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Chapter 7. Woest of wild

Translating Yorkshire culture in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights
  • Myrte Wouterse and Samantha Genegel
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Key Cultural Texts in Translation
This chapter is in the book Key Cultural Texts in Translation

Abstract

In the Victorian Era interest in regional culture and dialect and their representation in literature increased. In Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, cultural identity is explored extensively through the representation of dialect and the manner in which the situatedness of the novel in Yorkshire largely determines the identity of the characters. This article compares six Dutch translations of Emily Brontë’s novel, examining the manner in which the translators have preserved the specific Yorkshire elements in the target text. We look for patterns of similarity and difference in translation tactics between the early and late twentieth century in the Netherlands. The analysis is focused specifically on the topics of topology and dialect as representations of cultural identity in order to examine decisive elements in the attempt to translate culture.

Abstract

In the Victorian Era interest in regional culture and dialect and their representation in literature increased. In Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, cultural identity is explored extensively through the representation of dialect and the manner in which the situatedness of the novel in Yorkshire largely determines the identity of the characters. This article compares six Dutch translations of Emily Brontë’s novel, examining the manner in which the translators have preserved the specific Yorkshire elements in the target text. We look for patterns of similarity and difference in translation tactics between the early and late twentieth century in the Netherlands. The analysis is focused specifically on the topics of topology and dialect as representations of cultural identity in order to examine decisive elements in the attempt to translate culture.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents vii
  3. About the contributors xi
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Part I. Gender and identity
  6. Chapter 1. Genos , sex, gender and genre 9
  7. Chapter 2. Dancing through the waves of feminism 25
  8. Part II. Texts and politics
  9. Chapter 3. Bartolomé de Las Casas’ Breve Relación de la Destrucción de Las Indias ( Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies ) (1552) in translation 37
  10. Chapter 4. Have English translations of Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung , an icon of German culture, been affected by the changing relationship between Germany and Britain in the twentieth century? 53
  11. Chapter 5. Communicating change 79
  12. Part III. Texts and places
  13. Chapter 6. Lithuanian literature in English 95
  14. Chapter 7. Woest of wild 115
  15. Chapter 8. Polish dance in Eugene Onegin 131
  16. Part IV. Occident and Orient
  17. Chapter 9. The image of H. C. Andersen’s tales in China (1909–1925) 153
  18. Chapter 10. The cultural transformation of classical Chinese poetry in translation into English 171
  19. Chapter 11. The immigration of key cultural icons 185
  20. Chapter 12. Reproduction and reception of the concepts of Confucianism, Buddhism and polygamy 203
  21. Part V. Translating philosophy
  22. Chapter 13. Hegel’s Phenomenology 221
  23. Chapter 14. Adorno refracted 235
  24. Part VI. Text types
  25. Chapter 15. Construction of a cultural narrative through translation 257
  26. Chapter 16. Cultural satirical features in translation 275
  27. Chapter 17. Alterity, orality and performance in Bible translation 299
  28. Index of concepts 315
  29. Index of names 319
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