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Dr. D.W.A.G. (Danielle) van den Heuvel

Faculty of Humanities
Geschiedenis
Photographer: Anne Posthuma

Visiting address
  • Kloveniersburgwal 48
  • Room number: C1.09
Postal address
  • Postbus 1610
    1000 BP Amsterdam
  • Profile

    Biography

    I am an Associate Professor (UHD) and Academic Director of the Amsterdam School of Historical Studies. I obtained a PhD from the University of Utrecht in 2007. After holding postdoctoral research fellowships at the Faculty of Economics and Girton College of the University of Cambridge (2007-2012), I taught at the School of History and the Centre of Medieval and Early Modern Studies of the University of Kent (Canterbury). In 2016 I moved to the University of Amsterdam where I currently direct an NWO VIDI project on gender and urban space in Eurasia. I have also held Visiting Fellowships at the Institute of Advanced Studies on Asia (University of Tokyo, 2015; 2017), and the Institute of Advanced Studies (Amsterdam, 2020-21).

     

    Research interests

    Trained as a socio-economic historian of the pre-industrial Netherlands, over the years my research has broadened into the history of material culture, urban space and the built environment and currently covers the history of urban Eurasia in its transformation to the so-called modern era.   

    My research includes a variety of topics from gender relations to street life, everyday practices, food cultures, housing and urban segregation. Most of my work focusses on ephemeral aspects of life, and the experiences of so-called marginal groups such as women and the poor: all aspects that often remain overlooked in standard narratives of history. I am primarily interested in the agency of the overlooked and how their experiences were shaped by formal and informal institutions, such as laws and regulations, and beliefs and cultural practices.

    My work typically applies a comparative and long-term perspective and has an interdisciplinary character combining approaches from across the (Digital) Humanities and Social Sciences. My research has been supported by (amongst others) a Rubicon Grant (2007) and a VIDI Grant (2016) from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), an Ottilie Hancock Research Fellowship (JRF Girton College; 2008) and a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship (2010).

    I currently lead an interdisciplinary project team that works on the gendering of urban space in premodern cities in Eurasia (Amsterdam, Edo/Tokyo, Batavia/Jakarta and Berlin). In this context my research has expanded to the urban history of Asia and to questions on measuring and modelling urban everyday mobility in the past, on the extraction of practices from textual and visual sources, and on the relationship between architectural form, environment, and urban experience. Central to answering these questions are digital methods, including GIS, 3D reconstructions and agent-based modelling.    

    In the Vrouwen op de (Historische) Kaart project, funded by the KNAW Gewaardeerd Fonds,  I work with colleagues and partners from Education and Cultural Heritage on translating research findings into educational materials for secondary schools. We partner with F-SiteStudio Bertels, Hogeschool van Amsterdam and the UvA MA in History (Education).

    With colleagues at UvA’s Centre for Urban Studies and the Amsterdam School for Heritage and Memory I have launched a new platform called Claiming the Streets. This platform brings together scholars from a variety of disciplines as well as practitioners, activists and artists to exchange ideas on how to use insights from the past and present to imagine the future of city streets.

     

    Selected publications

    Books

    - Early modern streets. A European Perspective. Early Modern Themes (London: Routledge 2023).

    - Food hawkers. Selling in the streets from antiquity to the present [Edited with Melissa Calaresu] (London: Routledge 2016). 

    - Women and entrepreneurship. Female traders in the Northern Netherlands c. 1580-1815 (Amsterdam: Aksant 2007).

    - Bij uijtlandigheijt van haar man. Echtgenotes van VOC-zeelieden aangemonsterd voor de kamer Enkhuizen (1700-1750) (Amsterdam: Aksant 2005).

    Journal articles

    - ‘Capturing gendered mobility and street use in the historical city: a new methodological approach’, [with Bob Pierik, Bébio Vieira Amaro, Ivan Kisjes], Cultural and Social History (2020) 17:4 pp 515-536, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2020.1796239. [Republished in IAS Review (2021:1)]

    - 'Gender in the Streets of the Premodern City', Journal of Urban History  (2018) DOI: 10.1177/0096144218768493.

    - ‘Policing peddlers. The prosecution of illegal street trade in eighteenth-century Dutch towns’, The Historical Journal Vol. 58 No. 2 (June 2015) 367-392.

    - ‘The multiple identities of early modern Dutch fishwives’ in: SIGNS: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. Vol. 37 No. 3 (Spring 2012) 587-594. 

    Winner of the Thirsk-Feinstein Dissertation Prize and the IEHA Dissertation Prize.
    Winner of the J.R. Bruijn Prize.
  • The Freedom of the Streets (NWO VIDI)

    The Freedom of the Streets. Gender and Urban Space in Eurasia (1600-1850)

    University of Amsterdam, 2016-2023; Funded by NWO (VIDI Scheme)

    Principal Investigator: Dr Danielle van den Heuvel 

    This project analyses the gendering of urban space in the early modern city. It is widely held that between 1600 and 1850, women gradually withdrew from the public sphere of the street and moved to the private sphere of the home. This powerful narrative, linked to theories of modernisation, has created a conceptual stranglehold that sees public space as exclusively male and private space as entirely female, thereby obscuring the actual workings of gender in pre-industrial urban societies.

    This project offers a pioneering approach to the study of gendered urban space, enabling for the first time to move beyond the public/private dichotomy and analyse women’s access to pre-industrial streets in full. Through an analysis of the ownership of streets, both formally by authorities and informally through daily use, it uncovers how urban space was gendered in the run up to the nineteenth century. It hypothesises that the extent to which women could own the street depended on gender norms, local governance, urban fabric, and the everyday use of streets and squares. As such, this project uniquely enables a cross-cultural comparison that connects the material and immaterial city, as well as for women’s agency to play a central role in the analysis.

  • Publications

    2021

    • van den Heuvel, D. (2021). Een markteconomie. In H. J. Helmers, G. H. Janssen, & J. F. J. Noorman (Eds.), De Zeventiende Eeuw (pp. 210-228). Leiden University Press. [details]

    2020

    2019

    2018

    • van den Heuvel, D. (2018). A market economy. In H. J. Helmers, & G. H. Janssen (Eds.), The Cambridge Companion to the Dutch Golden Age (pp. 149-165). (Cambridge Companions to Culture). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316771549.012 [details]

    2016

    • Calaresu, M., & van den Heuvel, D. (2016). Introduction: Food hawkers from representation to reality. In M. Calaresu, & D. van den Heuvel (Eds.), Food hawkers: Selling in the streets from antiquity to the present (pp. 1-18). (The history of retailing and consumption). Routledge. [details]
    • van den Heuvel, D. (2016). Food, markets, and people: Selling perishables in urban markets in pre-industrial Holland and England. In M. Calaresu, & D. van den Heuvel (Eds.), Food hawkers: Selling in the streets from antiquity to the present (pp. 84-106). (The history of retailing and consumption). London: Routledge. [details]
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2016). 近世オランダ都市における女性の商業参加とギルド制度. In M. Mizui, Y. Matsui, A. Ota, M. Sugiura, & T. Fushimi (Eds.), 世界史の中の女性 Bensei Publishing.

    2015

    • van den Heuvel, D. (2015). Policing peddlers: The prosecution of illegal street trade in eighteenth-century Dutch towns. Historical Journal, 58(2), 367-392. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X14000478
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2015). Depictions and perceptions of street vendors in the Northern Netherlands, 1600-1800. In G. Nigro (Ed.), Il commercio al minuto tra economia formale ed economia informale.: Secc. XIII-XVIII (pp. 433). Firenze: Firenze University Press.

    2014

    • Van den Heuvel, D. (2014). New products, new sellers? Changes in the Dutch textile trades, c. 1650-1750. In Selling Textiles in the Long Eighteenth Century: Comparative Perspectives from Western Europe (pp. 118-137). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137295217
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2014). New products, new sellers? Changes in the Dutch textile trades c. 1670-1750. In J. Stobart, & B. Blondé (Eds.), Selling textiles in the long eighteenth century : Comparative perspectives from Western Europe (pp. 118). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

    2013

    • Van den Heuvel, D., & Ogilvie, S. (2013). Retail development in the consumer revolution: The Netherlands, c. 1670-c. 1815. Explorations in Economic History, 50(1), 69-87. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2012.08.003
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2013). Guilds, gender policies and economic opportunities for women in early modern Dutch towns. In D. Simonton, & A. Montenach (Eds.), Female agency in the urban economy: Gender in European towns, 1640-1830 (pp. 116-133). Routledge.

    2012

    • van den Heuvel, D. (2012). The multiple identities of early modern Dutch fishwives. Signs : Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 37(3), 587-594. https://doi.org/10.1086/662705
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2012). Selling in the shadows: Peddlers and hawkers in early modern Europe. In L. Lucassen, & M. van der Linden (Eds.), Working on labor: Essays in honor of Jan Lucassen (pp. 125). Brill.

    2008

    • Van Den Heuvel, D. (2008). Partners in marriage and business? Guilds and the family economy in urban food markets in the Dutch Republic. Continuity and Change, 23(2), 217-236. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0268416008006760
    • Van Den Heuvel, D., & Van Nederveen Meerkerk, E. (2008). Introduction: Partners in business? Spousal cooperation in trades in early modern England and the Dutch Republic. Continuity and Change, 23(2), 209-216. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0268416008006838

    2007

    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2007). Women and entrepreneurship. Female traders in the Northern Netherlands c. 1580-1815. Aksant Academic Publishers.
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G., & Van Aert, L. (2007). Sekse als de sleutel tot succes? Vrouwen en de verkoop van textiel in de Noordelijke en Zuidelijke Nederlanden ca. 1650-1800. Textielhistorische Bijdragen, 47, 7-32.
    • van der Heijden, M., & van den Heuvel, D. (2007). Sailors' families and the urban institutional framework in early modern Holland. The History of the Family, 12(4), 296-309. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hisfam.2007.12.005

    2004

    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2004). Getrouwd met Jan Compagnie: Oost-Indiëvaarders en hun echtgenotes in Enkhuizen en omgeving (1700-1750). Tijdschrift voor Zeegeschiedenis, 23, 30-42.

    2023

    2019

    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G., Pierik, B. T., Vieira Amaro, B., Weiss, A. R. F., & Yasunaga, M. (2019). Jiyūkūkan to shite no gairo: Asia-Europe (1600-1850) no toshi kūkan to jendā kenkyū ni okeru atarashī apurōchi. Toshi shi kinkyū, 6, 109-123.

    2018

    • van den Heuvel, D., Pierik, B., Vieira Amaro, B., & Weiss, A. (2018). The Freedom of the Streets. Nieuw onderzoek naar gender en stedelijke ruimte in Eurazië. Stadsgeschiedenis, 13(2), 133-145. [details]

    2016

    2010

    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G., & van Nederveen Meerkerk, E. (2010). Huishoudens, werk en consumptieveranderingen in vroegmodern Holland: Het voorbeeld van de koffie- en theeverkopers in achttiende-eeuws Leiden. Holland, 42(2), 102-124.

    2005

    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2005). Bij uijtlandigheijt van haar man. Echtgenotes van VOC-zeelieden aangemonsterd voor de kamer Enkhuizen (1700-1750). Aksant Academic Publishers.
    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2005). De Openbaar Koopvrouw: De handelingsbekwaamheid van gehuwde koopvrouwen in de Republiek. Historica, 12-14.

    2017

    • The Freedom of the Streets (Author), van den Heuvel, D. (Author), Pierik, B. (Author), Yasunaga, M. (Author), Saygi, G. (Author), Weiss, A. (Author), Amaro, B. (Author), Calabi, D. (Author), Gowing, L. (Author), Haneda, M. (Author), Ito, T. (Author), Sugiura, M. (Author), van Kemenade, E. (Author), & Hellman, L. (Author). (2017). The Freedom of the Streets: Gender and urban space in Eurasia 1600-1850. Web publication or website, Freedom of the Streets UvA. https://www.freedomofthestreets.org/

    2006

    • van den Heuvel, D. W. A. G. (2006). Een zwaar bestaan? Het wel en wee van Enkhuizer zeemansvrouwen in de eerste helft van de achttiende eeuw. Steevast : jaaruitgave van de Vereniging "Oud-Enkhuizen", 7-20.

    2019

    • Noordegraaf, J., Vermaut, T., Raat, M., Mol, H., Van Erp, M., Doreleijers, K., Van Der Sijs, N., Zandhuis, I., Zijdeman, R., Baptist, V., Rasterhoff, C., Van Oort, T., Vrielink, C., Kisjes, I., Pierik, B., Van Den Heuvel, D., & Kaplan, F. (2019). Semantic Deep Mapping in an Integrated Platform for Studying Historical Amsterdam. https://doi.org/10.34894/11P1SF

    Prize / grant

    • van den Heuvel, D. (2009). CHORD New Research Prize.
    • van den Heuvel, D. (2009). IEHA Ph.D. Dissertation Prize.
    • van den Heuvel, D. (2008). Thirsk-Feinstein Ph.D. Dissertation Prize.
    • van den Heuvel, D. (2008). Dr A.L. van Schelvenprijs.
    • van den Heuvel, D. (2003). J.R. Bruijnprijs.

    Media appearance

    2022

    • Pierik, B. (2022). Urban life on the move: Gender and mobility in early modern Amsterdam. [Thesis, fully internal, Universiteit van Amsterdam]. [details]

    2019

    • Noordegraaf, J., Vermaut, T., Raat, M., Mol, H., Van Erp, M., Doreleijers, K., van der Sijs, N., Zandhuis, I., Zijdeman, R., Baptist, V., Rasterhoff, C., van Oort, T., Vrielink, C., Kisjes, I., Pierik, B., van den Heuvel, D. & Kaplan, F. (1-1-2019). Semantic Deep Mapping in an Integrated Platform for Studying Historical Amsterdam. DataverseNL. https://doi.org/10.34894/11p1sf
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  • Ancillary activities
    No ancillary activities