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Ethics, aesthetics and décision: literary translating in the wars of the Yugoslav succession

Lookup NU author(s): Emeritus Professor Francis Jones

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Abstract

This is a participant-interpreter study of how issues of loyalty, ethics and ideology condition the action of a literary translator. A case-study is presented of the author’s socio-ethical dilemmas and decisions while translating Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian literature into English during the 1990s. This aims both to contribute to the socio-cultural historiography of that period and to illustrate how a literary translator might perform in settings of acute socio-cultural conflict. The case-study observations are then used to explore the nature of the literary translator as a textual and social actor. The “constrained autonomy” of the literary translator is seen as having several key implications. Among these are: that all translating acts have ethical and socio-political repercussions; that partiality informed by awareness of the demands of the wider social web may often be a more appropriate stance than neutrality; that the power structures within which the literary translator acts are more important than target language or translating strategy per se in determining source-culture representation, and that time/workload/chance factors may also play a role here; and that confronting Derrida's indécidable is a defining feature of translator autonomy.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Jones FR

Editor(s): Baker, M

Publication type: Book Chapter

Publication status: Published

Book Title: Translation Studies: Critical Concepts in Linguistics

Year: 2009

Volume: 3

Pages: 3-24

Edition: 1st

Number of Volumes: 4

Publisher: Routledge

Place Published: London

Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item

ISBN: 9780415344227


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