Voices in Translation: Bridging Cultural DividesGunilla M. Anderman Multilingual Matters, 2007 - 160 páginas In choosing to render dialect and vernacular speech into Scots, Bill Findlay, to whose memory this volume is dedicated, made a pioneering contribution in safeguarding the authenticity of voices in translation. The scene of the book is set by an overview of approaches to rendering foreign voices in English translation including those of the people to whom Findlay introduced us in his Scots dialect versions of European plays. Martin Bowman, his frequent co-translator follows with a discussion of their co-translation of playwright Jeanne-Mance Delisle. Different ways of bridging the cultural divide in the translation between English and a number of plays written in a number of European languages are then illustrated including the custom of creating English versions, an approach rejected by contributions that argue in favour of minimal intervention on the part of the translator. But transferring the social and cultural milieu that the speakers of other languages inhabit may also cause problems in translation, as discussed by some translators of fiction. In addition attention is drawn to the translators' own attitude and the influence of the time in which they live. In conclusion, stronger forces in the form of political events are highlighted that may also, adversely or positively, have a bearing on the translation process. |
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... Less immediately accessible - and consequently less successful as a vehicle for Broad Scots on the stage , rather than the page - Young's experiments of the 1950s and 1960s might have remained a dead end in the use of literary Scots in ...
... less graphic ' killed ' . On three occasions , she uses the less final ' lifeless ' , rather than the literal ' dead ' to describe the appearance of the heroine after her stepmother's attempts on her life . When the dwarfs discover her ...
... less agree is in relation to the style in which the tale is written . The Grimms ' process of editing their tales , which they claimed had origins in oral tradition , produced a distinctive and standardised style . The Grimm ' genre ...
Conteúdo
Gunilla Anderman | 6 |
The Vernacular Journey | 16 |
Drama in Scots Translation | 32 |
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