
Tradition, Trauma, Translation is concerned with how Classic texts - mainly Greek and Latin but also Arabic and Portuguese - become present in later cultures and how they resonate in the modern. A distinguished international team of contributors and responders examine the topic in different ways. Some discuss singular encounters with the Classic - those of Heaney, Pope, Fellini, Freud, Ibn Qutayba, Cavafy and others - and show how translations engage with the affective impact of texts over time and space. Poet-translator contributors draw on their own experience here. Others offer images of translation: as movement of a text over time, space, language, and culture. Some of these images are resistant, even violent: tradition as silencing, translation as decapitation, cannibalistic reception. Others pose searching questions about the interaction of modernity with tradition: what is entailed in 'The Price of the Modern'? Drawing, as it does, on Classical, Modernist, Translation, Reception, Comparative Literary, and Intercultural Studies, the volume has the potential to suggest critiques of practice in these disciplines but also concerns that are common to all these fields.
This volume investigates how classical texts from Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Portuguese traditions persist and resonate within modern cultural frameworks. Editors Jan Parker and Timothy Mathews assemble a diverse group of scholars and poet-translators to analyze the mechanisms of reception, focusing on the affective impact of these texts across temporal and linguistic boundaries. The work argues that the interaction between the classical and the modern is not merely a passive inheritance but an active, often volatile process of translation and transformation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the fields of comparative literature and classical reception studies frequently cite this volume for its interdisciplinary approach to the complexities of cultural transmission. Experts highlight the text as a significant contribution to understanding the intersection of modernism and classical tradition through the lens of translation theory.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2011-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191617601
ISBN-13:
9780191617607
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