by Vincent Kuitenbrouwer
Amsterdam University Press, 2012
eISBN: 978-90-485-1595-0 | Paper: 978-90-8964-412-1
Library of Congress Classification DT1918.P83K84 2012

ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
The Boer War gripped the Dutch public during the turn of the nineteenth century, when the Boer Republics, made up of descendants of seventeenth-century settlers from the Netherlands, were fighting the British Empire in South Africa. War of Words examines the ample Dutch propaganda during this time period, which attempted to counterweigh the British coverage of the war. Vincent Kuitenbrouwer offers a highly readable study of the pro-Boer movement in the Netherlands both during the Boer War and far into the twentieth century, while exploring the representation of South Africans in Dutch-language publications and the several persistent stereotypes that colored the Dutch attitude toward the Boers.

See other books on: Foreign public opinion | Netherlands | Propaganda | South Africa | Words
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