Bram van Leuveren
Lecturer
- Name
- Dr. B. van Leuveren
- Telephone
- +31 71 527 2727
- b.van.leuveren@hum.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0002-1372-0264
Dr. Bram van Leuveren is a Marie-Skłodowska-Curie Fellow at the Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society (LUCAS).
More information about Bram van Leuveren
Dr. Van Leuveren is a cultural historian of early modern Europe and particularly interested in the use of ephemeral arts, such as theatre, music, and temporary architecture, for diplomatic relations between elite and non-elite powers in the late sixteenth to mid-seventeenth centuries. His research is transnational, comparative, and interdisciplinary in scope. It focuses on questions of cultural exchange, translation, identity, and spectatorship. Dr Van Leuveren’s first monograph, Early Modern Diplomacy and French Festival Culture, 1572-1615, is based on his doctoral research at the University of St Andrews, United Kingdom, and under contract with Brill.
During his Marie-Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship, sponsored by the European Union, Dr Van Leuveren will examine the astonishing theatre productions, including ballets, plays, and tableaux vivants, that were organised by the Dutch city councils from the 1570s until the 1640s for the visits of prominent ambassadors and royals from England and France. He is interested in the hitherto overlooked role that these theatre productions played in the public diplomacy of England, France, and the Low Countries. He aims to demonstrate how each of these three countries used the printing press and diplomatic correspondence to communicate their own vision of – and involvement in – the theatrical spectacle of the Dutch city council to the widest possible international audience.
Dr Van Leuveren is the winner of a Maddock Research Fellowship 2019 (Marsh's Library, Dublin) and a PhD Seventh-Century Studentship in 2014 (University of St Andrews, School of Modern Languages). He taught at the University of St Andrews in early modern history, historiography, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century art history and comparative literature (2019-2020), and lectured in arts, culture, and media studies at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands (2020-2021).
Other positions
- Board Member and Information Office, The Society for Court Studies - European Branch Committee.
- Coordinator of the International Network for Early Modern Festival Study.
Lecturer
- Faculty of Humanities
- Centre for the Arts in Society
- KG Architecture History
- Leuveren B. van (2024), “Another Netherlands”? Colonial Violence and Festive Entries into the Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republic (forthcoming). In: Lind Sabrina & Raband Ivo (Eds.), Step by Step: Visualizing and Asserting Power in Netherlandish Joyous Entries (forthcoming). European Festival Studies: 1450-1700. Turnhout: Brepols.
- Leuveren B. van (2023), Print and pageantry as early modern tools for public diplomacy: French language pamphlets on the Habsburg-Bourbon Weddings (1614-1615) and Marie de Médicis's Tour of the Low Countries (1638). In: Schülke C., Bloemendal J., Glei R.F. & Goth M. (Eds.), Medievalia et Humanistica. Medievalia et Humanistica: studies in Medieval and Renaissance Culture no. 48. London: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 135-164.
- Leuveren B. van (2023), Early modern diplomacy and French festival culture in a European context, 1572-1615. Rulers & Elites no. 20. Leiden and Boston: Brill.
- Jaffré Marc Marc W.S., Leuveren B. van & Robinson A. (Eds.) (2023), Marginalized Voices and Figures in French Festival Culture, 1500-1800 (forthcoming). European Festival Studies: 1450-1700. Turnhout: Brepols.
- Leuveren B. van (2023), Misogyny and Francophobia: Controversy Surrounding the Festive Entries of Marie de Médicis into the Dutch Republic (1638) (forthcoming). In: Jaffré M.W.S., Leuveren B. van & Robinson A. (Eds.), Marginalized Voices and Figures in French Festival Culture, 1500-1800. European Festival Studies: 1450-1700. Turnhout: Brepols.
- Leuveren B. van (2021) An Unlikely Pairing? How Netherlandish Painting Brought Light to Louis XIV’s France. Review of: Stone H. (2019), Crowing Glories: Netherlandish Realism and the French Imagination during the Reign of Louis XIV. Toronto, Buffalo and London: University of Toronto Press. The Court Historian 26(1): 99-103.
- Leuveren B. van, Neptune on the Amstel: Theatre as Public Diplomacy in the Early Modern Netherlands. Leiden Arts in Society Blog. Leiden: Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society. [blog entry].
- Leuveren B. van (2020), Disputed state, contested hospitality: Dutch ambassadors in search of a new overlord at the French court of King Henry III, 1584-1585, Early Modern Low Countries 4(2): 205-233.
- Leuveren B. van (2020), Crossing borders: comparative and transnational approaches to court and civic festivals in early modern Europe, Arti dello Spettacolo / Performing Arts 6: 24-35.
- Prest J., Heath S., Townshend S., Leuveren B. van, Crowe S., Kroble Mary Woodcock, Stewart D., Sicard-Cowan H., Haitian Creole Language Services & McConnell-Wisskirchen A. (2020), Theatre in Saint-Domingue, 1764-1791: Plays, Ballets and Operas. St Andrews: Theatre in Saint-Domingue project (University of St Andrews). [database].
- Leuveren B. van (27 June 2019), Forging Diplomacy Abroad and at Home: French Festival Culture in a European Context, 1572-1615 (Dissertatie, School of Modern Languages, University of St Andrews). St Andrews: University of St Andrews. Supervisor(s): Prest Julia.
- Leuveren B. van (2017), Review of: Nathalie Rivère de Carles (ed.) (2016), Early modern diplomacy, theatre and soft power: the making of peace. London: Palgrave Macmillan. Legatio: The Journal for Renaissance and Early Modern Diplomatic Studies 1: 163-164.
- Lissa C.J. van, Caracciolo M., Duuren T. van & Leuveren B. van (2016), Difficult empathy: the effect of narrative perspective on readers’ engagement with a first-person narrator, Diegesis 5(1): 43-63.
- Leuveren B. van & Duuren T. van (2015), Small Stories, Unfulfilled Narrative Scripts: “Making Sense” of the Experimental Theatre Performance the fault lines, Danswetenschap in Nederland (8): 29-39.
- Leuveren B. van, ‘Studying Early Modern France: Archives, Texts, Images’: Hands-On Workshop in Special Collections. Special Collections blog. St Andrews: University of St Andrews. [blog entry].
- Leuveren B. van (2014), Essay, PSi Manifesto Lexicon : .
- Leuveren B. van (2013), Dancing spaces: exploring and performing spatialization in contemporary dance, Honours Review 1(2): .
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