Bourdieu in translation studies : the socio-cultural dynamics of Shakespeare translation in Egypt

Author(s)

    • Hanna, Sameh

Bibliographic Information

Bourdieu in translation studies : the socio-cultural dynamics of Shakespeare translation in Egypt

Sameh Hanna

(Routledge advances in translation and interpreting studies, 14)

Routledge, 2017

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

"First published 2016 by Routledge"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-217) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book explores the implications of Pierre Bourdieu's sociology of cultural production for the study of translation as a socio-cultural activity. Bourdieu's work has continued to inspire research on translation in the last few years, though without a detailed, large-scale investigation that tests the viability of his conceptual tools and methodological assumptions. With focus on the Arabic translations of Shakespeare's tragedies in Egypt, this book offers a detailed analysis of the theory of 'fields of cultural production' with the purpose of providing a fresh perspective on the genesis and development of drama translation in Arabic. The different cases of the Arabic translations of Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear and Othello lend themselves to sociological analysis, due to the complex socio-cultural dynamics that conditioned the translation decisions made by translators, theatre directors, actors/actresses and publishers. In challenging the mainstream history of Shakespeare translation into Arabic, which is mainly premised on the linguistic proximity between source and target texts, this book attempts a 'social history' of the 'Arabic Shakespeare' which takes as its foundational assumption the fact that translation is a socially-situated phenomenon that is only fully appreciated in its socio-cultural milieu. Through a detailed discussion of the production, dissemination and consumption of the Arabic translations of Shakespeare's tragedies, Bourdieu in Translation Studies marks a significant contribution to both sociology of translation and the cultural history of modern Egypt.

Table of Contents

1. The 'social turn' in translation studies, Bourdieu's sociology and Shakespeare in Arabic 2. Bourdieu's sociology of cultural production: what is in a translation 'field'? 3. Genesis of the field of drama translation in Egypt: the first Arabic Hamlet 4. Translators' agency and new translation products: de-commercialising the 'Arabic Shakespeare' 5. Explaining retranslation: the dialectic of 'ageing' and 'distinction' 6. 'Breaking the silence of doxa': iconoclastic translations 7. Towards a methodology for a sociology of translation

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