City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Literary translation and the rediscovery of reading, Clive Scott

Label
Literary translation and the rediscovery of reading, Clive Scott
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Literary translation and the rediscovery of reading
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
808359758
Responsibility statement
Clive Scott
Summary
The act of translation is perhaps the ultimate performance of reading. By translating a text translators rework the source text into a reflection of their reading experience. In fact all reading is translation, as each reader incorporates associations and responses into the reading process. Clive Scott argues that the translator needs new linguistic resources to do justice to the intricacies of the reading consciousness, and explores different ways of envisaging the translation of a literary work, not only from one language to another, but also from one form to another within the same language. With examples drawn from different literatures, including English, this exciting new departure in translation theory has much to offer to students of literature and of comparative literary criticism. It also encourages all readers of literature to become translators in their turn, to use translation to express and give shape to their encounters with texts"
Table Of Contents
Introduction; 1. Reading and translation; 2. Voice and rhythm; 3. Translating the textual environment (1); 4. Translating the textual environment (2); 5. Translating the acousticity of voice; 6. Free verse and the translation of rhythm; 7. The reinvention of the literary in literary translation; 8. Writing and overwriting the sound of the city; Epilogue: portrait of a reader: Malcolm Bowie in search of the critical interworld; Bibliographical references
Mapped to

Incoming Resources