TRANSLATOR’S NOTES AS A FORM OF LINGUISTIC LOCALIZATION OF LITERARY WORKS (THE CASE OF D. MITCHELL’S NOVELS)

Authors
I.D. Volkova
Affiliation
Volgograd State University
Issue 40
Pages
34-54

The purpose of the present article is to describe the significance of translator's notes from the point of view of localization of English works of fiction for Russian readership, as well as to identify the types of lexical units that become object of adaptation and the degree of their explication. The theoretical and methodological basis of this study is made up of the key provisions of translation studies, the study of linguistic localization and the study of literary discourse. Within the framework of the present research, a comparative analysis of the concepts of adaptation (pragmatic adaptation) and localization has been carried out to substantiate the advisability of using a new term to name culturally determined modifications of the original text. The characteristics of a literary text have been established, which make it possible to classify works of fiction as objects of localization. Content analysis of the English and Russian versions of the novels Cloud Atlas, The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet and The Slade House by the British writer D. Mitchell has been carried out. The original English-language and translated Russian-language versions of the specified literary works are analyzed, in particular, a comparative analysis of the English-language lexical units and phrases, accompanied by translator's notes in the secondary texts, has been conducted. The advantages of notes as a form of localization of literary texts are indicated. They consist in the possibility of a more detailed and quick description of foreign cultural units in comparison with intra-text transformations.

PDF file
For citation

Volkova, I.D. (2020). Translator’s notes as a form of linguistic localization of literary works (the case of D. Mitchell’s novels)Issues of Applied Linguistics, 40, 34-54.

 

 

This artiсle is available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.