Mapping Memory in Translation

Siobhan Brownlie 2016


E-Book: 244 English pages

Price: 5.000 Toman

Download: Mapping Memory in Translation (Brownlie 2016)


راهنمای سریع دانلود، کلیک کنید .


Mapping Memory in Translation aims to present a map of the application of memory studies concepts and approaches to the study of translation. Research located at the intersection of translation studies and memory studies has so far been somewhat dispersed, and does not embrace the full potential of the memory/translation nexus which this book aims to show. Each chapter focuses on a particular type or types of memory: personal memory, group memory, electronic memory, textual memory, national memory, transnational memory, institutional memory and cosmopolitan connective memory. The link with translation is illustrated by one or two case studies in each chapter covering both literary and non-literary translation and involving various different languages. Brownlie proposes an overall memory-based framework and range of concepts that could easily be applied in further case studies. The result is a book which offers a new global perspective on translation studies, as well as an insight into translation for memory studies scholars.


Author

Siobhan Brownlie is Lecturer in Translation and Intercultural Studies at the University of Manchester, UK. She is programme director of the Masters in Intercultural Communication and her recent research has focused on Memory Studies in relation to Translation Studies and Intercultural Studies. Siobhan’s previous publications include Memory and Myths of the Norman Conquest (2013).