COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Cambridge Conversations in Translation > Translation and Poetry (Workshop)
Translation and Poetry (Workshop)Add to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Dr Marcus Tomalin. Within the domain of literary translation, poetry has traditionally attracted a great deal of scholarly attention (Holmes 1970, 1988; Lefevere 1975, 1992; Bassnett 1980; Hermans 1985; Eco 2003; Robinson 2010; Jones 2011; Reynolds 2011, Drury 2015). The constraints offered by rhyme and meter may sometimes appear to justify the statement (often attributed to Robert Frost) that ‘poetry is that which is lost in translation’. The notion of translatability frequently seems to defy the very essence of poetry since it is a literary medium in which meaning and structural form seem to be inextricably linked. Even proponents of strikingly different approaches to poetry translation usually agree that any expectation of absolute ‘fidelity’ (whatever that is) must necessarily be qualified or compromised in one way or another. But which aspects of a given poem can be safely jettisoned, and which must be doggedly preserved? Nabokov’s literal approach contrasts with Ezra Pound’s ‘remakes’, and the ongoing debate sparked by Paul Celan’s work offers numerous challenging and conflicting insights. From crib translation to ‘versioning’, from tribute to parody, from Bringhurst’s ‘re-elicitings’ to Queneau’s exercises in style – translation has been an important aspect of creative practice for many influential poets. This Workshop will focus on practical aspects of poetry translation in the 20th century, especially the role of the avant-guarde, concrete poetry, and French poetry. This talk is part of the Cambridge Conversations in Translation series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsThe Encyclopaedia of Literature in African Languages Cambridge Hub events Department of Geography - main Departmental seminar seriesOther talksA stochastic model for understanding PIN polarity in isolated cells Superconformal quantum mechanics and integrability Louisiana Creole - a creole at the periphery An Introduction to Cluster Categories of Type A A physical model for wheezing in lungs A continuum theory for the fractures in brittle and ductile solids |