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Was Vincent van Gogh a Dutchman? A Frenchman? Or perhaps even an American, Japanese, Antillean or Moroccan? Since his death at the end of the nineteenth century, this world-famous artist has been ""naturalized"" by the inhabitants of the most diverse countries and territories. The anthology Vincent Everywhere subjects these nationalising tendencies to the critical gaze of (art) historians, sociologists, philosophers and writers. It takes the reader on a journey that begins in the Netherlands of today, starting with Van Gogh's incorporation into the now-official canon of Dutch history. Via the
Gogh, van, Vincent --- van Gogh, Vincent, --- Gogh, Vincent van, --- Appreciation --- National characteristics. --- Identity (Philosophical concept) --- Identity --- Philosophy --- Comparison (Philosophy) --- Resemblance (Philosophy) --- Characteristics, National --- Identity, National --- Images, National --- National identity --- National images --- National psychology --- Psychology, National --- Anthropology --- Nationalism --- Social psychology --- Collective memory --- Ethnopsychology --- Exceptionalism --- Fan-kao, --- Fan-ku, --- Fan'gao, --- Fangu, --- Fangu, Wensheng, --- Gogh, Vincent-Willem van, --- Van-Gog, Vint︠s︡ent, --- Van Gogh, Vincent, --- גוך, וינסנט ואן, --- ビンセントゴッホ, --- ゴッホ, --- 梵高, --- Gogh, Vincent van, - 1853-1890 --- Gogh, Vincent van, - 1853-1890 - Appreciation --- Van Gogh, Vincent
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