Vincent Kuitenbrouwer is Senior Lecturer History of International Relations. He is specialised in nineteenth- and twentieth-century imperial history, and has a special interest in colonial media. In 2012 he published the monograph War of Words. Dutch pro-Boer Propaganda and the South African War. Between November 2020 and September 2023 he co-ordinated the project 'Media War' on propaganda in Dutch-language media during the Second World War at the Dutch Institute for Sound and Vision. In recent years he also published widely on Dutch international radio-broadcasting in the late colonial era and the era of decolonisation.
Research interests
History of international radio-broadcasting
Colonial media history
History of the Dutch empire
Decolonisation
History of South Africa
Imperial culture in Europe
'Dutch Speaking to Dutch. Broadcasts from the Netherlands to Indonesia during the Decolonization War (1945–1949)', Journal of Radio & Audio Media 29:1 (2022) 42-60. Go to journal website
'Radio as a Tool of Empire. Intercontinental Broadcasting from the Netherlands to the Dutch East Indies in the 1920s and 1930s', Itinerario, vol. 40:1 (2016) 83-103. Go to journal website
with Marieke Bloembergen eds., 'A New Dutch Imperial History. Connecting Dutch and Overseas Pasts', special issue of BMGN-Low Countries Historical Review 128:1 (2013). Open access version available via journal website.
War of Words. Dutch Pro-Boer Propaganda and the South African War (1899-1902) (Amsterdam University Press 2012). Open access version available via OAPEN.