01815nas a2200241 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653001500043653001700058653002400075653001600099653001400115653002000129653001600149653001200165100001900177245009600196856011800292300001200410490000800422520112300430022002001553 d10aEndearment10aGezelligheid10aintangible heritage10aNetherlands10aNostalgia10aNostalgiascapes10aSemioscapes10aTourism1 aOlivier Rieter00aNostalgiascapes and Images of the Netherlands On Tourism, Intangible Heritage and Nostalgia uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85103546586&partnerID=40&md5=1a0ef2b301190393402b82b6b033326a a667-6780 v1213 aNostalgiascapes are specific places where a coherent and positive story about the past is told. This article discusses the Dutch Ellert and Brammert Open-air Museum in the province of Drenthe and the Dutch De Bruine Kroeg pub as nostalgiascapes where an attachment (endearment or vertedering ) for Dutchness is created. Dutchness is also represented in several places in other countries, such as Germany, the United States, Japan and China, where a stereotypical version of the Netherlands is displayed. This article discusses three forms of vertedering . Firstly, the article addresses the Western Netherlands (Randstad) inhabitants paternalistic view of the backward rural rest of the country (of which Drenthe is supposedly a prototype). Secondly, the article addresses the place of the Dutch positive self-congratulatory view of their national tradition of Dutch gezelligheid (coziness) in pubs and homes. Finally, the article examines the partly paternalistic view of Dutch old-fashioned quaintness displayed in some foreign countries based on stereotypes of Dutchness (wooden shoes, tulips, mills). a00428523 (ISSN)