学生们为人们分发热钱。莱顿的城市身份和有争议的记忆的历史(1841-2016)

B. V. D. Steen, P. Burger
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摘要

传说荷兰莱顿大学城的学生们过去常常在街上向不太富裕的市民扔硬币。拿起硬币,他们冒着烫伤手指的危险:学生们把硬币放在煎锅里加热。这个故事被认为是社会和文化差异的象征,将工人和学生分开,或者更一般地说,“城镇和大学”。关于这个故事的真实性和这个恶作剧发生的时间,人们众说纷纭。我们对这个当地传说的研究是基于当地报纸和其他最近可用的数字化资源,使我们能够在1841年至2016年的时间段内追溯这个故事。热硬币恶作剧与一个更温和的、国际知名的习俗有关,在这个习俗中,扔硬币的人和被扔硬币的人都知道会发生什么。在荷兰,关于这个恶作剧的故事特别与莱顿镇联系在一起,在20世纪恶作剧本身不再表演之后变得更加突出。我们在集体记忆和城市身份的背景下阅读热币传说:在两个世纪的过程中,不同的社会群体将这个故事作为群体内和群体外的边界标记,更广泛地说,作为反映城镇身份变化的一种手段。在20世纪下半叶的城市更新中,莱顿从一个古老、贫穷的工业城镇转变为一个现代、富裕的城市中心,并将自己标榜为“知识之城”。从修辞上讲,热币传奇是作为社会凝聚力的一个测试案例呈现的:莱顿真的留下了它分裂的历史吗?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Studenten strooien hete centen voor het volk. Stedelijke identiteit en de geschiedenis van een omstreden herinnering in Leiden (1841-2016)
Legend has it that students in the Dutch university town of Leiden used to throw coins in the street for the less well-off citizens. Picking up the coins, these risked burning their fingers: the students had heated the coins in a skillet. This story is told as emblematic for the social and cultural differences dividing laborers and students, or, more generally, ‘town and gown’. Opinions differ about the veracity of the story and the time period during which this prank was perpetrated. Our study of this local legend is based on local newspapers and other digitized sources that have recently become available, allowing us to trace the story over a time period that spans the years 1841-2016. The hot coins prank is related to a more benign, internationally known custom during which both throwers and throwees know what to expect. In the Netherlands, stories about the prank have become associated in particular with the town of Leiden, becoming more prominent during the 20th century, after the prank itself was no longer performed. We read the hot coin legend in the context of collective memory and urban identity: over the course of two centuries, various social groups have used the story as a boundary marker between in-group and out-group, and more broadly as a means to reflect on the shifting identity of the town. During the years of urban renewal in the second half of the twentieth century, Leiden transformed from an old, poor, industrial town into a modern, affluent urban centre that touts itself as a ‘city of knowledge’. Rhetorically, the hot coin legend is presented as a test case for social cohesion: did Leiden truly leave behind its divided history?
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