This was 2023! An overview of Humanities in the news
So much has happened this year! 2023 was an eventful year in which several wars raged about which our experts could offer interpretation. It was also the year in which the government made apologies for the slavery past. Leiden humanities scholars were at the forefront of this with their research on colonialism and slavery. As the Faculty of Humanities, we were in the midst of all this. A retrospect based on the most read news items and special events.
January | Awarded European grants
European grants for research on art, language and peace activism:
- Anna Tummers (LUCAS) receives ERC Consolidator Grant for research on art forgeries using digitale techniques
- Michaël Peyrot (LUCL) receives ERC Consolidator Grant for research on "The Silk Road language web"
- Kamila Krakowska Rodrigues (LUCAS) receives ERC Starting Grant for research on contemporary urban diversity in art
- Thijs Porck (LUCAS) receives ERC Starting Grant for research on the study of Old English by Europeans
- Carolien Stolte (LUIH) receives ERC Starting Grant for research on peace activism
Februaru | ‘Literary text can help us understand Europe better’
'Consider languages in their shared context.' That is the message of Professor and Arabist Beatrice Gründler, who will receive an honorary doctorate from Leiden University on 8 February. ‘I would like people to learn that Arabic history has a close connection with Europe.’
- 7 February: The spirit of Leiden in Brussels: successful fourth alumni event
- 10 February: How music shaped a Cabo Verdean community in Rotterdam
- 16 February: A year of war against Ukraine: What now?
- 23 February: Markus Davidsen: ‘We moeten ideeën doorvoeren die een hele opleiding verbeteren’
March | How the Dutch East India Company gained a clove monopoly on the Ambon islands
Nutmeg, mace and cloves: spices the Dutch East India Company (VOC) wanted to get its hands on. PhD candidate Tristan Mostert conducted research into the ‘clove hunt’ on the Ambon islands and discovered that VOC governors used increasingly extreme tactics to get hold of this spice.
- 2 March: Hossam Ahmed: ‘Listen to your students’
- 16 March: 'The use of online translation machines in healthcare settings may involve certain risks'
- 16 March: Who was the owner of the drowned books near Texel? 'It must be someone who travelled a lot'
- 17 March: Home magazines of yesteryear: Upholsterers were the interior designers of the eighteenth century'
April | President of the European Parliament in The Hague: ‘Your friends don’t want to vote? Let me call them’
‘We have to have accountability.’ That was Roberta Metsola’ for her audience on Thursday evening. The President of the European Parliament had come to the Wijnhaven building to speak with students.
- 5 April: Sex, power and colonialism: 'Marriages and sexuality were fundamental to colonial power'
- 11 April: How migration policy in autocracies and democracies differs from what we expect
- 12 April: Dorine Schellens and Peter Verstraten win the LUCAS Public Engagement Award 2023
- 26 April: Cultural genocide: 'I see no scenario in which Uyghur culture can revive in Xinjiang'
May | New joint minor Authenticity and Art Crime
Made You Look and other series on art forgeries are very popular. Perfect timing therefore for the new Leiden-Delft-Erasmus minor Authenticity and Art Crime. An exciting subject that is also attracting more attention because of the question of what is real and what is not.
- 1 May: Nicolien Mizee new writer in residence at Leiden University
- 2 May: Where does this Inca language come from? Verb conjugations should provide some answers
- 4 May: What did resistance look like in Indonesia during the Second World War?
- 15 May: Test expert Coen van 't Veer: 'The Dutch final exam is a good measuring tool'
June | The Chains of Holland’s Glory: research into South Holland's slavery past completed
Karwan Fatah-Black and Lauren Lauret are co-authors of Geketend voor Hollands Glorie (The Chains of Holland’s Glory) that studies the political and economic connections between South Holland and slavery. The findings of this research will be presented with Dr. Joris van den Tol (Radboud University) to the residents of the province on June 8, 2023, in The Hague.
- 2 June: Teaming up with Portugal: as a doctor, how do you talk to a patient?
- 5 June: Finally signing the walls of the Sweat Room: 'That really is the finishing touch'
- 12 June: Lips pouted or not? How improved speaker recognition can help forensic investigations
- 22 June: Students go on virtual exchange to Virginia: 'This is the most fun programme there is'
July| Why should you worry about China and Taiwan?
A war is looming, with possibly even greater consequences for us than the war in Ukraine. China wants to take control of Taiwan. It is a conflict that has been going on for decades. China expert Casper Wits explains why tensions are so high right now. (in Dutch)
- 3 July: How seals point to an undocumented prehistoric language
- 4 July: Leiden researchers on king’s apology for the Netherlands historical role in slavery
- 6 July: Digital learning: Italian and Dutch students help each other (in Dutch)
- 6 July: PRINS is back again: ‘I am proud of what we have achieved’
August | PhD candidates exchange experiences at small-scale summer school
Excursions to Leiden museums, a flown-in American professor and a collaboration with PhD students from Cambridge: Leiden PhD candidates in early modern art were in luck this summer. An award from the Camino Fund allowed the LUCAS research institute to organise a special summer school for them around the concept of 'style'.
- 1 August: Why is that word there? Research on language structure completed
- 2 August: Influencers, X and WhatsApp: social media and the coup in Niger
- 11 August: Cattle, rather than geometric shapes, determine how the Hamar see the world
- 21 August: As old as the road to Rome: 'Fake news was already to be found in ancient times'
September | Zelensky addresses students: 'Live your own life, but do so together with others'
A standing ovation. A wave and a smile from the president. A final selfie. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky addressed students in the Netherlands for the first time on Tuesday morning 12 September via a livestream in The Hague. He did so in front of two packed lecture halls at both Leiden University and The Hague University of Applied Sciences. Several hundred interested persons took part via the livestream. His message: 'Look outside your bubble to see what’s happening in the world.'
- 5 September: Schatgraven in Schotse archieven: hoe klonk gesproken Schots?
- 11 September: Olja Karmanova wins Faculty Teaching Prize 2023
- 19 September: Did Dutch investments contribute to Indonesia’s economic development?
- 28 September: What is the Chinese government’s approach to immigrants?
October | Real language comes to life in Virtual Reality
Researchers who want to investigate speakers' 'natural language use' face a challenge. As soon as participants realise they are being interviewed, they make different language choices than they would in everyday life. University lecturer Paz Gonzalez, together with colleagues professor Nivja de Jong and associate professor Jenneke van de Wal and student assistants, thinks they have come up with a solution to this problem. The use of VR glasses should help elicit unconscious real language from subjects. (in Dutch)
- 9 October: Database full of 3D models: 'Maybe it will help us deal with restitution more inclusively'
- 13 October: Decolonisation in art: 'That darkness says: up to here and no further'
- 17 October: How a UN mission in Cambodia became a 'success' by taking sides
- 23 October: NWO grant to research scent language in seventeenth-century literature: 'God is like a scent'
November | New research programme for urgent challenges in Africa
Leiden University and four other Dutch universities will appoint 51 PhD candidates to conduct solution-oriented research for and with the African continent. They will focus on urgent challenges such as climate change, the energy transition, accessible and affordable global healthcare, political stability and governance, access to clean water and sustainable urban development.
- 3 November: 175 years of the Constitution: ‘Its dryness makes it a success'
- 6 November: AI for humanities: ‘Especially as a humanities student, you have the tools to work with this’
- 15 November: Researchers get free rein with new Social Sciences and Humanities Labs
- 16 November: Trying to fight global warming with philosophy
December | Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer: ‘Only creativity can save the world’
Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer delivered the Huizinga lecture on Friday 8 December in a packed Pieterskerk. The writer seized the opportunity of the 52nd edition to point out the importance of creativity, both for artists and scientists.
- 1 December: ERC Starting Grant for Thijs Porck: 'Everyone loved Old English in the nineteenth century'
- 4 December: Leiden University receives Prime Minister's Award from Korea for Korea Studies program
- 11 December: New professor Florian Schneider: ‘Chinese citizens are more perturbed by climate change than many in America or Europa’
- 12 December: Advice to EU on looted art claims: ‘An agency could bring order to the legal chaos’
This was a selection of the more than 200 news items about the Faculty of Humanities published this year. Want to read more? Then check this page for the full news overview. The faculty editors would like to thank everyone for their hard work and dedication. Happy holidays and here’s to a year full of new stories!