This three-volume work presents a systematic theory of Chinese-English translation that integrates historical facts, theoretical comparisons, scholarly analysis, and practical methods.
The author addresses key issues in the translation of Chinese classics while guiding readers through the art of translation and cultural transmission. Beginning with basic cultural concepts, the study moves through translation theory to practical applications - covering traditional Chinese culture, Western and Chinese translation theories, and in-depth analysis of classical texts. The volumes build upon each other to create a complete framework for understanding and practicing Chinese-English translation.
This set will serve as an essential resource for scholars and students of Chinese-English translation and Chinese studies who need practical translation guidance, as well as for translators working with classical Chinese texts.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Academic, Postgraduate, Professional Reference, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core
Illustrationen
16 s/w Tabellen
16 Tables, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 156 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-032-66697-6 (9781032666976)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Pan Wenguo is a tenured professor and a doctoral supervisor at East China Normal University. He is also the honorary president of the China Association for Comparative Studies between English and Chinese. As a renowned linguist, bilingual expert, and senior translator with international recognition, Professor Pan has made significant contributions to diverse fields: Chinese-English contrastive studies, Sinogram ontology, Middle Chinese rhyme tables, history of Chinese word formation, naming conventions across cultures, Western translation theory, translating practice, philosophical linguistics, teaching Chinese as a foreign language, and promoting Chinese culture globally.
Volume 1: Part I. The System and Core Focus of Chinese Culture 1. The System of Chinese Culture 2. The Way of Governance: The Core Focus of Chinese Culture 3. The Structure of Chinese Culture and Recommended Books for Reading Part II. New Thoughts for Rendering Chinese Classics into English 4. Translation into and out of One's Mother-Tongue and a Defense for the Latter 5. The Current Model and a New Approach to Translation 6. The Translation of Terminology: Divisions of Jing and Shi 7. The Translation of Terminology: Divisions of Zi and Ji Part III. The Wenzhang Theory of Translation 8. Translation Theory with Chinese Characteristics 9. Translation Theories and Their Cultural Background 10. Why Is It Called the Wenzhang Theory of Translation 11. The Theory of "Dao" and "Qi" of the Wenzhang Theory of Translation I 12. The Theory of "Dao" and "Qi" of the Wenzhang Theory of Translation II
Volume 2: Part I. A Brief History of Western Translation Theory 1. The Study of Translation Theory 2. Phase I: Classical 3. Phase II: Literary 4. Phase III: Philosophical 5. Phase IV: Linguistic 6. Phase V: After "Cultural Turn" Part II. A Brief History of Translation and Translation Studies in China: Before the 20th Century 7. From the Origins to Buddhist Sutra Translation 8. Translations in the Ming and Qing Dynasties: From Science and Technology to Reform 9. Yan Fu's Thoughts on Translation Part III. A Brief History of Translation and Translation Studies in China: Since the 20th Century 10. The Translation Trend in China in the 20th Century 11. Theoretical Research I 12. Theoretical Research II 13. Research on Translation of Terminology 14. Characteristics of Poetry Translation 15. Concepts of Poetry Translation Research and their Historical Origin
Volume 3: Part I. Jing-Division 1. Translations of the Canons of Changes, Historical Documents, and Poetry 2. Translations of the Notes of Rites and the Zuo's Transmission 3. Translations of the Great Learning, the Mean and the Analects 4. Translations of the Mengzi Part II. Zi-Division 5. Translations of the Confucian School 6. Translations of the Daoist School 7. Translations of the Schools of Legalism and Mohism 8. Translations of the Schools of Strategism and Integrativism