of Men and Anatomy of a Disappearance) discuss freedom of speech, the Arab Spring and artistic responses now and in the past to revolutionary events. Jo Glanville, editor of Index on Censorship, will chair the event.
Thursday 26 January 2012 @ 6.30pm, UCL, entrance Malet Place, Medical Sciences Building, AV Hill Lecture Theatre
The discussion will be followed by a drinks reception.
Event organised by UCL - SELCS, Department of Dutch, with support from the Royal Dutch Embassy and Index on Censorship.
No Need for the Great Arab Spring Novel
Abdelkader Benali and Hisham Matar discuss literature and revolutions
With Time Magazine recently choosing ‘The Protester’ as Person of the Year 2011, it seems a relevant question to ask whether art is capable of protest, of revolting against tyranny. On 26 January the authors Hisham Matar (In the Country of Men and Anatomy of a Disappearance) and Abdelkader Benali (Dutch Writer in Residence 2011/12 at UCL, Wedding by the Sea) discussed this topic at ‘Time Travels in Literature and Politics’: literature and its response to political suppression.
The event was timely – as Chair Jo Glanville, Editor of Index on Censorship, pointed out: it was exactly a year after the uprising in Egypt. Matar and Benali are both rooted in the Arab-speaking world: Benali was born in Moroccobefore he moved to the Netherlands in 1979, aged four. His first novel,Wedding by the Sea (1996 , English transl. 2000), discusses a theme he would often revisit, that of the intermingling of East and West, aptly visualised by Benali’s latest title Oost = West (2011, ‘East = West’).
Hisham Matar’s personal history is uncomfortably topical: his father was considered a threat to the Libyan authorities, and was abducted by the Gaddafi regime in 1990. Matar has not seen or heard of his father since. The Arab Spring and Gaddafi’s downfall made Libya world news in 2011; Matar’s novels (2006 and 2011), however, made readers around the world familiar with living under the Libyan dictatorship on a far more personal scale.
It is exactly this personal scale that Benali and Matar say is essential to literature written in response to political events. Their own writing seems to focus on small gestures, family ties, relationships. Neither of them feels the need to write ‘the Great Arab Spring Novel’. ‘That simply sounds ridiculous,’ Benali says. The two writers share a fear of Big Histories, especially when it comes to describing the recent revolutionary events in the Arab countries.
Benali expands: ‘9/11 has brought the Big Story back. And it is suffocating. I am looking for more nuances.’ When Benali lived in Beirut during the Lebanese war in 2006, he felt it was important to speak to people on the ground. The chance meetings he described as a result were very different impressions of war than the ones the Dutch media presented.
Matar: ‘It is difficult to understand what it is – what we call – the Arab Spring. I don’t claim I do. I find it tough to pronounce.’
Because of his personal history, Matar is often seen as a natural spokesman for freedom of expression. But the author quickly says that writing never made him feel particularly brave. To speak out against the dictator Gaddafi brought more anxiety and instability to Matar’s life. ‘It was perverse, more so than heroic; it was a tangible trauma. I secretly admired the ones who could stay quiet.’
Benali can relate to the attachment of shame to writing. His debut novel was written at his parents’ place, in a house that contained no more than two books, the Qur’an and the Yellow Pages. He was told to stop reading before his eye sight would turn bad. ‘I wrote about my family whilst I was living under their roof. I felt sad and guilty, watching them as if I were an anthropologist. It was as if I took revenge on them.’
‘Literature is rebellious by nature, because it detaches itself from reality,’ according to Matar. And therefore writing is a solitary protest: ‘In the end we are alone, because we distance ourselves through writing’. I might argue otherwise, saying that Benali’s and Matar’s writing has brought readers closer to political events – both up close and personal. Though the exact rebellious impact of literary writing is impossible to measure – and may even be quite uninteresting – this event showcased a humanity and humility in writing from the Arab world, and a variety of protests against Big Narratives that are so much favoured by oppressors.
The event ‘Time Travels in Literature and Politics’ was organized by the UCL Department of Dutch, with support from Index on Censorship and the Royal Dutch Embassy. Abdelkader Benali is the Dutch Writer of Residence at UCL in 2011/12. His visits are sponsored by the Dutch Foundation for Literature.
Stefanie van Gemert is a PhD-candidate in Comparative Literature and a teaching assistant in modern literature at the Department of Dutch. Her research focuses on the reception of post-colonial literature in the Dutch and English literary fields.
Page last modified on 07 jan 12 06:02 by Ulrich Tiedau


