This paper deals with the views on language and language study put forward in a number of essays, composed by an eighteenth-century Dutch scholar, professor Meinard Tydeman (1741-1825). In his linguistic studies published from the early 1760s onwards, Tydeman emphasized the importance of and the imperative need for the study and cultivation of the mother tongue within the context of a ‘civil society’. As such, Tydeman’s works mark the transition to a ‘civil’ approach to the study of the Dutch language. Furthermore, attention is paid to the theoretical underpinnings of his 1805 essay on the origin of language, which was mainly directed against the ideas of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. As it appears, Tydeman has always remained a true follower of the famous eighteenth-century Dutch linguist Lambert ten Kate (1674-1731).
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publication
Auteur
Trefwoorden
Jaar
2015
Gepubliceerd in
Addenda. Artikelen voor Ad Foolen. Onder redactie van Sander Lestrade, Peter de Swart & Lotte Hogeweg. - Nijmegen : Radboud University, 2015, p. 305-319
Impressum
2015
Literatuuropgave
Ja
publication
Auteur
Abstract
Trefwoorden
Jaar
2012
Gepubliceerd in
Neerlandica Wratislaviensia, 21 (2012), p. 87-100
Impressum
2012
Literatuuropgave
Ja
publication
Titel
Against Darwin : Willem G. Brill (1811-1896) on the origin of language
Auteur
Trefwoorden
Jaar
1994
Gepubliceerd in
Florilegium historiographiae linguisticae: études d'historiographie de la linguistique et de la grammaire comparée à la mémoire de Maurice Leroy / éd. par Jan De Clerq, Piet Desmet. - Louvain-La-Neuve : Peeters, 1994. - P. 349-359
Impressum
1994
publication
Auteur
Trefwoorden
Jaar
1993
Gepubliceerd in
Cahiers voor taalkunde ; 10
Impressum
Amsterdam: Stichting Neerlandistiek VU, 1993
Pagina/deel
XXXV, 136 p.
Literatuuropgave
Ja
Register
Ja