Institute of Modern History

Dr. Esther Baakman

Contact

Seminar für Neuere Geschichte
Wilhelmstraße 36
72074 Tübingen

esther.baakmanspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de

 


Biography

I am a historian of early modern colonial history and the history of news My research deals with the intersection of both fields focusing on colonial news in the periodical press, colonial citizenship, and the development of various discourses of slavery in early modern Europe. My current book project, based on my dissertation and provisionally entitled Atlantic Adivces: Representing the Americas in the Dutch Periodical Press, explores how the periodical press consistently covered distant but urgent transatlantic conflicts and developments using the constant flow of communications in the Atlantic world. It reveals how the weekly periodicity of the press brought stories of colonialism and slavery into the lives of European citizens. Alongside my research, I have been teaching in early modern and modern history at Leiden University, and Radboud University Nijmegen.

Short CV

2023-2024
Teach@Tübingen Fellow
2023-2024
Short-term Fellow at the John Carter Brown Library
2023
Charles W. Wendell Research Fellow at the New Netherland Institute
2015-2023
PhD from Leiden University

Atlantic Advices. Representing the Americas in the Dutch periodical press, ca. 1630-1795

2020-2023
Lecturer Political History, Radboud University Nijmegen
2019-2020
Lecturer Dutch History, Leiden University
2013-2015
Junior Lecturer Dutch Criminal Law, Utrecht University

Research

Research interests

  • Early modern history

  • Colonial and global history

  • History of news

  • Slavery

  • Early modern public discourse


Publications

  • Esther Baakman  (2023). ‘From Valuable Merchandise to Violent Rebels : Depicting Enslaved Africans in the Dutch Periodical Press in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.' BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.51769/bmgn-lchr.12793

  • Esther Baakman & Michiel van Groesen, ‘Kranten in de Gouden Eeuw’, in: Huub Wijfjes & Frank Harbers (eds.) De krant. Een cultuurgeschiedenis. (Amsterdam 2019) 21-45.

  • Esther Baakman, ‘“Their Power has been Broken, the Danger has Passed”. Dutch Newspaper Coverage of the Berbice Slave Revolt, 1763’, Early Modern Low Countries 2/1 (2018) 45-67.


Teaching

summer semester 2024

Exercise for master students

Representing Slavery in Early Modern Europe
Thu, 2pm-4pm c.t. and alternative dates, see alma, location: Hegelbau, 2nd upper floor, room 228
teaching language: Englisch
start: 18.04.2024

Archive

winter semester 2023/24
  • exercise: News culture in early modern Europe, 1500-1800