Translating and transmediating children's literature
著者
書誌事項
Translating and transmediating children's literature
(Critical approaches to children's literature / series editors, Kerry Mallan and Clare Bradford)
Palgrave Macmillan, c2020
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全1件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
From Struwwelpeter to Peter Rabbit, from Alice to Bilbo-this collection of essays shows how the classics of children's literature have been transformed across languages, genres, and diverse media forms. This book argues that translation regularly involves transmediation-the telling of a story across media and vice versa-and that transmediation is a specific form of translation. Beyond the classic examples, the book also takes the reader on a worldwide tour, and examines, among other things, the role of Soviet science fiction in North Korea, the ethical uses of Lego Star Wars in a Brazilian context, and the history of Latin translation in children's literature. Bringing together scholars from more than a dozen countries and language backgrounds, these cross-disciplinary essays focus on regularly overlooked transmediation practices and terminology, such as book cover art, trans-sensory storytelling, ecart, enfreakment, foreignizing domestication, and intra-cultural transformation.
目次
Table of Contents
1. Anna Kerchy and Bjoern Sundmark: Introduction
INTER-/INTRA-CULTURAL TRANSFORMATIONS
2. Clementine Beauvais: Translated into British: European Children's Literature, (In)difference and Ecart in the Age of Brexit
3. Hannah Felce: Picture Books in a Minority Language Setting: Intra-cultural Transformations
4. Joanna Dybiec-Gajer: Mixing Moralizing with Enfreakment - Polish Language Rewritings of Heinrich Hoffmann's Classic Der Struwwelpeter (1845)
5. Dafna Zur: Translating the Happiest Place on Earth: The Soviet Union in North Korean Children's Literature
IMAGE-TEXTUAL TRANSFORMATIONS
6. Aneesh Barai: "How farflung is your fokloire?": Foreignizing Domestications and Drawing Bridges in James Joyce's The Cat and the Devil and Its French Illustrations
7. Bjoern Sundmark. The Translation and Visualization of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit into Swedish, the aesthetics of fantasy, and Tove Jansson's illustrations
8. Anna Kerchy. The (im)possibilities of translating literary nonsense: Attempts at taming iconotextual monstrosity in Hungarian domestications of Lewis Carroll's "Jabberwocky"
METAPICTORIAL POTENTIALITIES
9. Petros Panaou and Tasoula Tsilimeni: Translated Book Covers as Peritextual Thresholds: Comparing Covers of Greek Translations to Covers of Source Texts
10. Karolina Rybicka. Translating Tenniel: Discovering the Traces of Tenniel's Wonderland in Olga Siemaszko's Vision of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
DIGITAL MEDIA TRANSITIONS
11. Cheryl Cowdy: Grammars of New Media: Interactive Trans-Sensory Storytelling and Empathic Reading Praxis in Jessica Anthony's and Rodrigo Corral's Chopsticks
12. Dana Cocargeanu: Translated and Transmediated: Online Romanian Translations of Beatrix Potter's Tales
13. Cybelle Saffa and Domingos Soares: Between Light and Dark: Brazilian Translations of Linguistically-marked Ethical Issues in Star Wars Transmedia Narratives for Children
INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSIONS
14. Annalisa Sezzi. A Thousand and One Voices of Where the Wild Things Are: Translations and Transmediations
15. Agnes Blumer. Translating Ambiguity: The Translation of Dual Address in Children's Fantasy During the 1950s and 1960s
16. Carl F Miller: Omne Vetus Novum Est Iterum: The Rise of Latin translation in children's literature
17. Caisey Gailey. Newtonian and Quantum Physics for Babies: A Quirky Gimmick for Adults or Pre-Science for Toddlers?
「Nielsen BookData」 より