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1.
Translating multilingual Singapore : an anthological perspective por
  • Lee, Tong King
Series Volume 56, Issue 1, 2010 ; v. 56, n. 1Temas: ANTOLOGIA; BILINGUISMO; CHINO; INGLÉS; LENGUAJE; MALAYO; SINGAPUR; TAMIL; TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCION LITERARIA.
Origen: Babel - Volume 56, Issue 1, 2010
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Chino
Detalles de publicación: Sint-Amandsberg : Fédération Internationale des Traducteurs, january-march 2010
Resumen: This paper explores the ideological function of translation in negotiating power relations among languages in multilingual Singapore. Based on an analysis of the discursive roles of translation in multilingual literary anthologies published between 1985 and 2008, the paper argues that the power relation between English and the mother tongue languages has shifted over the past two decades. Central to this ideological shift is translation, the underlying discursive mechanism in all multilingual publications in Singapore. It has been found that the potential of a language to be translated into, as opposed to its being translated out of, is directly proportional to its symbolic capital in a multilingual society. It has also been predicted that the future trend in multilingual literary translation in Singapore will tend towards a multi-directional approach whereby the four official languages engage one another multilaterally in a complex dynamic of translation relations.
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H17.

2.
A feminist woman with a given female language : a contradictory figure in the Japanese translation of Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman por
  • Furukawa, Hiroko
Series ; vol.58n.2Temas: AUTORES CANADIENSES; GENERO; MUJERES; TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCION DE NOVELA; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL JAPONES; TRADUCCION LITERARIA; TRADUCCIONES DE ATWOOD.
Origen: Babel
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: jap
Detalles de publicación: Sint-Amandsberg : Fédération Internationale des Traducteurs, april-june 2012
Resumen: "The acclaimed Canadian novelist Margaret Atwood published The Edible Woman in 1969 when feminism was becoming an influential trend in North America. Although this story has a radical feminist voice, The Edible Woman was translated by a male translator, Oura Akio, in 1996, and his language choice for the protagonist is excessively feminine. (...) In the Japanese translation, readers are likely to find a contradictory figure in Marian and she seems to be happy to use impeccable women's language given and promoted by male-dominant authorities. (...) This fact interferes with the novel's feminist purpose. I therefore examine the effect of Maian's language use in the Japanese translation from a reader-response theory and a relevance theory point of view."
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H17.

3.
Discursive mediation in translation : Representation of the Harry Wu topic in the chinese translations of living history. por
  • Wang, Hui
  • Zhu, Chunshen
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 4, décembre 2009 ; v. 54, n. 4Temas: CENSURA; MEDIACIÓN; PROCESO DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL CHINO; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCION LITERARIA; TRADUCCIÓN Y SOCIEDAD; TRADUCCIONES DE HARRY WU.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 4
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, décembre 2009
Resumen: This paper describes how mediation in translation is realized by means of inclusion and exclusion of information at the selection stage and discursive deviations at the presentation stage in the process of target text production. It discusses the effect of mediation in relation to two types of the target text recipients, one is termed professional readers representing the censoring authorities and the other the intended reading public, and their respective socio-cultural backgrounds. Our argument in this paper is that an investigation of translation from the perspective of mediation helps reveal the power struggle underlying the translation process. The detailed description of the textual realization of mediation, in particular, helps create an awareness of the various ways the target text producer may take to mediate the translation process to achieve a compromise between the author's interests and the professional readers' political concerns so as to get the translation published.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

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