3.8 Article

Transferring knowledge to/from the market - still building the polysystem? The translation of Australian fiction in Romania

Journal

OPEN LINGUISTICS
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 341-353

Publisher

DE GRUYTER POLAND SP Z O O
DOI: 10.1515/opli-2022-0199

Keywords

literary translation; Australian fiction; polysystem; descriptive studies

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This article investigates the translation of Australian writers in Romania from both a diachronic and synchronic perspective, examining quantitative aspects such as the number of translated authors and works, as well as qualitative dimensions such as translation policies and the role of translators. It also explores how the affordability, portability, and ownership of literary translation influence the creation and practice of translation.
The Polysystem Hypothesis, bringing together language, literature, culture and society, has hallmarked Translation Studies, while heralding the cultural turn, subsequently attributed to the study of Bassnett and Lefevere. Without a shadow of doubt, this conceptual and methodological framework continues to spark interdisciplinary research interests, allowing for recasts. In this context, the current article sets out to investigate the translation of Australian writers in Romania, from a diachronic and synchronic perspective alike. The main aims are related to featuring quantitative aspects - number of translated authors, number of translated works, etc., and qualitative dimensions - translation policies, the role of translators in the interlinguistic and intercultural transfer of texts, other controlling factors. Furthermore, the affordability, portability and ownership of literary translation underlie shifting patterns of translation knowledge creation and transfer and of translation effective practice.

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