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L'Unité de recherche accueille avec plaisir le chercheur néerlando-islandais Simon Halink dans le cadre d'un séjour court USIAS du 26 mars au 5 avril 2025

Simon Halink is a cultural historian specialized in the comparative study of national movements and the historical development of national identities in the course of the ´long nineteenth century´ (c. 1789-1914), particularly in small national communities such as Friesland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands. His main interest lies in studying the various ways in which mythology, ideas about the past - primarily medieval history - and linguistic purism have been mobilized in processes of cultural nation-building. He earned his Ph.D. degree from the University of Groningen in 2017 with a study on Old Norse mythology and national culture in Iceland. Since then, he has worked as a postdoctoral researcher and lecturer at the University of Iceland and as an Assistant Professor in Modern History at Leiden University. Furthermore, he is actively involved in the Study Platform on Interlocking Nationalisms (headed by Joep Leerssen, University of Amsterdam) and the ensuing Encyclopedia of Romantic Nationalism in Europe (https://ernie.uva.nl/viewer.p/21).

 

Since 2021, Halink holds a research position at the Fryske Akademy in Leeuwarden (the Netherlands), affiliated with the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). Here, he studies the development of Frisian (national) identity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries from a comparative perspective, and in the broader context of European cultural history. He is the author of the monograph De Viking vanbinnen: Over IJslanders en hun verhalenwereld ("The Viking within: On Icelanders and their story world", Noordboek 2023) and editor of the volume Northern Myths, Modern Identities: The Nationalisation of Northern Mythologies Since 1800 (Brill 2019, vol. 19 in the series National Cultivation of Culture). Halink is a member of the editorial boards of De Vrije Fries and the online journal Studies on National Movements (https://openjournals.ugent.be/snm/), as well as a board member of the Historical Society of Iceland (Sögufélagið).