The term ""Untranslatables"" is rooted in two explorations of translation written originally in German: Walter Benjamin's now ubiquitous ""The Task of the Translator"" and Goethe's extensive notes to his ""tradaptation"" of mystical Persian poetry. The essays collected in
Un/Translatables unite two inescapable interventions in contemporary translation discourses: the concept of ""Untranslatables"" as points of productive resistance, and the Germanic tradition as the primary dialogue partner for translation studies. The essays collected in the volume pursue the critical itineraries that would result if ""Untranslatables,"" as discussed in Barbara Cassin's
Dictionary of Untranslatables, were returned, productively estranged, to their original German context. Thus, these essays explore Untranslatables across Germanic literatures-German, Yiddish, Dutch, and Afrikaans-and follow trajectories into Hebrew, Arabic, Mandarin, Japanese, English, and Scots.
About the AuthorBethany Wiggin is an associate professor and graduate chair of German at the University of Pennsylvania, USA, and director of the Penn Program in Environmental Humanities.
Catriona MacLeod is Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term Professor in German at the University of Pennsylvania, USA.
Book InformationISBN 9780810133433
Author Bethany WigginFormat Paperback
Page Count 264
Imprint Northwestern University PressPublisher Northwestern University Press
Weight(grams) 459g