Translation and Nation: Towards a Cultural Politics of EnglishnessRoger Ellis, Liz Oakley-Brown Multilingual Matters, 2001 - 225 Seiten In recent years the marginal position which has defined translators and their texts has come under increasing and sustained challenge. However, although translation and subjectivity has been thoroughly considered in terms of post-colonialism and post-structuralism, there are few discussions which focus specifically on the construction of "Englishness" through vernacular translation. Using a range of theoretical approaches the five essays in this volume aim to realise such an understanding of translation by critically analyzing the cultural and political implications of translation and the construction of English subjectivities at particular historical moments. |
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Seite 54
... religion ' ( Duffy , 1992 : 568 ) , are framed by a Christian ideology attempting to shift the religious perspectives of its subjects . As the above extract from the Injunctions suggests , in the break with the past , expressed ...
... religion ' ( Duffy , 1992 : 568 ) , are framed by a Christian ideology attempting to shift the religious perspectives of its subjects . As the above extract from the Injunctions suggests , in the break with the past , expressed ...
Seite 67
... religious and political climate of the reign of Elizabeth I. Thomas Nashe seems to be the only sixteenth - century writer to comment on Golding's religious involvements ( Golding , 1937 : 205 ) . Not till the late nineteenth century do ...
... religious and political climate of the reign of Elizabeth I. Thomas Nashe seems to be the only sixteenth - century writer to comment on Golding's religious involvements ( Golding , 1937 : 205 ) . Not till the late nineteenth century do ...
Seite 68
... religious dimension , he does not develop his observations further . Lyne does go further : he suggests that the vocabulary employed by Golding throughout his version of the Metamorphoses signifies a text clearly engaged with mid ...
... religious dimension , he does not develop his observations further . Lyne does go further : he suggests that the vocabulary employed by Golding throughout his version of the Metamorphoses signifies a text clearly engaged with mid ...
Inhalt
Women Translators Gender and the Cultural Context | 85 |
Discourses of Allusion in | 120 |
W H Audens Poetic | 167 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Translation and Nation: Towards a Cultural Politics of Englishness Roger Ellis,Liz Oakley-Brown Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2001 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adopted text Algarotti argues argument attempt Auden and Kallman's Bassarids Behn Bible translations Book Calvin Calvinist Cartesian century Chaucer Christian claim classical allusion classical education construction contemporary context cultural Deanesly debate defined Descartes desire Dionysus discourse discussion edition emphasises England Entretiens Epistle essay figure Fontenelle Fontenelle's Framley Parsonage French function gender Golding Golding's translation Greek Gretham Hermaphroditus Horace Hudson ideas imagination implied John Calvin Kallman knowledge laity language Latin libretto linguistic literature Lollard MAENADS male marchioness means Metamorphoses metaphor Middle English moral myth Narcissus narrative narrator nature Newtonian opera original Ovid Ovid's text Peend's Pentheus philosopher poem political preface Prologue Protestant quotation quoted Rake's Progress reader religious role Salmacis scientific signify social textual Thackeray theory tion Tiresias Tom Brown's Schooldays tongue trans Trevisa Trollope Trollope's Ullerston understanding vernacular verse W.H. Auden women words writing Wycliffite þat