Saturday, March 10, 2012

Translating Transtormer

In today's New York Times, David Orr looks at competing translations of Nobel laureate Thomas Transtromer (I always see that at 'transformer', and I always get a picture of Thomas the Tank Engine turning into a giant robot... just thought I'd share that). Orr tells us
But what’s unusual about Transtromer is that the most interesting debates over English versions of his work actually took place before his Nobel victory. In this case, the argument went to the heart of the translator’s function and occurred mostly in The Times Literary Supplement. The disputants were Fulton, one of Transtromer’s longest-serving translators, and Robertson, who has described his own efforts as “imitations.” Fulton accused Robertson (who doesn’t speak Swedish) of borrowing from his more faithful versions while inserting superfluous bits of Robertson’s own creation — in essence, creating poems that are neither accurate translations nor interesting departures. Fulton rolled his eyes at “the strange current fashion whereby a ‘translation’ is liable to be praised in inverse proportion to the ‘translator’s’ knowledge of the original language.” Robertson’s supporters countered that Fulton was just annoyed because Robertson was more concerned with the spirit of the ­poems than with getting every little kottbulle exactly right.
He then gives us a feel for Transtromer before he shows us some of the competing translations, and ends musing
But translating a poem is like covering a song. We can savor the liberties someone is taking with, say, “Gin and Juice” in a way we couldn’t understand similar variations on songs written by Martians. And Transtromer, however popular he is among poets, remains largely unknown to readers eager to see work from the new Nobel laureate. In this instance, even a sincere imitation probably isn’t the most helpful form of flattery.
If you're interested in translation, give it a peek.

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1 Comments:

At 1:11 PM, March 10, 2012 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Translators: Damned if we do, damned if we don't.

 

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