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Marijke Spies (1934–2013)

Author of Nederlandse literatuur, een geschiedenis

11+ Works 134 Members 2 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Marijke Spies was until September 1999 Professor in 16th and 17th century Dutch Literature at the Vrije Universiteit of Amsterdam.

Includes the name: Marijke Spies

Image credit: Marijke Spies in 2007 - Photo: © Nelleke Moser

Series

Works by Marijke Spies

Associated Works

Volledige dichtwerken en oorspronkelijk proza (1986) — Introduction, some editions — 22 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Spies, Marijke
Birthdate
1934-08-05
Date of death
2013-05-12
Burial location
Cremated
Gender
female
Nationality
Netherlands
Birthplace
Eindhoven, Netherlands
Place of death
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Places of residence
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Brussels, Belgium
Education
Delft University of Technology
Utrecht University
Occupations
hoogleraar Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde
professor
literary historian
magazine editor
novelist
Relationships
University of Amsterdam
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Short biography
Marijke Spies was born in Eindhoven, The Netherlands, and attended the Lorentz Lyceum. After graduating in 1951 she went to Brussels for a year to learn French. She then studied architecture at Delft University of Technology, but dropped out before finishing her degree and went on a world tour. When she returned home, she enrolled at Utrecht University, from which she graduated in 1961.

The following year, she joined the faculty of the university's Dutch Studies Department, specializing in older literature. She published her first book, De krisis in dehistoric Neerlandistiek, on the methodology of literary history, in 1973. In 1979, she obtained her doctorate and began to publish many scholarly articles that were considered groundbreaking within historical Dutch studies. She focused on Renaissance rhetoric and poetics and many authors from the 16th and 17th centuries.

She was a strong supporter of an interdisciplinary research culture. In 1985, she co-founded the Seventeenth Century Working Group, an interdisciplinary collaboration that also published the magazine De Zeventiende Eeuw. From 1985 to 1991, she was secretary of the magazine. In 1992, she was appointed professor of the History of Rhetoric at the University of Amsterdam and in 1994 became professor of Old Dutch Literature at the Vrije Universiteit (Free University). In 1999, together with historian Willem Frijhoff, she published 1650: Conquered Unity, about cultural relations between the Netherlands and other European countries. When she retired in the same year, her English studies were collected in a volume called Rhetoric, Rhetoricians and Poets: Studies in Renaissance Poetry and Poetics.

She remained professionally active and served president of the Association of Literary Scholars from 2001 to 2004. She also contributed to part two of The History of Amsterdam, published by Frijhoff in 2004.

In 2004, Prof. Spies made her debut as a fiction writer with a successful novel, An Innocent Family.
Although she had objections to Russian Communism, she became a member of the Communist Party of the Netherlands (CPN). She remained a member when the party merged with three other left-wing parties into GroenLinks.

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Reviews

account of a Dutch adventurer who went looking for an arctic trade route to China: full of the period's mix of arcane belief and empirical science
 
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ramage | Sep 11, 2005 |

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Statistics

Works
11
Also by
2
Members
134
Popularity
#151,727
Rating
3.8
Reviews
2
ISBNs
22
Languages
2
Favorited
1

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