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Translation, Globalisation and Localisation

Translation, Globalisation and Localisation

Prof. Wang Ning | Dr. Sun Yifeng

(2008)

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Book Details

Abstract

The global/local distinction has changed significantly, and the topic has been heatedly debated in literary and cultural as well as translation scholarship. In this age of globalisation, the traditional definition of translation has been altered. In the present anthology, translation is viewed as a cultural and political practice, and accordingly translation studies is based on a heightened awareness of global/local tensions in translation and of its moderating and transforming impact on local cultural paradigms. All the essays in this anthology deal with issues of translation from a cultural and theoretic perspective with regard to tensions and conflicts between global and local interests and values. No matter how different their approaches may seem, the essays are thematically integrated to discuss translation in a dialectical framework: either “globalising” Chinese issues internationally, or “localising” general and international issues domestically.


The book does credit to the editors who present a wide-ranging and comprehensive insight into the international discussion of globalisation and localisation with a focus on China. The book is recommended for its overall quality and its topicality.


This rich, searching and detailed collection of essays provides fine insight into a cluster of related issues: translation itself, globalization, postcoloniality, hegemony and appropriation, modes of cultural analysis. This fine collection shows how effectively rigorous academic analysis can deepen our understanding of contemporary social realities.


Wang Ning is Professor of English and Director of the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, Tsinghua University. Apart from his numerous publications in Chinese, his English articles frequently appear in such international prestigious journals as New Literary History, Critical Inquiry, boundary 2, ARIEL, Neohelicon, Perspectives: Studies in Translatology, Comparative Literature Studies, Modern Language Quarterly and Semiotica. His most recent publication in English is Globalisation and Cultural Translation (2004).

Sun Yifeng is Head and Associate Professor of Department of Translation at Lingnan University, Hong Kong. He is the author of several books and numerous articles in Chinese and English. His most recent book in English entitled Misplaced Anxiety and Cultural Identity: Translations of Foreign Otherness is forthcoming.


Translation, Globalisation and Localisation is an important and altogether timely contribution to a greater conversation about the meanings of globalization and cultural translation.


The book successfully globalizes the research results on translation studies made by domestic Chinese researchers. This anthology excels in its richness and depth thanks to its refreshing views and critical perspectives. Extensive research by each contributor is conspicuous and highly appreciated. All in all, the book stands out as a fine collection of contemporary translation and cross-cultural studies that surely deepens our understanding of the underrepresented Chinese research community.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Contents v
Notes on Contributors vii
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1
Part 1 Historical Overviews 13
Chapter 1 Transvaluing the Global: Translation, Modernity and Hegemonic Discourse 15
Chapter 2 Translation in the Global/Local Tension 31
Chapter 3 Translation Studies in China: A ‘Glocalised’ Theoretical Practice 50
Chapter 4 On Cultural Translation: A Postcolonial Perspective 75
Chapter 5 Towards Pluralistic and Interdisciplinary Approaches: A Reflection on Translation Studies in Contemporary China 88
Part 2 Current Developments 109
Chapter 6 A Global View of Translation Studies: Towards an Interdisciplinary Field 111
Chapter 7 Transgression and Appropriation in Transnational Cultural Translation: A Deconstructive Observation 127
Chapter 8 When a Turning Occurs: Counter-evidence to Polysystem Hypothesis 140
Chapter 9 Translating Popular Culture: Feng Xiaogang’s Film Big Shot’s Funeral as a Polynuclear Text 155
Chapter 10 English as a Postcolonial Tool: Anti-hegemonic Subversions in a Hegemonic Language 174
Bibliography 185