Chapter 17. Alterity, orality and performance in Bible translation
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Jacobus A. Naudé
and Cynthia L. Miller-Naudé
Abstract
The Bible contains numerous features of alterity (aspects which reflect its “otherness” to modern readers) which are compounded by its cultural and generic diversity. Here, we examine alterity in Bible translation through the lens of Emmanuel Levinas’s concept of the Other, which he viewed as an equal rather than an inferior, and his insistence that oral, face-to-face encounters with the other are primary. Performance translation recreates the oral nature of the biblical text, providing a means both to encounter the alterity of the Bible in a meaningful way and to convey it to contemporary audiences. We use a liturgical psalm and a proverbial saying to illustrate the potential of performance translation in conveying the alterity of the Bible in translation.
Abstract
The Bible contains numerous features of alterity (aspects which reflect its “otherness” to modern readers) which are compounded by its cultural and generic diversity. Here, we examine alterity in Bible translation through the lens of Emmanuel Levinas’s concept of the Other, which he viewed as an equal rather than an inferior, and his insistence that oral, face-to-face encounters with the other are primary. Performance translation recreates the oral nature of the biblical text, providing a means both to encounter the alterity of the Bible in a meaningful way and to convey it to contemporary audiences. We use a liturgical psalm and a proverbial saying to illustrate the potential of performance translation in conveying the alterity of the Bible in translation.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- About the contributors xi
- Introduction 1
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Part I. Gender and identity
- Chapter 1. Genos , sex, gender and genre 9
- Chapter 2. Dancing through the waves of feminism 25
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Part II. Texts and politics
- 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
- 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
- Chapter 5. Communicating change 79
-
Part III. Texts and places
- Chapter 6. Lithuanian literature in English 95
- Chapter 7. Woest of wild 115
- Chapter 8. Polish dance in Eugene Onegin 131
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Part IV. Occident and Orient
- Chapter 9. The image of H. C. Andersen’s tales in China (1909–1925) 153
- Chapter 10. The cultural transformation of classical Chinese poetry in translation into English 171
- Chapter 11. The immigration of key cultural icons 185
- Chapter 12. Reproduction and reception of the concepts of Confucianism, Buddhism and polygamy 203
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Part V. Translating philosophy
- Chapter 13. Hegel’s Phenomenology 221
- Chapter 14. Adorno refracted 235
-
Part VI. Text types
- Chapter 15. Construction of a cultural narrative through translation 257
- Chapter 16. Cultural satirical features in translation 275
- Chapter 17. Alterity, orality and performance in Bible translation 299
- Index of concepts 315
- Index of names 319
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents vii
- About the contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Gender and identity
- Chapter 1. Genos , sex, gender and genre 9
- Chapter 2. Dancing through the waves of feminism 25
-
Part II. Texts and politics
- 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
- 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
- Chapter 5. Communicating change 79
-
Part III. Texts and places
- Chapter 6. Lithuanian literature in English 95
- Chapter 7. Woest of wild 115
- Chapter 8. Polish dance in Eugene Onegin 131
-
Part IV. Occident and Orient
- Chapter 9. The image of H. C. Andersen’s tales in China (1909–1925) 153
- Chapter 10. The cultural transformation of classical Chinese poetry in translation into English 171
- Chapter 11. The immigration of key cultural icons 185
- Chapter 12. Reproduction and reception of the concepts of Confucianism, Buddhism and polygamy 203
-
Part V. Translating philosophy
- Chapter 13. Hegel’s Phenomenology 221
- Chapter 14. Adorno refracted 235
-
Part VI. Text types
- Chapter 15. Construction of a cultural narrative through translation 257
- Chapter 16. Cultural satirical features in translation 275
- Chapter 17. Alterity, orality and performance in Bible translation 299
- Index of concepts 315
- Index of names 319