
Literary Translation
Description
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Literary Translation introduces students to the components of the discipline and models the practice. Three concise chapters help to familiarize students with:
what motivates the act of translation
how to read and critique literary translations
how to read for translation.
A range of sustained case studies, both from existing sources and the author's own research, are provided along with a selection of relevant tasks and activities and a detailed glossary. The book is also complemented by a feature entitled 'How to get started in literary translation' on the Routledge Translation Studies Portal (http://cw.routledge.com/textbooks/translationstudies/).
Literary Translation is an essential guidebook for all students of literary translation within advanced undergraduate and postgraduate/graduate programmes in translation studies, comparative literature and modern languages.
Reviews / Votes
'Chantal Wright's survey of current thinking about literary translation is both a masterful synthesis and a compelling critique. By linking why translators translate with how they read, she powerfully demonstrates the interactions between theory and practice. If you want to know how the cultural and political stakes of translating literature are understood today, read this book--now.' Lawrence Venuti, Temple University, USA'An impressive volume, bringing the theory and practice of literary translation into closer intellectual engagement with each other. Especially appealing is the investigation into the often intimate relationship between individual reading experiences and the practice of translation. This engagingly written work will have a profound impact on the teaching of literary translation in tertiary institutions.' Rita Wilson, Monash University, Australia
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Person
Content
Chapter 1 Why do we translate?
Chapter 2 How do we read translations?
Chapter 3 How do translators read?
Conclusion
Appendix
Tzveta Sofronieva's German-language poems
Glossary
Index
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