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Translating the Nonhuman: What Science Fiction Can Teach Us About Translating
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Translating the Nonhuman: What Science Fiction Can Teach Us About Translating
Current price: $100.00
Barnes and Noble
Translating the Nonhuman: What Science Fiction Can Teach Us About Translating
Current price: $100.00
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The so-called "fictional turban" in translation studies has staked out territory previously unclaimed by translation scholars – territory in which translators are portrayed as full human beings in their social environments – but so far no one has looked to science fiction for truly radical explorations of translation.
fills that gap, exploring speculative attempts to cross the yawning chasm between human and nonhuman languages and cultures.
The book consists of three essays, each bringing a different theoretical orientation to bear on a different science-fiction work. The first studies Samuel R. Delany's 1966 novel,
, using Peircean semiotics; the second studies Suzette Haden Elgin's 1984 novel,
, using Austinian performativity and Eve Sedwick's periperformative corrective; and the third studies Ted Chiang's 1998 novella, “Story of Your Life,” and its 2016 screen adaptation,
, using sustainability theory. Themes include the 1950s clash between Whorfian untranslatability and the possibility of unbounded (machine) translatability; the performative ability of a language to change reality and the reliance of that ability on the periperformativity of “witnesses”; and alienation from the familiar in space and time and its transformative effect on the biological and cultural sustainability of human life on earth.
Through these close readings and varied theoretical approaches,
provides a tentative mapping of science fiction's usefulness for the study of human-(non)human translation, with translators and interpreters acting as explorers of new ways to communicate.