Abstract

After the Synod of Dort (1618-1619) forbade Remonstrant gatherings in the Dutch Republic, many Remonstrants secretly continued preaching or attending sermons and were consequently fined or imprisoned. Among them was the Nijmegen widow Willemken van Wanray (ca. 1573-1647), who wrote an autobiographical narrative of the religious persecution she endured. Scholars have shed light on the role of culturally existing scripts on which authors relied to present themselves as role models in their autobiographical narratives; such stories functioned in the family circle as examples of Christian behavior. This article, however, uses a linguistic approach to better understand the construction and functioning of autobiographical narratives as communicative events, by investigating the role of linguistic variation in positioning the self in interaction with an audience. It demonstrates that early modern writers could vary verb types and tenses to create multiple identities. Willemken van Wanray made strategic linguistic choices to present not only a Christian example to her descendants, but, anticipating further religious turbulence, she also created an innocent self for potential Gomarist readers, in order to avoid renewed persecution.

Highlights

  • After the Synod of Dort (1618-1619) forbade Remonstrant gatherings in the Dutch Republic, many Remonstrants secretly continued preaching or attending sermons and were fined or imprisoned

  • Cora van de Poppe is a PhD student at Utrecht University, working on the project Language Dynamics in the Dutch Golden Age. She studies the relationship between linguistic variation within early modern individual language users as well as the social, cultural, and literary context. She has worked and published on variation in the use of the genitive in early modern literature and is currently exploring how linguistic variation contributed to memory construction in seventeenth-century society

  • Among them was the Nijmegen widow Willemken van Wanray, who wrote an autobiographical narrative of the religious persecution she endured

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Summary

Cora van de Poppe

Cora van de Poppe is a PhD student at Utrecht University, working on the project Language Dynamics in the Dutch Golden Age. She has worked and published on variation in the use of the genitive in early modern literature and is currently exploring how linguistic variation contributed to memory construction in seventeenth-century society

The Shaping of an Innocent Martyr
Positioning as Innocent Suspect
Conclusion
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