The Poetics of Imperialism: Translation and Colonization from The Tempest to TarzanOxford University Press, 1991 - Počet stran: 202 The Poetics of Imperialism redefines the Anglo-American frontier in terms of problems of translation. Exploring questions of language and colonization, the book demonstrates how intracultural problems of translation--rooted in conflicts of race, gender, and class in the Western tradition of property--were projected onto the communal economics of kinship in the New World as the primary process of dispossession. In describing this process of translation, Cheyfitz examines a range of texts from European travel narratives to the work of Frederick Douglass, Frantz Fanon, and Leslie Marmon Silko; from The Tempest to Tarzan. This venture in the conjunction of critical theory and cultural studies cuts across the disciplines of literature, anthropology, and history within the context of critical theory. |
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Strana xi
... world . I am the world . The white man has never understood this magic substitution . The white man wants the world ; he wants it for himself alone . He enslaves it . An acquisitive relation is established between the world and him ...
... world . I am the world . The white man has never understood this magic substitution . The white man wants the world ; he wants it for himself alone . He enslaves it . An acquisitive relation is established between the world and him ...
Strana 28
... world , even though this figure needs the world as words to express , or mediate , his thoughts ( a potential contradiction to which I will return ) . This imperial figure dwarfs the world — the creation appears like a bauble in his ...
... world , even though this figure needs the world as words to express , or mediate , his thoughts ( a potential contradiction to which I will return ) . This imperial figure dwarfs the world — the creation appears like a bauble in his ...
Strana 163
... World politics , we can understand that Miranda is moving in the opposite direction with Caliban , locating the word in a " proper " place that will uphold the Old World hierarchy of the savage and the civilized . Miranda , in the name ...
... World politics , we can understand that Miranda is moving in the opposite direction with Caliban , locating the word in a " proper " place that will uphold the Old World hierarchy of the savage and the civilized . Miranda , in the name ...
Obsah
The Foreign Policy of Metaphor | 22 |
Translating Property | 41 |
Translation Transportation Usurpation | 59 |
Autorská práva | |
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absolute Algonquian Algonquian languages alienation apes appears Arawaks Aristotle articulates become Caliban cannibal century Chapter Cibecue Cicero civilized classical colonial colonists Columbian Orator Columbus communication conflict context Cronon crucial cultures decorum displacement domestic Douglass eloquent orator Emerson empire England English equivocal essay European example figure force Frantz Fanon frontier Greystoke ground human idea identity ideological imperial island Jamestown kin-ordered land Leslie Marmon Silko linguistic literal Loeb Classical Library master meaning metaphor Miranda mode Montaigne Montaigne's Native American nature notion play political possession Powhatan primal problem of translation process of translation proper Prospero Puttenham relation Renaissance represent rhetorical Richard Hakluyts romance savage scene of translation Sea Venture Shakespeare slave social speak speech suggests Tarzan tells Tempest tion Todorov tradition translatio translatio imperii True Declaration U.S. foreign policy understand University Press univocal usurpation Virginia voyage weroance Western words World writing York