Descripción
Sonja Brentjes, Jens Hoyrup, Bruce R. O'Brien (eds) - Pages: 406 p. Illustrations:2 b/w, 5 tables b/w. Language(s):English. Brepols. NEW. Hardcover. Publication Year:2022 - SUMMARY What has driven acts of translation in the past, and what were the conditions that shaped the results? In this volume, scholars from across the humanities interrogate narratives on the process of translation: by historical translators ranging from ancient Babylonia to early modern Japan and the British Empire, and by academics from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries who interpreted these translators practices. In Part 1 the volume authors reflect on the history of the approaches to the phenomenon of translation in their specific fields of competence in order to learn what shaped the academic questions asked, what theoretical and practical tools were deployed, which arguments were privileged, and why certain kinds of evidence (but not others) were thought to be the basis for understanding the function and purpose of all translation performed in a given culture. Part II explores how translators and authors from antiquity to modern times described their own motivations and the circumstances in which they chose to translate. In both parts, the contributors disentangle histories of translation from the specialized intellectual fields (such as science, religion, law, or literature) with which they have been bound in order to make the case that we understand translation best when we take into account all cultural practices and translation activities cutting synchronically and diachronically through the entire societal fabric. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Sonja Brentjes, in cooperation with Jens Høyrup and Bruce O Brien Part 1: Observer Narratives Scholarly Translation in the Ancient Middle East: Ancient and Modern Perspectives C. Jay Crisostomo Interdisciplinary Interactions: Septuagint Studies, Classics, and Translation Studies Benjamin G. Wright III A Plurality of Voices: Fragmented Narratives on Syriac Translations Matteo Martelli Re-visiting the Translation Narratives: The Multiple Contexts of the Arabic Translation Projects Miriam Shefer-Mossensohn Philosophical Pahlavi Literature of the Ninth Century Götz König Changing Perceptions in Modern Scholarship on Tangut Translations of Chinese Texts Imre Galambos Biblical Theology, Scholarly Approaches, and the Bible in Arabic Miriam Lindgren Hjälm Translating inside al-Andalus: From Ibn Rushd to Ibn Juljul Maribel Fierro Part 2: Participant Narratives From Opheleia to Precision: Dionysius the Areopagite and the Evolution of Syriac Translation Techniques Emiliano Fiori Wisdom in Disguise: Translation Narratives and Pseudotranslations in Arabic Alchemy Christopher Braun Philology and Polemics in the Prologues to the Latin Talmud Dossier Alexander Fidora Faraj ben Salīm of Agrigento: Translation, Politics and Jewish Identity in Medieval Sicily Lucia Finotto Practices of Translation in Medieval Kannada Sciences: Removing the Conflict between Textual Authority and the Worldly Eric Gurevitch The Trope of Sanskrit Origin in Pre-Modern Tamil Literature Eva Wilden Ibn al Quff the Translator, Ibn al-Quff the Physician: Translation and Authority in a Medieval Commentary on the Hippocratic Aphorisms Nicolas Carpentieri Isaac Aboab da Fonseca s Preface to his Hebrew Translation of Abraham Cohen De Herrera s Puerta del Cielo Federico Dal Bo Mahometism in Translation: Joseph Morgan s Version of Mohamad Rabadán s Discurso de la Luz (1723 1725) Teresa de Soto The Possibility of Translation: A Comparison of the Translation Theories of Ogyū Sorai and Ōtsuki Gentaku Rebekah Clements The Hermeneutics of Mathematical Reconciliation: Two Pandits and the Benares Sanskrit College Dhruv Raina. N° de ref. del artículo 00646
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