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1.
World of stories por
  • Stevens, Aletta
Temas: INGLATERRA; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCION LITERARIA.
Origen: ITI BULLETIN: The journal of the Institute of Translation & Interpreting
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Milton Keynes : Institute of Translation & Interpreting, January-February 2014
Resumen: Aletta Stevens reveals how a paucity of translated books means English-speaking children are missing out on a rich variety of literature from around the world
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H56.

2.
Where the wild things are translating picture books por
  • Oittinen, Riitta
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: AUTORES NORTEAMERICANOS; IMAGEN; METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; TRADUCCIONES DE SENDAK.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: Translating picture books is a many-splendored thing: it includes not only the relationship between the verbal and the visual (images and other elements) but also issues like reading aloud and child images. In the following, while mainly concentrating on the visual, I will deal with the other questions as well, as they all interact and influence each other. My starting point is translating as rewriting for target-language audiences - we always need to ask the crucial question: "For whom?" Hence, while writing children's books is writing for children, translating children's literature is translating for children. (See Hunt 1990:1, 60-64 and Oittinen 2000.) The reasons why I take such a special interest in translating picture books are twofold: cultural and national as well as individual. In Finland, we translate a lot: 70-80
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

3.
When modern Little Red Riding Hoods cross borders... or don't... por
  • Beckett, Sandra L
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCIÓN DE CUENTOS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL FRANCÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIONES DE CAPERUCITA ROJA; TRADUCTORES LITERARIOS.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: Many contemporary retellings of Little Red Riding Hood, the best-known of all fairy tales, are by major, award-winning authors and illustrators, but all too often they remain completely unknown in the anglophone world. This paper examines retellings from numerous countries to show why or why not they cross international borders.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

4.
When children’s literature transcends its genre : translating Alice in Wonderland por
  • Kibbee, Douglas A
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL FRANCÉS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIONES DE ALICIA EN EL PAIS DE LAS MARAVILLAS; ADAPTACIÓN; TRADUCCION DE NOMBRES PROPIOS; TEORÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: A book such as Alice in Wonderland, written for a girl, but nowadays understandable only by adults, the translation of proper nouns can reveal the audience for which translators have addressed their works. This article looks at the translation of proper nouns. These cultural traits are first names, historical references, place names and names of languages: should these be changed to facilitate comprehension by children? This study is then used to evaluate some aspects of theories proposed by Shavit and Oittinen concerning adaptation and translation.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

5.
The translation of culture-bound elements into finnish in the post-war period por
  • Hagfors, Irma
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: AUTORES INGLESES; METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCION DE NOMBRES PROPIOS; TRADUCCION DE NOVELA; TRADUCCION DEL/AL FINLANDES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; TRADUCCIONES DE GRAHAME.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: Culture-bound elements, such as proper names and food items, not only place the story of a book in a specific culture and period of time, but also imply certain values and create an ambience. These elements also have an effect on how the reader identifies with the story and characters. Thus, it is important to find the most appropriate strategy to translate such elements. This paper considers the Finnish translation (1949) of Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows (1908), a multi-layered and allusive children's book set in Edwardian England, and some other children's tales translated into Finnish around the same era. The translation of The Wind in the Willows dates back to a period of time when British culture was not yet well known in Finland. The paper argues that certain inconsistencies in the translation of culture-bound elements in the book make it difficult for target text readers to understand its layers of meaning and to identify with the characters. Similar inconsistencies in the translation of culture-bound elements are found in other Finnish translations of children's books from the same period. The findings may be explained by a limited knowledge of foreign cultures in post-war Finland.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

6.
Translation for reading aloud por
  • Dollerup, Cay
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: AUTORES ALEMANES; ESTUDIOS DE TRADUCCIÓN; LECTURA; PROCESO DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE CUENTOS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCION DEL/AL DANES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL DANES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIONES DE GRIMM.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: The article takes a look at the translation of children's literature intended for reading aloud. The pragmatic (or theoretical) point of departure is a 'narrative contract' between the child (audience) and the reader as in the oral tradition of yesteryear. It is therefore argued that, at least initially, children's literature for reading aloud was a continuation of the narrative tradition in the extended family adapted to the conditions and mores of the nuclear family. The nuclear family was a 19th century innovation promoted by the new middle classes, and they best carried on the narrative tradition by means of stories such as those of the brothers Grimm in Germany and Hans Christian Andersen in Denmark. Referring to an informal questionnaire among Translation Studies scholars covering eleven countries, it is concluded that the tradition of reading aloud for children is alive and well. This leads to a model for the translational situation for read-aloud literature that calls for guiding principles in the exploration of differences between 'originals' and 'translations.' Having introduced such layers, viz. the structural, the linguistic, the content and intentional ones, a paratextual and chronological layer are also called for, because of the ubiquity of modern co-prints and the need to introduce diachronic perspectives. The article discusses decision-makers in the process of translation, such as publishers and the like, and also briefly views questions of translational traditions before it discusses translations of the Grimm Tales into English and Danish, to conclude that there are two different schools of 'respectable translators,' one targeting stories for reading aloud and another for silent reading, even though the translators may not be aware of this. The final part takes up questions concerning the translation of names, rhymes, and a highly complex text which is discussed in depth. The conclusion is that translation for reading aloud is an art requiring great competence of translators. It also ought to attract more attention from Translation Studies scholars because it questions fundamentals in translation work that are also found in other types of translation.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

7.
Translation and intercultural education por
  • Pascua Febles, Isabel
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: LITERATURA CANADIENSE; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ESPAÑOL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; EXTRANJERISMOS; ESPAÑA.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: This paper deals with translated Canadian multicultural literature written for children and its reception in an intercultural education context in Spanish schools. In the first part of the paper I will introduce intercultural education. In the second part, I will examine the role of the translator working in a multicultural environment where texts are written in one language (English) in one country (Canada), then translated into another language (Spanish) and published in Spain. I will also look at the reception of these translations as well as the strategies translators should use to maintain the otherness of the original texts.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

8.
Translating children's stories from Chinese to English : Strategies and methods por
  • Li, Li
Series ; vol.63n.4Temas: METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TEORIA DEL ESCOPO; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL CHINO; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIONES DE YIZHEN.
Origen: Babel
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Chino
Detalles de publicación: Sint-Amandsberg : Fédération Internationale des Traducteurs, july 2017
Resumen: Translation, according to the German functional approach to Translation Studies, is a purpose-driven interaction that involves many players. Translating children's stories is no exception. Using her personal experience of translating Mr. Wolf's Hotline, a book comprising 47 Chinese children's stories by Wang Yizhen, a contemporary Chinese writer , in light of the Skopos and text-type theories of functional approach in particular, the author has outlined the strategies and methods adopted in her translations in terms of language, structure and culture. With child readers in mind during the translation process, the translator has used rhetorical devices, onomatopoeic words, modal particles, and also changed some of the sentence structures of the stories, such as from indirect sentences into direct quotations, and from declarative sentences into questions. In terms of culture, three aspects, namely, the culture-loaded images, the names of the characters and nursery rhymes are singled out for detailed analyses. Though marginalized, 'children's literature is more complex than it seems, even more complex' (Hunt 2010:?1), and translation of children's literature is definitely challenging. This paper outlines the strategies and methods the author has adopted in translating some children's stories from Chinese to English.
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H17.

9.
Translating children’s literature in the arab world : the state of the art por
  • Mdallel, Sabeur
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL ARABE; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIONES DE LAS MIL Y UNA NOCHES; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; IDEOLOGIA; IDENTIDAD CULTURAL.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: Children’s literature in the Arab World is impregnated with morality, didactics and a heavy ideological bias, in spite of some attempts for change. Translating for children is, in its turn, governed by the same rules that govern writing for them.Translation is not only a lexical but also a cultural transfer. Adopting some protective cultural measures, while translating for children, becomes inevitable especially if the source and target cultures have little in common. The Arabian Nights is the first book for children in the Arab world, though not initially meant for them, to be translated into many languages and has become part of international Children’s Classics.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

10.
Traduire In the Night Kitchen, ou de la difficile lecture d'un album. por
  • Nières-Chevrel, Isabelle
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: ADAPTACIÓN; AUTORES NORTEAMERICANOS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL FRANCÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; TRADUCCIONES DE SENDAK.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Francés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: La traduction française de In the Night Kitchen se révèle très décevante. En confrontant cette traduction française et la traduction allemande qui lui est contemporaine, l'étude s'attache à cerner les résistances qu'offre l'album à toute traduction, le mécanisme d'aveuglement qui a présidé à la traduction française et l'écart des possibilités que donne aux traducteurs français et allemand leur langue respective. Elle s'interroge enfin sur la place qu'occupent les images dans la lecture d'un album. Lire un album, c'est lire tout à la fois des images et du texte, même si le traducteur ne rendra compte ensuite que de sa lecture à travers sa traduction du seul texte.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

11.
Time, narrative intimacy and the child : implications of the transition from the present to the past tense in the translation into english of children’s texts por
  • Lathey, Gillian
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; PROCESO DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; NIÑOS; BELL, ANTHEA; TRADUCTORES; LECTURA; INGLESES.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: The British version of Jean de Brunhoff’s Histoire de Babar is a striking example of the transition from the present to the past tense in the translation of children’s texts into English. With reference to theories of narrative time, this paper invites speculation on the impact of such a tense shift on the present-tense qualities of the original, on the performance of a shared reading by child and adult and, finally, on the relevance of the young child’s developing understanding of the role of tense in narrative.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

12.
Proper names in translations for children : Alice in Wonderland as a case in point por
  • Nord, Christiane
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCION DEL/AL PORTUGUES; ADAPTACIÓN; AUTORES INGLESES; METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCION DE NOMBRES PROPIOS; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ESPAÑOL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL FRANCÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL ITALIANO; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; TRADUCCIONES DE ALICIA EN EL PAIS DE LAS MARAVILLAS; TRADUCCIONES DE LEWIS CARROLL.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: Drawing on a corpus of eight translations of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland into five languages (German, French, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, Italian), the paper discusses the forms and functions of proper names in children's books and some aspects of their translation. In Alice in Wonderland, we find three basic types of proper names: names explicitly referring to the real world of author and original addressees (e.g., Alice, her cat Dinah, historical figures like William the Conqueror), names implicitly referring to the real world of author and original addressees (e.g., Elsie, Lacie and Tillie, referring to the three Liddell sisters Lorina Charlotte, Alice and Edith Mathilda), and names referring to fictitious characters. An important function of proper names in fiction is to indicate in which culture the plot is set. It will be shown that the eight translators use various strategies to deal with proper names and that these strategies entail different communicative effects for the respective audiences.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

13.
Outside influencias por
  • Robertson, Helen
Temas: CATALOGOS; LIBROS; LITERATURA INFANTIL; REINO UNIDO; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES.
Origen: ITI BULLETIN: The journal of the Institute of Translation & Interpreting
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Milton Keynes : Institute of Translation & Interpreting, may-june 2007
Resumen: Its first aim is to promote children ́s books in translation, but outside in has plans to expand its reach. Helen Robertson MIT has been a translator for 24 wears. For the last 14 years, she has run ker own translations business, which is now based in York
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H56.

14.
Narratology meets translation studies, or, the voice of the translator in children's literature por
  • O'Sullivan, Emer
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: ADAPTACIÓN; TEORÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; TRADUCTORES LITERARIOS.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: When critics identify 'manipulations' in translations, these are often described and analysed in terms of the differing norms governing the source and the target languages, cultures and literatures. This article focuses on the agent of the translation, the translator, and her/his presence in the translated text. It presents a theoretical and analytical tool, a communicative model of translation, using the category of the implied translator, the creator of a new text for readers of the target text. This model links the theoretical fields of narratology and translation studies and helps to identify the agent of 'change' and the level of communication in which the most significant modifications take place. It is a model applicable to all translated narrated literature but, as examples illustrate, due to the asymmetrical communication in and around children's literature, the implied translator as he/she becomes visible or audible as the narrator of the translation, is particularly tangible in translated children's literature.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

15.
Jetzt bist du in Deutschland, Däumling : Nils Holgersson on foreign soil : Subject to new norms por
  • Desmidt, Isabelle
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: ADAPTACIÓN; AUTORES SUECOS; METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL SUECO; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; TRADUCCIONES DE HOLGERSSON.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: The German words in the title are taken from the first German translation of the Swedish children's book Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige (Nils Holgersson's wonderful journey throughout Sweden, Lagerlöf 1906-1907). In this translation Nils is said to land in Germany, which is never the case in the Swedish original. Presumably, the German translator Klaiber added this extra visit to oblige the German readers with a visit of Nils to their own country. Looking at some of the German versions of Nils Holgersson, this article addresses the influence of extratextual factors, i.e., different kind of norms, on the translating and rewriting process.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

16.
From Harry to Garri : strategies for the transfer of culture and ideology in russian translations of two english fantasy stories por
  • Judith, Inggs
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: LITERATURA INGLESA; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL RUSO; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIONES DE HARRY POTTER; TRADUCCIONES DE LEWIS; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; IDEOLOGIA; IDENTIDAD CULTURAL.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: This article focuses specifically on two examples of fantasy stories and their translations into Russian: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (Lewis 1950), a classic English fantasy story, and Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (Rowling 1997), a modern blending of fantasy with the traditional English school story. The analysis shows that the approach to translation is largely random. In the translations of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, there is some evidence of simplification as a strategy, and some confusion over the appropriate translation of cultural items in the translations of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. Generally, however, the translators are shown not to have attempted to situate the stories in a Russian context, and have retained intact both the cultural backdrop and the moral values put forward in the works. A study of the reception of such works by young readers would provide valuable information about the success or failure of the translations discussed in this article.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

17.
Faithfulness in translation of children's literature : The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in chinese por
  • Kwok, Virginia
Series ; vol.62n.2Temas: INGLÉS - CHINO; METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL CHINO; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIONES DE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN.
Origen: Babel
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Sint-Amandsberg : Fédération Internationale des Traducteurs, april-june 2016
Resumen: Faithfulness as a principle of translation has been upheld for a long time despite many debates among scholars in the field. In the context of translating children's literature, this poses further challenges and recent studies have yet to reach a conclusion (Epstein 2012; Nikolajeva 2011; Henitiuk 2011; Kruger 2011; Emery 2004; Dai 2001; Hervey 1997). In this article, from the sociological perspective, I shall discuss this issue by examining Klingberg (1986)'s approach of being faithful to the source text and Oittinen (1993)'s strategy of being faithful to the readers respectively. A study of Chinese translations of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn for children readers will be looked at. Methods of dialogical approach: purification, simplification, rewording and modernization will be compared with equivalence method to find out which one offers a better reader reception. I argued that having an orientation and purpose of translation with a dialogical view will benefit readers more than simply adhering to the original without deviation at linguistic level. The reasons are that the target text will be more comprehensible for children readers' stage of cognitive and psychological development, life experience, knowledge, cultural tolerance and linguistic development in reading gems of foreign literature in translation.
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H17.

18.
Exploring cultural difference through translating children’s literature por
  • Metcalf, Eva-Maria
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ALEMAN; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DE CUENTOS; ADAPTACIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN Y CULTURA; PROYECTOS; ESTUDIANTES.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: This article is descriptive in nature, presenting a student-faculty project in which participants translated a short children’s story from German into English in order to explore the cultural embeddedness of language and the hermeneutic nature of translation. By reflecting on issues surrounding the translation of children’s literature and by imitating the situation of a professional translator, project participants gained insight into the workings of language and the complexities associated with translation.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

19.
Domestication and foreignization in translating american prose for slovenian children por
  • Mazi-Leskovar, Darja
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL INGLÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL ESLOVENO; TRADUCCIONES DE LA CABAÑA DEL TIO TOM; EXTRANJERISMOS; DOMESTICACION.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Inglés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: The purpose of this article is to describe and explore the examples of domestication and foreignization in translations of American prose read by Slovenian children. A few of the earlier American books that have entered the children’s literature canon have been read by dual audience and among these Uncle Tom’s Cabin has the longest tradition. The translations of the novel are presented in the light of domestication and foreignization endeavours. In order to complete and expand the picture of translating for children, a few additional works published in different eras of Slovenian translation history are briefly discussed.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

20.
De quelques aspects de la traduction en anglais des textes de Gabrielle Roy publiés pour les enfants por
  • Romney, Claude
Series Meta Volume 48, numéro 1-2, mai 2003 ; v. 48, n. 1-2Temas: AUTORES CANADIENSES; TRADUCCIÓN DE CUENTOS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL FRANCÉS; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCIONES DE ROY; TRADUCTORES LITERARIOS.
Origen: Meta, volume 48, numéro 1-2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Francés
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, mai 2003
Resumen: Les textes de la grande écrivaine canadienne-française Gabrielle Roy publiés pour les enfants n'avaient pas, à l'origine, été composés pour eux. Ils ne furent toutefois aucunement modifiés, une fois la décision prise de changer de lectorat. L'article qui suit examine certains aspects des traductions de trois de ces textes qui ont paru en anglais et sont l'oeuvre de deux traducteurs ayant pris pour point de départ les éditions pour enfants, dans le but d'établir s'ils avaient tenu compte du nouveau public. Il semble que le premier, plus que la seconde traductrice, ait adapté le texte des récits qu'il a transposés, afin de les rendre accessibles aux jeunes enfants.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para referencia: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre: No para préstamo (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

21.
La adaptación y la traducción en los textos literarios infantiles : su deslinde por
  • Pascua Febles, Isabel
  • Gaitero, Rafael Martín [ed.]
  • Vega, Miguel Angel [ed.]
  • Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, España
  • Encuentros Complutenses en torno a la traducción, 7 Madrid 24-29 noviembre 1997
Series Actas VII Encuentros Complutenses en torno a la Traducción : lengua y Cultura: estudios en torno a la traducciónTemas: METODOLOGÍA DE LA TRADUCCIÓN; TRADUCCIÓN DE CUENTOS; TRADUCCIÓN DE LITERATURA INFANTIL; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL ESPAÑOL; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES.
Origen: Encuentros Complutenses en torno a la traducción, 7
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Madrid : Universidad Complutense de Madrid.Instituto Universitario de Lenguas Modernas, 1999
Resumen: Este trabajo esta basado en el deslinde entre los conceptos de adaptación y de traducción siguiendo la teoría sobre los dos tipos de actividad bilingüe, centrándose en particular en las adaptaciones como técnica traductológica, sus tipos y sus motivos. La traducción de la literatura infantil, al igual que en cualquier tipo de texto, no tiene cabida la arbitrariedad, pues hay que respetar de igual forma al lector adulto que al niño-lector. Siempre que se necesiten "manipulaciones" deben estar motivadas por la no coincidencia de los conocimientos presupositivos, de las convenciones textuales o de las normas de comportamiento verbal de ambas culturas.
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: 061.3:81'25 E17 VII .

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