imagining global amsterdam History, Culture, and Geography in a World City edited by marco de waard AMSTERDAM UNIVERSITY PRESS Imagining Global Amsterdam Cities and Cultures Cities and Cultures is an interdisciplinary humanities book series addressing the interrelations between contemporary cities and the cultures they produce. The series takes a special interest in the impact of globalization on urban space and cultural production, but remains concerned with all forms of cultural expression and transformation associated with contemporary cities. Series editor: Christoph Lindner, University of Amsterdam Advisory Board: Ackbar Abbas, University of California, Irvine Nezar AlSayyad, University of California, Berkeley Derek Gregory, University of British Columbia Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, University of New South Wales Shirley Jordan, Queen Mary, University of London Geoffrey Kantaris, University of Cambridge Bill Marshall, University of London Ginette Verstraete, VU University Amsterdam Richard J. Williams, University of Edinburgh Imagining Global Amsterdam: History, Culture, and Geography in a World City Edited by Marco de Waard amsterdam university press This book is published in print and online through the online OAPEN library (www.oapen.org) OAPEN (Open Access Publishing in European Networks) is a collaborative initiative to develop and implement a sustainable Open Access publication model for academic books in the Humani- ties and Social Sciences. The OAPEN Library aims to improve the visibility and usability of high quality academic research by aggregating peer reviewed Open Access publications from across Europe. Cover illustration: Photographer: TESS Cover design: Kok Korpershoek, Amsterdam Lay-out: Heymans & Vanhove, Goes isbn 978 90 8964 367 4 e- isbn 978 90 4851 513 4 (pdf) e- isbn 978 90 4851 799 2 (ePub) nur 694 Creative Commons License CC BY NC ND (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/ 3 0 ) M. de Waard / Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam 2012 Some rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, any part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise). Every effort has been made to obtain permission to use all copyrighted illustrations reproduced in this book. Nonetheless, whosoever believes to have rights to this material is advised to contact the publisher. 5 Table of Contents Acknowledgments 7 Introduction 9 1 Amsterdam and the Global Imaginary 9 Marco de Waard Part I: Historicizing Global Amsterdam 25 2 Imagining Social Change in Early-Modern Amsterdam: Global Processes, Local Perceptions 27 Ulrich Ufer 3 Amidst Unscrupulous Neighbours: Amsterdam Money and Foreign Interests in Dutch Patriotic Imagery 45 Dorothee Sturkenboom 4 Visualizing Commerce and Empire: Decorating the Built Environment of Amsterdam 67 Michael Wintle 5 Romance and Commerce: Imagining Global Amsterdam in the Contemporary Historical Novel 83 Joyce Goggin and Erinç Salor 6 Dutch Decline Redux: Remembering New Amsterdam in the Global and Cosmopolitan Novel 101 Marco de Waard Part II: Amsterdam Global Village: (Inter)National Imaginings 123 7 Form, Punch, Caress: Johan van der Keuken’s Global Amsterdam 125 Patricia Pisters 8 Rembrandt on Screen: Art Cinema, Cultural Heritage, and the Museumization of Urban Space 143 Marco de Waard 9 Imagining a Global Village: Amsterdam in Janwillem van de Wetering’s Detective Fiction 169 Sabine Vanacker 10 . Amsterdam, City of Sirens: On Hafid Bouazza’s Short Story ‘Apolline’ 187 Henriette Louwerse 6 imagining global amsterdam Part III: Global Amsterdam’s Cultural Geography 199 11 . Amsterdam and/as New Babylon: Urban Modernity’s Contested Trajectories 201 Mark E. Denaci 12 . Amsterdam’s Architectural Image from Early-Modern Print Series to Global Heritage Discourse 219 Freek Schmidt 13 . Amsterdam Memorials, Multiculturalism, and the Debate on Dutch Identity 239 Jeroen Dewulf 14 . Graphic Design, Globalization, and Placemaking in the Neighbourhoods of Amsterdam 255 Bharain Mac an Bhreithiún 15 . A Global Red-Light City? Prostitution in Amsterdam as a Real-and-Imagined Place 273 Michaël Deinema and Manuel B. Aalbers 16 . Global Eros in Amsterdam: Religion, Sex, Politics 289 Markha Valenta Contributors 305 Index 309 7 Acknowledgments This collection of essays originates in the conference Imagining Amsterdam: Vi- sions and Revisions , held at the Trippenhuis in Amsterdam on 19 - 21 November 2009 . Most of the essays brought together here were first presented on that oc- casion, and subsequently revised and expanded for inclusion in this book. In preparing their papers for publication, contributors were asked to connect them to the themes of globalization, the modern urban imaginary, and Amsterdam as ‘global village’ in ways that they thought best given their expertise and concep- tual interests and concerns. It goes without saying that a project of this scope and kind cannot take shape without incurring some substantial debts, which I am very keen to acknowledge here. First of all, my warm thanks go to Joyce Goggin and to Christoph Lindner for their encouragement, support, and tacti- cal and practical advice throughout this project’s different stages. Back in 2008 , Joyce joined me in organizing the Imagining Amsterdam conference. Her help in getting this project off the ground has been essential, and working together was good fun along the way. Christoph’s support and advice, too, have been crucial, and I consider it an honour that Imagining Global Amsterdam now launches the Cities and Cultures book series under his general editorship at AUP. Next, thanks are due to the Institute of Culture and History at UvA for supporting the con- ference organizationally and financially, and to Amsterdam University College for offering additional encouragement and support. I would also like to thank Miriam Meissner for doing an expert job on the images for this book in her role as editorial assistant, and AUP for their continued confidence in me and in this project despite some delays. My final debt is to the students at Amsterdam Uni- versity College who took my undergraduate courses on ‘Literary Cities’ and ‘The Modern Urban Novel’ in the Spring terms of 2010 and 2011 . Their readiness to discuss a range of ideas and texts with me that ended up having a role in the mak- ing of this book was exemplary and inspirational; I can only hope they learned as much from the experience as I feel I gained by it myself. I dedicate this collection to all the students that I have had the good fortune to work with at AUC, that most international of colleges – as another way in which to cheer them on as they give meaning to what it is to be ‘global citizens’ in Amsterdam. MdW 9 Introduction 1. Amsterdam and the Global Imaginary Marco de Waard Cultural Mobility, Global Performativity A young woman – immersed, it appears, in her reading – sits on a large, beanbag- shaped stone chair on Amsterdam’s Dam Square. Her pose, if not exactly com- fortable, seems balanced enough, although she may have had to put herself into a squat first over her sizeable black travelling bag. Behind her we see a museum poster, one of a series put up there by the Amsterdam (Historical) Museum to advertize its collection when a large bank building was temporarily fenced off in 2009 and 2010 . The scene on the poster forms a striking contrast with the calm of the woman’s pose: a monumental canvas by Jan Abrahamsz. Beerstraaten, it evokes the fire that destroyed Amsterdam’s old town hall in the night of 7 July 1652 . The inflamed sky, rendered in part in screaming colours, suggests the event may have seemed to spell apocalypse to some of those who witnessed it, including perhaps the painter himself. The fact that the Exchange Bank, too, was destroyed (it was housed in the same building) offers the potential of a stern cautionary tale in this city of Calvinists and commerce, of seventeenth-century republicans and burghers. In fact, a new town hall was already being built; seen in its entirety, the painting shows the scaffolding behind the waaghuis , suggesting that the fire only sealed the old building’s appointed fate – and so, could just as well be cast as a providential sign of benevolence, divine arrangements meshing nicely with worldly ones. 1 The woman, in any case, is oblivious to the painting, as she is to the tourist draws near where she sits. We know that on her right stands the Nieuwe Kerk, which regularly houses art and heritage exhibitions. Just in front of her is the city’s Madame Tussauds; if she looks up, she is likely to see people queue up to see Rembrandt, Lady Gaga, and the Dalai Lama in wax. Just across from her is the Palace on the Dam, the building which Beerstraaten saw completed during his lifetime, and which now functions as a museum and a place for royal recep- tions. And finally, surrounding all this, we may sense the hustle and bustle and noise of Amsterdam itself: the shops, the street vendors and ‘living statues’ who often punctuate Damrak and Dam Square, and other city users, residents, and travellers. Strikingly, though, in the photograph the modern city is mainly there by suggestion: it only intrudes in the form of the litter on the woman’s side, on 10 introduction the square’s characteristic cobblestones. She, meanwhile, reads Jack Kerouac’s On the Road ( 1957 ) as if nothing could disturb her peace. What to make of this rich assemblage of images, sensations, and cultural markers? What kind of urban experience is conjured up by it? How should we understand the woman’s some- what enviable, but also rather curious moment of poise? In the context of a collection of essays on ‘imagining global Amsterdam’, the point to make is that the photograph, which is shown in detail on the cover of this book, points to three different kinds of cultural mobility, each of which firmly belongs to the present ‘age of globalization’. They are: the mobility of the tourist or corporeal traveller, moving across countries and continents to visit ‘capitals of culture’ (if not, to stay in Kerouac’s beatnik idiom, to be simply ‘on the road’); the mobility of the image – potentially any image – across time and space, a trend only intensifying now that the ‘society of the spectacle’ announced in the 1960 s by Guy Debord has spiralled into hypermediacy and into incessant, neurotic re-mediation; and finally, the mobility of the ‘city’ as an imagined or mental construction in its own right, in the sense that it leads a life independent of its existence as a physical place, appealing to visitors, media users, and art and architecture lovers in contexts ranging from the Netherlands and Europe to America and Asia, and articulated by a spate of narratives and re-mediations. Paradoxically, this city as an imagined construct could be said to live a shadowy, shimmering existence while the images proliferate: under today’s conditions, the most successful ‘cities of culture’ – at least in commercial or cultural-economic terms – may be those where one has ‘always already’ been, even if one has never actually set foot in them. Indeed, if we stay with the example of the woman on Dam Square for just a little longer, we see several cultural scripts being played out in this photograph, none of which is unique to Amsterdam as a place. First, the ‘romance’ of a road novel like On the Road could be projected onto one’s travel experience in many other places. The novel scripts the woman’s encounter with Amsterdam in ways that make it ‘American’ or ‘global’ as well as Dutch or European. Second – and notwithstanding the special charm of this photo’s composition – a thematically comparable photo of a similar situation could have been taken in any other ‘capi- tal of culture’, hypermediated places such as Dam Square being available in every tourist city today. (It is worth recalling here that in their seminal book Remedia- tion , Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin compare heavily mediated cities to ‘theme parks’. Although the pull of historical gravity in this photograph is palpa- ble, the Dam Square it gives us hardly escapes this ‘logic of hypermediacy’ [Bolter and Grusin 1999 , 169 ]). Third and last, even my own reading of the photograph and the museum poster in the above could not entirely avoid slipping into the language of the art catalogue or travel guide, and thus into the conventions of a globally circulating script, best summed up perhaps as the master script of ‘Euro- pean cultural heritage’ (more about which later). The point is that all these scripts are intensely repeatable across media and places, which means that none of them can define the singular experience of an urban space or place in its uniqueness It is this free play of cultural mobilities and global performativities, of images on the move and people responding to their movements, that the present collection 11 amsterdam and the global imaginary seeks to address – using Amsterdam as a strategic lens for bringing into focus the dynamics of urban image formation under conditions of globalization in society and culture. Imagining Amsterdam, Imagining Globality However, if the emphasis put here on the power and autonomy of images some- how suggests that Amsterdam is placed ‘under erasure’ in this collection, I should wish to disabuse the reader of this impression at once. Imagining Global Amster- dam turns to Amsterdam as a singularly fascinating case study for the manifold impact which globalization exerts, specifically in how it transforms urban life and culture, produces new relations to place, space, and travel, and generates new visions of both the city’s future and its past. In so doing, the collection takes as its subject not only articulations of Amsterdam as a ‘world city’ – indeed, ‘global Amsterdam’ as one may find it today, a major hub for international com- merce and tourism and the place where nearly 180 nationalities cohabit 2 – but also globally circulating images of Amsterdam as produced and received over time, and finally, if somewhat elusively, what could be described as Amsterdam- themed imaginings of the ‘global’ as such – i.e., representations of the city that use it as a focal point for reflecting on the kind of global order which historically it has had a hand in creating, and, by implication, on that to which we now seem headed for the future. The existing scholarship on Amsterdam as a global or world city is large and diverse, but so far, historical and urban-geographical studies substantially prevail over studies of city imagery; what is more, Amsterdam’s global dimension, both in the seventeenth century and today, is still more often assumed as part of the background of other and more specialized inquiry than submitted to scrutiny in its own right, as the subject of reflective practice and representation. 3 In brief, then, let me consider three compelling reasons why (the idea of) Amsterdam should offer a unique and exceptional case study for exploring the relationship between globalization, urban culture, and today’s ‘society of the image’ from a broad and international humanities perspective. The first is Amsterdam’s persis- tent, but dynamic and contradictory association with the ‘global village’ idea: i.e., of a city relatively free of the darker connotations of global citydom which attach to primary or ‘core’ world cities such as London, Tokyo, or New York, while intensely globally (inter)connected through various worldwide networks and flows. To some extent, Amsterdam may owe its ‘global village’ image quite simply to its physical geography and scale, as when it is dubbed ‘the world’s smallest metropolis’ or ‘the smallest world city’ (Westzaan 1990 , 27 ; Deben et al. 2007 , back cover); indeed, if world cities form the ‘faces’ of globalization, as has often been suggested, then Amsterdam provides it with a face that seems compar- atively friendly and humane. To some extent, also, the image borrows continued resonance and appeal from the ‘global village’ concept so famously promoted by Marshall McLuhan in the 1960 s, as a utopian metaphor for a democratic and egalitarian world society integrated by global media. That Amsterdam has 12 introduction been considered directly in light of McLuhan’s concept/ideal speaks from the Amsterdam-based films of Johan van der Keuken, among others – discussed in chapter 7 in this book. 4 However, if the ‘global village’ image of the city has long held special attraction, it is complicated by the international interest in contem- porary Amsterdam as the epitome of an open society, or as a space where an unequalled degree of tolerance and permissiveness, and an historically evolved culture of legal pragmatism, can be seen to co-exist with the possibility of li- centiousness or even the breakdown of social morals. Let me turn to Jonathan Blank’s feature-length documentary film Sex, Drugs & Democracy ( 1994 ) for a particularly resonant example. Exploring ‘the Dutch idea of a free society’ to wide American media coverage when it came out, Blank’s film documents Dutch policies regarding abortion and euthanasia, the legalization of ‘vices’ such as hashish, marijuana, and brothels, the Dutch wealth distribution system, and sex education for schoolchildren (among other subjects) through largely sympathetic interviews with local Amsterdammers, combined with evidence about low rates in teen pregnancy, HIV infection, and drug abuse. For many (foreign) online re- viewers, the image that is conjured up approximates a paradise on earth, at least by suggestion, thereby setting up an implicit standard for comparison. As one American reviewer put it in 2002 : ‘I’m sure it is not a perfect society. ... But it is as perfect a society that we could ever hope to see. And the film really does make one re-evaluate what freedom, liberty, justice for all and democracy really mean. And how far the USA has so profoundly regressed from those utopian elements on which it was founded’. 5 Yet what also sticks is the image of a precarious bal- ance, of a socio-cultural lifeworld highly dependent on participation and civic consensus – which throws up the question how proof this society is against dif- ficulty and change and how capable it is of self-perpetuation. If for a long time, the image prevailed of Amsterdam as a place of radical freedom from prohibitions and legal constraints, a laboratory for ‘alternative’ lifestyles, if one with a dangerous edge – typically popularized in such 1990 s texts as Irvine Welsh’s story ‘Eurotrash’ ( 1994 ) and Ian McEwan’s noir novel Amsterdam , which carried the Booker Prize in 1998 – in the early 2000 s new po- litical developments and socio-cultural trends introduced a sea change in how the city was regarded, at home as well as abroad. In January 2000 , Dutch publicist Paul Scheffer published a controversial article in NRC Handelsblad that ques- tioned the multiculturalist consensus that had prevailed so far in Dutch public discourse. The ensuing debate – about the direction of the multicultural society, and on a deeper level about the meaning and constitution of ‘community’ in the Netherlands and about the terms of social inclusion, integration, and cohe- sion – gained further momentum in the wake of ‘ 9 / 11 ’, as several essays in this collection note. 6 If initially this debate remained largely domestic, international media coverage of the murder of Theo van Gogh ( 2 November 2004 ) was quick to locate Amsterdam at the forefront of transformations that were felt to be underway or imminent in European society at large, specifically in terms of the ‘dangers’ posed to freedom of speech – of which van Gogh had styled himself a provocative proponent – and in terms of the pressures placed on tolerance by new fundamentalisms, real or perceived. No matter what degree of exaggeration 13 amsterdam and the global imaginary or misreading was involved, the global image of the city was changing for a fact, and so was its self-image at home. In the United States, readers with an interest in the Netherlands could now read Ian Buruma’s Murder in Amsterdam: The Death of Theo van Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance ( 2006 ) as well as watch Blank’s movie – even though, it should be added, the idea of Amsterdam as a pars pro toto of European-style social policy and welfarism also continued to have cur- rency, and still does so to this day (e.g. Shorto 2009 ; Fainstein 2010 ). I am, it must be obvious, sketching some highly complicated developments in very broad strokes here. In the context of the present collection, the point to make is that the cultural reorientation towards specifically Dutch traditions of liberty, tolerance, and civic life which was set in motion in the early 2000 s has not only taken place in political forums and news media but also through literature, film, urban architecture, the visual arts, and graphic design, and that the impulse for this reorientation originates in international as well as domestic perceptions and concerns. Some of the essays that follow trace a response to the present cul- tural moment through re-imaginings and re-articulations of Amsterdam that are keenly alive to the utopian, dystopian, heterotopian, and various other inflections carried by the idea and image of the city in the eye of (inter)national beholders. It is hoped that such studies add to our understanding of the intensity of global exchange which has been invited by Amsterdam’s city image over time, and that they expand the imaginative and intellectual space in which current socio-politi- cal discussions are being played out. The second reason why Amsterdam’s place in modern urban and global imag- inaries deserves attention and study in its own right is its inscription, qua ‘world city’, in two historical moments that are powerfully linked by contemporary resonances. On the one hand, the idea of Amsterdam remains inextricably tied up with the Dutch ‘moment of world hegemony’ during the seventeenth century, when for some fifty years the city formed the heart of a capitalist world system maintained through the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie or VOC) and the West India Company (WIC), among others – the former, famously, often ‘considered to have been the first transnational [trad- ing] company in the world’ (Nijman 1994 , 211 ). As the historical sociologist and world-systems theorist Giovanni Arrighi has written, these ‘Dutch chartered companies were both beneficiaries and instruments of the ongoing centralization in Amsterdam of world-embracing commerce and high finance ... [and] the me- dium through which the Dutch capitalist class established direct links between the Amsterdam entrepôt on the one side, and producers from all over the world on the other’ ( 1994 , 143 ; italics in original). This situation had a powerful impact on local self-images and on the ‘global consciousness’ that emerged in the city in the course of the seventeenth century – as Ulrich Ufer’s essay in this collec- tion attests. Nor was the Dutch mercantilist effort short-lived, even if by the late 1670 s world supremacy was lost. By 1728 , ‘Daniel Defoe was still referring to the Dutch as “the Carryers of the World, the middle Persons in Trade, the Factors and Brokers of Europe”’ (Wallerstein 1982 , 102 ); the VOC took until the close of the eighteenth century to expire. A walk through Amsterdam’s historic inner-city centre testifies abundantly to this global past and its legacy, as Michael Wintle’s 14 introduction chapter shows in discussing colonial iconography still decorating many buildings and gables in the city today. On the other hand, Amsterdam and the Netherlands are in various ways caught up in the present ‘age of globalization’ – contemporaneous with that multiheaded gorgon now commonly known as neoliberalism, roughly stretching from the late 1970 s into the present day (for periodization, see Harvey 2005 ). Neoliberal globalization makes itself felt in Amsterdam in various ways. It gener- ates transformations of urban space, most notably in the Zuidas district and the city centre, which is often said – and feared – to fossilize into a ‘theme park’ of some kind. 7 It also works on the level of the (immigrant) neighbourhood or wijk , where it creates new kinds of urban literacy, new forms of urban identification, and new models of local and communal belonging. Finally, it makes itself felt through processes of city branding and city marketing that are omnipresent in some of Amsterdam’s lived, physical spaces, as they are in images in the media (the I amsterdam branding campaign, considered by Bharain Mac an Bhreithiún in chapter 14 , being a conspicuous case in point). ‘Global Amsterdam’ provides us with plenty of examples, then, of the intertwinement of the local and the glob- al so often discussed under the rubric of ‘glocalization’, in the term promoted by Roland Robertson ( 1995 ). ‘Glocalization’ refers to the local inflections – through urban spaces and practices, subjectivities and identities – given to globally circu- lating trends, and thereby to the intense and dynamic interdependence of the two. In this sense the concept throws up important questions about determination and resistance, about ‘strategy’ (hegemonic) and ‘tactics’ (from below). In Part III of this book, about global Amsterdam’s cultural geography, the reader finds in- depth discussion of examples of localized inscriptions in global processes: from the elevation to ‘global heritage’ status of Amsterdam’s inner-city grachtengordel in 2010 , which Freek Schmidt considers in the conclusion to his chapter, to the place of Amsterdam’s Red Light District in the city’s image and self-representa- tion at home and abroad, discussed from different angles in chapters 15 and 16 If Imagining Global Amsterdam studies how globalization impacts on the city’s cultural geography, another – and closely related – aim it hopes to achieve is this: to show that some of the literary and artistic articulations of Amsterdam of recent years, specifically in the English-speaking world, go a long way towards throwing the current ‘age of globalization’, as a moment of critical conjuncture, into historical relief. Several essays in this collection suggest that the city’s hegem- onic moment in the mercantilist era on the one hand, and the current moment of neoliberalism on the other encounter each other in recent re-imaginings of the city – as if Amsterdam has the capacity to inscribe itself in a double temporal- ity which maps different historical layers onto each other. Let me refer to two notable trends in recent Anglo-American cultural production to elaborate on the idea. For nearly two decades now, one significant trend in historical fiction has been that of the Amsterdam-themed heritage novel which, characteristically, de- velops either an art-historical or a global-markets-and-finance plot that is set in the seventeenth-century ‘Golden Age’. These fictions can often be seen to medi- ate ambiguously between the readerly desire for ‘romanticizations of commerce’ and the need for economic ‘cautionary tales’ – an oscillation that has everything 15 amsterdam and the global imaginary to do, as Joyce Goggin and Erinç Salor show in an astute analysis of two novels of this kind, with current anxieties about volatile markets, risk financing, and the ‘financialization of everyday life’ (chapter 5 ). The other trend is that of the pronounced surge of interest, in the Netherlands but also in the English-speaking world, in the historical and cultural relations between Amsterdam and New York – an interest one could date back at least to Russell Shorto’s bestselling The Island at the Centre of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America ( 2004 ), and which has gathered steam with the 400 th anniversary of New York-Amsterdam relations in 2009 . Let me emphasize the novelty of this interest, before considering its relevance for current urban and global imaginaries. From an American and New York perspective, it could be said as recently as 1999 that ‘the unflattering caricatures of backward and inept Dutch people that permeate our culture’ lent the ‘colonial Dutch’ who governed New Netherland ‘a timeless quality that tends to separate them from the stream of historical action’ (Goodfriend 1999 , 19 ). Thus New York colonial history remained firmly Anglocentric, its Dutch episode a mere prelude to post- 1664 or post- 1674 English rule. The recent renascence of interest, by contrast, marks a new desire to experience American history through the lens of other, in- tersecting continental and national cultural paradigms. That this trend has trav- elled from academic historiography to popular histories like Shorto’s, and from thence to representations in literature, film, and the visual arts, may indicate an imaginative need on the part of audiences and readers to ‘imagine globality’ or become ‘globally conscious’ in new ways. This would certainly go some way towards explaining the re-articulation of markers of ‘Dutchness’ in notable New York-based novels such as Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland ( 2008 ) and Teju Cole’s Open City ( 2011 ), or in a film such as Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps ( 2010 ), and it would suggest a global context for interpreting such cultural expressions and their role in cultural memory. (In chapter 6 , the case of Netherland is used to explore how the idea and image of (New) Amsterdam mediates between differ- ent spatial and temporal orders, in ways that are formative of this novel’s ‘global aesthetic’ and of the cosmopolitan ideal expressed in it). The third and final reason why Amsterdam merits special attention from the perspective of humanities-based globalization research is that articulations of the city – both in commercial and political discourses and in literature, film, and the visual arts – have in recent years become deeply implicated in Europe’s cultural heritage industries and in the processes of politicization and commodification with which they are tied up. In a recent study titled Tracking Europe: Mobil- ity, Diaspora, and the Politics of Location , Ginette Verstraete has mounted a searching critique of the official, hegemonic discourses of European citizenship and transnational identification through which EU member states engage in the ‘worldwide marketing of unity-in-diversity’, specifically through the promotion and practice of cultural tourism that is centred on ‘cultural capitals’. European cities, Verstraete argues, are increasingly given to standardizing the cultural-his- torical markers of ‘difference’ and ‘authenticity’ that constitute their ‘identity’ within a geography which converts such markers into vital political/economic currency. In this argument, the European promotion of cultural mobility and 16 introduction travel is seen as highly ideologically charged: ‘In a borderless Europe of cultural diversity, tourists from Europe and far beyond flock around with pictures and cultural narratives that connect Europeanness to a variety of unique destinations, sight-seeing (the viewing of images) to site-seeing (the viewing of places), and citizenship to imaginary transportation within a stereotypically differentiated ge- ography of cultural heritage’ (Verstraete 2010 , 10 ). In a sense, Verstraete’s argu- ment forms a – richly contextualized – variation on the long-standing debate in globalization scholarship about the relations and tensions between cultural het- erogenization and homogenization , inviting us to look at European heritage cities as invested in something like the standardized performance of ‘heterogeneity’. As will be seen, this argument is particularly relevant for the concerns of the present book, and it is important to keep in mind as a background for some of the critical questions that are asked in the chapters that follow – about Amsterdam’s place in Europe’s cultural economy and geography, but also about new subjectitivies and performativities that can be seen to surface in the global heritage city. Indeed, from the ‘museumization’ of urban space in Rembrandt Year 2006 (chapter 8 ), to the commodified performance of the ‘authentically’ local or national in a popular neighbourhood like De Pijp (chapter 14 ), the incorporation of the culturally ‘dif- ferent’ and ‘distinctive’ in a new dynamics of commercialization and branding throws up urgent questions about place and space, about identity and memory, and about cultural agency and power. Imagining Amsterdam, imagining globality: in the fifteen essays that follow, (global) images of (global) Amsterdam are approached as forms of imagining, advancing one’s understanding of, or otherwise responding to ‘the global’ itself, both in view of the city’s past and in view of contemporary transformations. The essays are informed by perspectives ranging from cultural history, art and ar- chitecture history, and film studies to comparative literature, human geography, and urban planning. While they are diverse in terms of scholarly background, perspective, and approach, what unites them is a shared commitment to histori- cization – in the assumption that the dynamics of image making in regard both to Amsterdam and to ‘globality’ as such can be traced a very long way back, and that trying to do so enriches our critical sense. The combined effect, it is hoped, is to expand the repertoire of historical and cultural case studies that help us conceptualize the issues at stake in thinking about Amsterdam, globalization, and urban culture today. History, Culture, and Geography in a World City Imagining Global Amsterdam breaks into three parts. The first part, ‘Historiciz- ing Global Amsterdam’, puts the idea and image of Amsterdam as ‘world city’ in historical perspective in two different ways. On the one hand, it revisits early- modern Amsterdam to inquire how Amsterdammers conceived of themselves and their city as part of a larger, global or globalizing whole – specifically through their experiences with overseas trade and the changes it brought to their society and culture. What did it mean for them to be ‘globally conscious’, and how did 17 amsterdam and the global imaginary they express their emerging sense of ‘the world as a whole’ (or, what Roland Robertson and David Inglis have proposed to discuss in terms of a ‘global ani- mus’ [ 2004 ])? How did it transform the image and self-presentation of the city that it knew itself ‘globally connected’? On the other hand, the section treats the question of Amsterdam as an historic ‘world city’ retrospectively , as a subject of cultural memory, asking how historical narratives – in literature, film, and popu- lar culture – look back on the city’s early-modern hegemonic moment now and in light of the cross-historical resonances already suggested above. The first three essays respond to the first set of questions by placing the role of commerce, capital, and cosmopolitanism in early-modern Amsterdam very firmly in the context of a nascent ‘global awareness’. Ulrich Ufer, in ‘Imagining Social Change in Early-Modern Amsterdam’, looks at early attempts by Amsterdam- mers to consider the city and themselves through the lens of three urban imagi- naries with distinctly global dimensions: respectively, an urban imaginary that was largely affirmative of global economic enterprise and the logic of accumula- tion which it was seen to set in motion; an imaginary that was more ambivalent about global commerce and its impact on urban life; and finally, an imaginary that questioned the city as a site of accumulation and affluence through the use of dystopian imagery and tropes. The chapter intersects with, and builds on, the work so influentially conducted in this area by Simon Schama, among others ( 1987 ). At the same time it foregrounds – in ways that resonate with other chap- ters in this book – the emergence of new conceptualizations of history, change, and progress in early-modern Amsterdam, asking attention for the complex tem- poralities involved in imagining the global. Dorothee Sturkenboom, in ‘Amidst Unscrupulous Neighbours: Amsterdam Money and Foreign Interests in Dutch Patriotic Imagery’, focuses on eighteenth-century representations of the Dutch spirit of commerce and enterprise, of Dutch national finance, and of the idea of ‘Amsterdam money’ to consider the interaction of these elements in light of three frames of reference: the urban, the national, and the transnational or European. It is seen that cultural representations of Dutch finance and Amsterdam money struggled to reconcile the idea of national or patriotic interests with that of the city as a site of free exchange, open circulation, and transnational connectedness. This links the chapter to the general theme of urban cosmopolitanism which runs through this section – in Sturkenboom’s case studies, primarily the subject of cultural anxiety and critique. Finally, Michael Wintle’s ‘Visualizing Commerce and Empire: Decorating the Built Environment of Amsterdam’ traces some of the prominent ways in which the impulse to visualize global commerce and em- pire entered the built environment of Amsterdam. The popular historical writer Geert Mak has referred to Amsterdam as ‘almost an anti-monument turned flesh’ ( 2001 , 3 ). But if it is true that Amsterdam lacks the ‘architecture of prestige’ which determines the image and self-presentation of various other European cap- itals, Wintle’s essay reminds us that it has not been free from monumentalizing impulses of its own, resulting in a (bourgeois) iconography of global prestige. Part I is completed by two essays from the field of literary studies which con- nect to the previous three by foregrounding – again – the themes of capitalism, commerce, and cosmopolitan life, but which also differ from them in that they 18 introduction approach ‘Golden Age’ Amsterdam as a global lieu de mémoire , investigating its place in cultural memory today and in relation to the commodification of na- tional art and heritage. In ‘Romance and Commerce: Imagining Global Amster- dam in the Contemporary Historical Novel’, Joyce Goggin and Erinç Salor turn to the phenomenon of the historical novel situated in the Dutch ‘Golden Age’, most commonly in Amsterdam or Delft – a remarkable trend in English-language popular fiction that took a flight in the late 1990 s with novels by Tracy Chevalier, Deborah Moggach, and Susan Vreeland, among others. Goggin and Salor open up a critical perspective on this voluminous corpus of fictions by exploring how they inscribe themselves in the European art and heritage industries, while at the same time responding imaginatively to the economic and financial crises that so strongly define the present cultural moment. The question how the ‘historical Amsterdam novel’ negotiates these two – to some extent conflicting – impulses is uppermost on this chapter’s mind. Finally, chapter 6 , ‘Dutch Decline Redux: Remembering New Amsterdam in the Global and Cosmopolitan Novel’, seeks to propel the discussion forward as it considers the place of (New) Amsterdam in two recent Anglophone novels that, to some degree at least, resist and challenge the commodification of global cultural memory. It is found that both novels, in articulating memories of (New) Amsterdam and early-modern Dutch mercantil- ism in formally innovative ways, propose new ways for thinking and inhabiting the spatio-temporalities of the global, thereby contributing to cosmopolitaniza- tion. Part II is titled ‘Amsterdam Global Village: (Inter)National Imaginings’. I have already noted how it was media theorist Marshall McLuhan who proposed the metaphor of the ‘global village’ in the 1960