Routledge Handbook of Translation and Activism
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<p><em>The Routledge Handbook of Translation and Activism</em> provides an accessible, diverse and ground-breaking overview of literary, cultural, and political translation across a range of activist contexts.</p><p>As the first extended collection to offer perspectives on translation and activism from a global perspective, this handbook includes case studies and histories of oppressed and marginalised people from over twenty different languages. The contributions will make visible the role of translation in promoting and enabling social change, in promoting equality, in fighting discrimination, in supporting human rights, and in challenging autocracy and injustice across the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, East Asia, the US and Europe.</p><p>With a substantial introduction, thirty-one chapters, and an extensive bibliography, this Handbook is an indispensable resource for all activists, translators, students and researchers of translation and activism within translation and interpreting studies.</p> <p>Acknowledgements</p><p>Notes on Contributors</p><p>1. ‘Introduction: Translation and Activism in the Time of the Now’</p><p>I. <b>Theorising Translation and Activism</b></p><p>2. ‘Theory, Practice, Activism: Gramsci as a Translation Theorist’</p><p>3. ‘Activist Translation, Alliances and Performativity: Translating Judith Butler’s <i>Notes toward a Performative Theory of Assembly </i>into Italian’</p><p>4. ‘Farhadpour, Prismatically Translated: Philosophical Prose and the Activist Agenda’ and ‘Morad Farhadpour: A Biographical Sketch’ ; ‘Thought/Translation,’</p><p>5. ‘Translating Marx in Japan: Yoshimoto Taka’aki and Japanese Marxism’;Yoshimoto Taka’aki, from ‘Contemporary Times and Marx’</p><p>II. <b>The</b> <b>Interpreter as Activist</b></p><p>6. ‘<i>Okyeame Poma</i>: Exploring the Multimodality of Translation in Precolonial African Contexts’</p><p>7. ‘Translator, Native Informant, Fixer: Activism and Translation in Mandate Palestine’</p><p>8. ‘Translation in the War-Zone: The Gaza Strip as Case Study’</p><p>III. <b>The</b> <b>Translator as Activist</b></p><p>9. ‘Translating Mourning Walls: Aleppo’s Last Words’</p><p>10. ‘Resistance, Activism and Marronage in Paul Bowles’s Translations of the Oral Stories of Tangier’</p><p>11. ‘Translators as Organic Intellectuals: Translational Activism in Pre-Revolutionary Iran’ </p><p>12. ‘Translating for <i>Le Monde diplomatique</i> <i>en español</i>: Disciplinary Norms and Activist Agendas’</p><p>IV. <b>Bearing Witness</b></p><p>13. ‘Written on the Heart, in Broken English’</p><p>14. ‘Writing as Hospitality: Translating the Fragmentary in Arabic and English’</p><p>15. ‘Joint Authorship and Preface Writing Practices as Translation in post-‘Years of Lead’ Morocco’</p><p>16. ‘Activist Narratives: Latin American Testimonies in Translation’ </p><p>V. <b>Translation and Human Rights</b></p><p>17. ‘The Right not to Have an Interpreter in Criminal Trials: The Irish Language as a Case Study’</p><p>18. ‘The Right to Understand and to be Understood: Urban Activism and US Migrants’ Access to Interpreters’</p><p>19. ‘Feminism in Translation: Reframing Human Rights Law Through Transnational Islamic Feminist Networks’</p><p>VI. <b>Translating the Vernacular</b></p><p>20. ‘Against a Single African Literary Translation Theory’</p><p>21. ‘The Single Most Translated Short Story in the History of African Writing: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o and the Jalada Writers Collective’</p><p>22. ‘The Dialectics of Dissent in Postcolonial India: <i>Vrishchik </i>(1969-73)’ </p><p>23. ‘Bengali Dalit Discourse as Translational Activism: Studying a Dalit Autobiography’</p><p>VII. <b>Translation, Migration, Refugees</b></p><p>24. ‘What Is Asylum? Translation, Trauma, and Institutional Visibility’</p><p>25.‘Citation and Recitation: Linguistic Legacies and the Politics of Translation in the Sahrawi Refugee Context’</p><p>26. ‘Resistant Recipes: Food, Gender and Translation in Migrant and Refugee Narratives’ </p><p>VIII. <b>Translation and Revolution</b></p><p>27.‘Late-Qing Translation (1840-1911) and the Political Activism of Chinese Evolutionism’</p><p>28. ‘‘The Pen is Mightier than the Sword’: Exploring the ‘Warrior’ Lu Xun’</p><p>29. ‘The Political Modes of Translation in Iran: National Words, Right Sentences, Class Paragraphs’ </p><p>30. ‘Civil Resistance through Online Activist Translation in Taiwan’s Sunflower Student Movement’</p><p>31. ‘Afterword: Postcolonialism, Activism, and Translation’</p><p>Index</p>
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