
Translation and the Manipulation of Difference
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Shamma examines the reception of Arabic literature - especially the Arabian Nights - in nineteenth-century England and offers a detailed analysis of the period's major translations from Arabic: by Edward Lane, Richard Burton and Wilfred Blunt. He demonstrates that the long, complicated history of interaction, often confrontation, between Europe and the Arab World, where (mis)representations of the Other were intricately embroiled with political struggles, provides a critical position from which to examine the crucial role of context, above and beyond the textual elements of the translation, in shaping the political effects of translation. Examining translation techniques and decisions in the context of the translators' own goals as well as the conditions that surrounded the reception of their work, the study shows how each translator 'manipulated' his original in line with political positions that ranged from (implicit) acquiescence to steadfast resistance to colonialism. In a carefully elaborated critique of totalizing positions, the author argues that the foreignizing-domesticating model is too limited to describe the social and political function of translation and calls for a more complex understanding of the sociopolitical dimensions of translation strategies.
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Content
Edward William Lane's Translation of The Arabian Nights
1. The Age of Galland
Galland and His Readers
2. Galland Reconsidered
3. Lane and The Arabian Nights
The British Colonial Interest in Egypt
The Describer of Egypt
The Arabian Nights
"An epoch in the history of popular Eastern literature"
Literal Translation and the Exhibitionary Complex
Literalism in Postcolonial Theories
2. The Exotic Dimension of Foreignizing Strategies
Richard Francis Burton's Translation of The Arabian Nights
1. A Rebel Manque
The "Pilgrimage" to Mecca
2. Burton the Translator
The Arabian Nights
Burton and his Readers
Contextualizing the Nights
"Oriental in tone and colour"
"A complete picture of Eastern peoples"
3. Foreignism or Exoticism?
4. Venuti on Burton
3. Domestication as Resistance
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt's Translations from Arabic
1. Looking for a Cause
In Byron's Footsteps
2. A "Political First Love"
The "Rob Roy of the Desert"
"Shepard rule"
3. The "scourge of the oppressor"
Blunt and the Irish Literary Revival
4. Blunt the Translator
A New Rubaiyat?
5. Translation as a Political Act
Conclusion
Translation as Adjustment
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