The Translator's TurnJohns Hopkins University Press, 1991 - 318 pages Despite landmark works in translation studies such as George Steiner's After Babel and Eugene Nida's The Theory and Practice of Translation, most of what passes as con-temporary "theory" on the subject has been content to remain largely within the realm of the anecdotal. Not so Douglas Robinson's ambitious book, which, despite its author's protests to the contrary, makes a bid to displace (the deconstructive term is apposite here) a gamut of earlier cogitations on the subject, reaching all the way back to Cicero, Augustine, and Jerome. Robinson himself sums up the aim of his project in this way: "I want to displace the entire rhetoric and ideology of mainstream translation theory, which ... is medieval and ecclesiastical in origin, authoritarian in intent, and denaturing and mystificatory in effect." -- from http://www.jstor.org (Sep. 12, 2014). |
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Page 47
... speech , that unpleasantly physical , and therefore chaotic and fallen , phenomenon , but la langue , the " spiritual " or idealized system that supposedly undergirds our speech . It is the rightness that Saussure feels in propounding ...
... speech , that unpleasantly physical , and therefore chaotic and fallen , phenomenon , but la langue , the " spiritual " or idealized system that supposedly undergirds our speech . It is the rightness that Saussure feels in propounding ...
Page 101
... speech ; Saussure himself , in the Cours de linguistique général , does point the way to a serious study of speech , and with a little work linguists could redress the balance until speech and system were almost on a par with each other ...
... speech ; Saussure himself , in the Cours de linguistique général , does point the way to a serious study of speech , and with a little work linguists could redress the balance until speech and system were almost on a par with each other ...
Page 264
... speech - act theory , sketchy as it is , is more advanced than Austin's , who insists on retaining a hierarchy between primary or ordinary or " serious " speech acts , which mean what they say , and secondary or literary or ...
... speech - act theory , sketchy as it is , is more advanced than Austin's , who insists on retaining a hierarchy between primary or ordinary or " serious " speech acts , which mean what they say , and secondary or literary or ...
Table des matières
The Idiosomatics of Translation | 15 |
The Ideosomatics of Translation | 29 |
Instrumentalism | 54 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
abstract advertising Augustine Augustine's Augustinian Bakhtin become Benjamin Bible translation body Buber Burke called Chapter Christian complexity conversion course cultural Derrida dialectic dialogical dualism emotional English equivalence ethical Eugene Nida example experience fact feel Finnish George Steiner God's Goethe Harold Bloom hermeneutical heteroglossia human I-You ically ideal ideological ideosomatic programming instrument interpretation ironic translator Kenneth Burke kind language lation liberal linguistic logical logological Luther mainstream translation matic meaning medieval metalepsis metaphor metonymic mind never Nida original paradigm perfect perfectionism perfectionist person perverse poem poet political rhetoric romantic sense sense-for-sense shift SL and TL SL author SL text SL writer somatic response speak speaker specific speech spirit stable Steiner subversion synecdochic talk theorists things third seal tion TL reader TL receptor tradition trans transcendental translation theory translator's trope turn understanding Väinämöinen Western translation word-for-word words ἐν καὶ