Violent Phenomena
eBook - ePub

Violent Phenomena

Essays Toward the Future of Literary Translation

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Violent Phenomena

Essays Toward the Future of Literary Translation

About this book

“These essays, deftly blending the political and the personal, offer fresh, galvanizing, and passionate perspectives on literary translation.”—Jhumpa Lahiri

A manifesto in 22 essays, Violent Phenomena breaks stale rules about who can and should translate, envisioning a future more reflective of the beautiful polyphony of literature in all languages.

?What would it take to unlearn centuries of colonial influence over the books we read? The values, institutions, and structures that determine which of the world’s books and authors are translated, and by whom, are in dire need of disruption. Violent Phenomena brings together established and emerging translators from around the world to guide the way.

Frantz Fanon wrote in 1961 that “Decolonization is always a violent phenomenon,” meaning that the violence of colonialism can only be counteracted in kind. As colonial legacies linger today, what are the ways in which we can disentangle literary translation from imperial violence? In stark contrast with their predecessors, who were trained to be as “neutral” as possible, the contributors to Violent Phenomena demand engagement with the translator’s identity, voice, and cultural context, which shapes the result and in turn has an outsize influence on how a writer’s work is received.

From Anton Hur on “The Mythical English Reader” to Sawad Hussain’s “Why Don’t You Translate Pakistanian?,” these essays face the hard questions head on, offering readers the tools they need to demand a new literary playing field.

Features a new foreword by award-winning translator and author Bruna Dantas Lobato.

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Information

Publisher
HarperVia
Year
2026
eBook ISBN
9780063321236

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Note to Readers
  4. Contents
  5. Foreword: Bruna Dantas Lobato
  6. Introduction: Kavita Bhanot & Jeremy Tiang
  7. 1. All the Violence It May Carry on its Back: A Conversation about Literary Translation by Gitanjali Patel & Nariman Youssef
  8. 2. “Blackness” in French: On Translation, Haiti, and the Matter of Race by Kaiama L. Glover
  9. 3. The Lion of the Tribe of Judah is Dead! by Aaron Robertson
  10. 4. Right to Access, Right of Refusal: Translation of/as Absence, Sanctuary, Weapon by Khairani Barokka
  11. 5. The Mythical English Reader by Anton Hur
  12. 6. Preserving the Tender Things by Ayesha Manazir Siddiqi
  13. 7. The Combined Kingdom:‘Decolonising’ Welsh Translation by Eluned Gramich
  14. 8. Seeking Hajar: Decolonising Translation of Classical Arabic Texts by Sofia Rehman
  15. 9. Proust’s Oreo by Layla Benitez-James
  16. 10. Western Poets Kidnap Your Poems and Call Them Translations: On the Colonial Phenomenon of Rendition as Translation by Mona Kareem
  17. 11. Freed from the Monolingual Shackles: a Mongrel CrĂŽnica for the Mutt Translator by LĂșcia Collischonn
  18. 12. Why Don’t You Translate Pakistanian? by Sawad Hussain
  19. 13. Translating The Invisible: A Monologue About Translating the Poems of Nagraj Manjule by Yogesh Maitreya
  20. 14. Desassimilar: Decolonizing a Granddaughter of Assimilados by Sandra Tamele
  21. 15. Translation for the Quaint but Incomprehensible in parsetreeforestfire by Hamid Roslan
  22. 16. Worlds in a Word: Loss and Translation in Kashmir by Onaiza Drabu
  23. 17. Translations from Armenian: Reimag(in)ing the Inassimilable by Shushan Avagyan
  24. 18. Between CriĂ© and Écrit by Monchoachi (tr. Eric Fishman)
  25. 19. Bad Translation by Elisa Taber
  26. 20. Considering the Dystranslation of Zong! by M. NourbeSe Philip & Barbara Ofosu-Somuah
  27. 21. Not a Good Fit by Madhu Kaza
  28. Acknowledgments
  29. Recommended Reading
  30. About the Contributors
  31. Copyright
  32. About the Publisher

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Yes, you can access Violent Phenomena by Kavita Bhanot,Jeremy Tiang in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Languages & Linguistics & Publishing. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.