The Dutch World of Washington Irving

Free with admission

Join New Netherland Institute's director, Deborah Hamer, as she talks to Dr. Elisabeth Funk about her exciting, new book, The Dutch World of Washington Irving: Knickerbocker's History of New York and the Hudson Valley Folktales (Cornell, 2025).  The conversation will focus on Funk's work documenting the Dutch context of Irving's life and how his work preserved New York's Dutch heritage in a moment when Anglo-Americanization was talking hold. Join us after the conversation for a reception.

 

The Dutch World of Washington Irving tells an alternative origin story of American literary culture.

In December of 1809, before finding fame with "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," Washington Irving published his satirical A History of New York, from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty under the pseudonym Diedrich Knickerbocker. Elisabeth Paling Funk explains that the History of New York and the Hudson Valley folktales that followed were part of an early trend of responding to the national desire for a historical record. Funk argues that these works uniquely describe this part of the American scene in the period of the Early Republic and bring forward the Dutch strain in its history and culture.

Funk explores what the young Irving would have read, heard, and observed during his early life and career in New York City, once part of the former colony of New Netherland, where he was surrounded by Dutch-speaking neighbors and relatives and Dutch literature. Based on these sources, The Dutch World of Washington Irving argues that Irving's Knickerbocker works—not only his History but also his Hudson Valley stories—represent a crucial effort to preserve Dutch life and folk customs in the Hudson Valley in the face of Anglo-Americanization.

Providing the first complete glossary of Irving's Dutch vocabulary and drawing on untranslated Dutch sources, Funk offers cultural historians, scholars of American folklore and literature, and the latest generation of Irving's readers unprecedented access into the Dutch world of Washington Irving and his American contemporaries.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Born in the Netherlands, Elisabeth Paling Funk received her PhD from Fordham University, taught English at the university level, and is now a translator, editor, and independent scholar. She lives in the Hudson Valley.

 

ABOUT NEW NETHERLAND INSTITUTE

New Netherland Institute Studies is dedicated to publishing the best scholarship on the seventeenth-century Dutch mid-Atlantic settlement of New Netherland, its colonial context, and its legacy. Through this publishing partnership New Netherland Institute and Cornell University Press will share expertise in order to enhance the growing literature on Dutch colonialism. The research of both emerging and established scholars will be highlighted and the books will be disseminated to readers around the world.

For more than three decades, the New Netherland Institute (NNI)—an independent, non-profit, non-governmental organization—has helped cast light on America’s long-neglected Dutch roots. The NNI shares a unique role with the New Netherland Research Center (NNRC), a unit of New York State’s Office of Cultural Education, which provides historical content to the State Archives, Library, and Museum. Through its support of the translation and publication of New Netherland’s records provided by the NNRC and its various educational and public programs, NNI has helped put the 17th-century Dutch colony back in the public and academic eye.

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