David Van Reybrouck

David Van Reybrouck
David Van Reybrouck.
Born (1971-09-11) 11 September 1971 (age 52)
OccupationAuthor

David Grégoire Van Reybrouck (born 11 September 1971, in Bruges) is a Belgian cultural historian, archaeologist and author. He writes historical fiction, literary non-fiction, novels, poetry, plays and academic texts. He has received several awards for his works, which includes Congo: The Epic History of a People and Revolusi.

Background and education

Van Reybrouck was born into a family of florists, bookbinders and artists. His father, a farmer's son, spent five years in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as a railway engineer immediately after independence. He holds a doctorate from Leiden University.

Writings

Van Reybrouck's first book, De Plaag (in English: The Plague), was a cross between a travelogue and a literary whodunnit set in post-apartheid South Africa. It received several awards, including the prize for the best Flemish debut in 2002 and a shortlist nomination for the Gouden Uil, one of the leading literary prizes in the Low Countries. It was translated into Afrikaans, French and Hungarian. A longtime op-ed writer for the Flemish national newspaper De Morgen, Van Reybrouck has co-edited a volume on the federal future of Belgium (What Belgium Stands For: a Scenario, 2007) and a pamphlet, Pleidooi voor populisme (A Plea for Populism, 2008), which was met with controversy. The latter won the Netherlands' most distinguished essay prize.

His book Congo. Een geschiedenis (in English: Congo: The Epic History of a People) was published in 2010. It is based on his ten journeys through the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the use of libraries and archives. He has interviewed hundreds of individuals, with a particular predilection for so-called "ordinary people", precisely because their lives and choices are so often extraordinary[citation needed]. The book portrays slavery and colonialism, resistance and survival. It includes archival material, interviews and personal observations. Congo. Een geschiedenis has been translated into English, French, German, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Swedish, Danish and Finnish. Van Reybrouck has also been actively involved in organising literary workshops for Congolese playwrights in Kinshasa and Goma.

In 2016 he published the English language version of Against Elections: The Case for Democracy where he advocates for a deliberative democracy based on sortition.[1]

In 2020 he published Revolusi which applies to Indonesia the method he used in Congo - a combination of interviews with Indonesian Nationalists and genocide perpetrators that live in complete impunity. It discusses the events that lead to start of Indonesia's military dictatorship, with historical interpretation.

In 2022 he published De kolonisatie van de toekomst (in English: The Colonization of the Future), where he argues that we should not only focus on the injustices of past colonialism, but also on today's injustices impacting present and future generations.[2]

Awards and honors

Libris History Prize (2010)

Publications (English)

  • 2000, From Primitives to Primates. A history of ethnographic and primatological analogies in the study of prehistory. Leiden, Sidestone Press, 2012. (Dissertation Leiden University, 2000). ISBN 978-90-8890-095-2
  • 2008, Missie (play)
  • 2014, Congo: The Epic History of a People. Transl. by Sam Garrett. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780062200112
  • 2015, The First World War Now. ISBN 978-9492081070
  • 2016, Against Elections: The Case for Democracy. Random House UK. ISBN 978-1847924223

Publications (Dutch)

References

  1. ^ Anthony, Andrew (18 July 2016). "Against Elections: The Case for Democracy by David Van Reybrouck – review". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
  2. ^ Chaumeau, Christine (20 December 2022). "David Van Reybrouck: "The fight for decolonization can't be detached from the fight against global warming"". JusticeInfo.net. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
  3. ^ Gouden Ganzenveer 2014
  4. ^ "Séance inaugurale de rentrée académique 2015–2016". Université Saint-Louis – Bruxelles.
  5. ^ "David Van Reybrouck wins the European Book Prize". Focus on Belgium. 14 December 2017. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  6. ^ "Should media report differently in the wake of attacks? Think about it and join the discussion!".

This article is wholly or partly based on material from Dutch Wikipedia

External links

  • David van Reybrouck's personal website
  • David van Reybrouck's publisher's website Archived 1 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine
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