Translation goes to the Movies

This highly accessible introduction to translation theory, written by a leading author in the field, uses the genre of film to bring the main themes in translation to life. Through analyzing films as diverse as the Marx Brothers' A Night at the Opera, The Star Wars Trilogies and Lost in Translation, the reader is encouraged to think about both issues and problems of translation as they are played out on the screen and issues of filmic representation through examining the translation dimension of specific films. In highlighting how translation has featured in both mainstream commercial and arthouse films over the years, Cronin shows how translation has been a concern of filmmakers dealing with questions of culture, identity, conflict and representation. This book is a lively and accessible text for translation theory courses and offers a new and largely unexplored approach to topics of identity and representation on screen. Translation Goes to the Movies will be of interest to those on translation studies and film studies courses.

[1]  R. Maltby,et al.  "Film Europe" and "Film America" : cinema, commerce and cultural exchange, 1920-1939 , 1999 .

[2]  J. Fabian Time and the Other: How Anthropology Makes Its Object , 1983 .

[3]  Don Kiraly,et al.  A Social Constructivist Approach to Translator Education: Empowerment from Theory to Practice , 2000 .

[4]  Jens Ulff-Møller Hollywood's Film Wars with France:: Film-Trade Diplomacy and the Emergence of the French Film Quota Policy , 2001 .

[5]  Aristotle,et al.  Classical literary criticism , 1965 .

[6]  E. B. Tylor Primitive Culture: Researches Into the Development of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Art, and Custom , 1974 .

[7]  G. Pratt,et al.  Geography and the construction of difference , 1994 .

[8]  Charles Taylor,et al.  A Secular Age , 2007 .

[9]  A. Stephanson Manifest Destiny: American Expansion and the Empire of Right , 1995 .

[10]  Régis Debray,et al.  Introduction à la médiologie , 2000 .

[11]  Steven J. Ross,et al.  The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907.@@@The Transformation of Cinema, 1907-1915.@@@An Evening's Entertainment: The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915- , 1992 .

[12]  M. Kinkade,et al.  The Languages of Native North America , 2000 .

[13]  G. Genette,et al.  Narrative Discourse Revisited , 1979 .

[14]  M. Heidegger The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays , 1977 .

[15]  J. Urry The Tourist Gaze: Leisure and Travel in Contemporary Societies , 1990 .

[16]  Cecilia Wadensjö,et al.  Interpreting As Interaction , 1998 .

[17]  Charles Forsdick Travel in Twentieth-Century French and Francophone Cultures: The Persistence of Diversity , 2005 .

[18]  A. Smith,et al.  Towards a Global Culture? , 1990 .