The world of translation
Tipo de material: TextoDetalles de publicación: New York : P.E.N. American Center , 1971Descripción: 384 pTema(s): Resumen: Conference papers rarely make good reading. Written to be read aloud, they fall somewhere between the speech, which is hortatory and calculated to persuade, and the essay, which is discursive and was rudely defined to by Dr Johnson as "an irregular indigested piece". Except, perhaps, papers presented at meetings on the exact sciences, once in print they are rarely heard of again. This collection of papers on translation has some chance of meeting a better fate. One difference between it and other books on the subject known to me is the emotion stirred in the reader by so many of its contributors.Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
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Libros | Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre | OLD | H 81'255.4: 061.3 =111 W893 1971 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible | 2065 |
Conference papers rarely make good reading. Written to be read aloud, they fall somewhere between the speech, which is hortatory and calculated to persuade, and the essay, which is discursive and was rudely defined to by Dr Johnson as "an irregular indigested piece". Except, perhaps, papers presented at meetings on the exact sciences, once in print they are rarely heard of again. This collection of papers on translation has some chance of meeting a better fate. One difference between it and other books on the subject known to me is the emotion stirred in the reader by so many of its contributors.
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