TYBA-SEM-VI-PAPER-VI-TRANSLATION-STUDIES-THEORY-AND-PRACTICE-II-1-munotes

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TERMS & CONCEPTS -I
Unit Structure
1.0 Objectives
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Formal and Dynamic Equivalence
1.3 Intra -lingual and Inter -lingual Translation
1.4 Qualities and Strategies of Translator
1.5 Conclusion
1.6 Check Your Progress
1.0 OBJECTIVES
 To introduce the readers to two types of translation viz: Formal and
Dynamic.
 To acquaint the readers with inter and intra -lingual translations.
 To understand the vital role that a translator plays in the process of
translation.
 To help the learners unders tand the strategies the translator uses.
 To know the qualities and qualifications that the translator ideally
should possess.
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Correspondence and equivalence are frequently used in translation studies.
Correspondence indicates the similarit ies of the symbols and structures
of the two languages in use in translation. Though there can be no absolute
correspondence between two languages, a translation may be close to the
original if it is done scientifically and systematically. Equivalence
indicates the comparable and similar elements found in two languages.
Equivalences are classified into many categories by different theorists.
Eugene Nida in Towards a Science of Translation classifies equivalence
into Formal Equivalence and Dynamic Equivalenc e. As far as the types
of translation are concerned, traditional translation theorists divided
translation into two types, namely Literary and non -Literary translation.
Literary translation emphasised both “sense and style” while non -literary
translation e mphasised the sense alone. Taking a linguistic stance Roman
Jacobson makes a threefold classification of translation as Inter -lingual,
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2 1.2 FORMAL AND DYNAMIC EQUIVALENCE
Formal Equivalence and Dynamic Equivalen ce are two approaches to
Translation. Dynamic Equivalence attempts to render the text word -for-
word at the expense of natural expressions in the target language. Formal
Equivalence, which is also known as Functional Equivalence, tries to
convey the idea ex pressed in the source text at the expense of literalness,
original word order and the source text's grammatical voice. Formal
Equivalence emphasizes literal fidelity to the source text whereas
Dynamic Equivalence emphasizes readability.
1.2.1 Formal Equiv alence
The focus in Formal Equivalence is on the message of the source language
text (SLT) in both form and context. If Formal Equivalence is taken as the
guiding principle, then the translator has to be concerned with formal
correspondences such as poetry to poetry and sentence to sentence. In such
an orientation in translation, the message in the target language should
match the different elements in the source language. Hence, Formal
Equivalence demands accuracy and correctness. This type of translation
based on structural equivalence is also called a gloss translation . This
indicates that the translator attempts to reproduce as literally and
meaningfully as possible the form and content of the original. A
translation based on Formal Equivalence offers a close correspondence to
the structure of the Source language Text (SLT). Such a gloss translation
enables the reader to identify himself/herself with the source language
context and its means of expression. For example, a phrase like “holy
kiss” would be r endered literally and supplemented with a footnote
explaining that this was a customary method of greeting found in the New
Testament.
1.2.1.1. Principles Governing Formal Equivalence
Formal Equivalence is basically source -oriented and it tries to reveal t he
form and content of the source language text. A Formal Equivalence
Translation (FET) attempts to reproduce several formal elements in
translation such as
1. Grammatical units
2. Consistency in word usage
3. Meaning in terms of source context.
For inst ance, the reproduction of grammatical units in translation may
consist of:
A] Translating nouns by nouns, verbs by verbs.
B] Keeping all phrases and sentences intact (not splitting them up or
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3 C] Preserving all forms of indicators (marks of punctuation, markers of
cohesion and paragraph breaks)
Another principle closely observed in formal equivalence is a concordance
of terminology, that is, it always renders a particular term in its source
language meaning. For instance, if one translates Aristotle’s Poetics into
Hindi or Marathi, there must be a rigid consistency in the rendering of key
terms like catharsis , hubris and mimesis in the way in which Aristotle has
used them. However, in many instances, a translator cannot re produce the
normal structure of the source message. For example, puns, instances of
assonance and idioms defy formal equivalent rendering. In such cases, a
translator can use marginal notes. A good Formal Equivalence Translation
is supplemented with margin al notes. These notes not only explain some
formal features but also the equivalents employed in the translation.
1.2.2. Dynamic Equivalence
Dynamic Equivalence is based on the principle of equivalent effect. In
such a translation, one is not concerned with matching the receptor
language message with the source language message, but with a dynamic
relationship i.e., the relationship between receptor and message should be
the same as that which existed between the original receptors and the
source languag e text. It also tries to achieve complete naturalness of
expression. It attempts to relate the receptor to the modes of behavior
relevant to the context of his culture. In this mode, the translator does not
insist on understanding the cultural patterns of the source language context
to understand the message. A good example of dynamic equivalence
translation is J. B. Philips’s rendering of the New Testament. In this
translation, he interprets the message “Greet one another with a holy kiss”
as “give one ano ther a hearty handshake”.
1.2.2.1. Principles Governing Dynamic Equivalence
Dynamic Equivalence Translation (DET) can be described as one
concerning both bilingual and bicultural aspects of translation. It is a
translation that reflects both the meaning a nd the intention of source
language test.
As Dynamic Equivalence Translation is directed toward the equivalence
of response rather than the equivalence of form, it is also called natural
equivalence . Generally, Dynamic Equivalence Translation fits into th ree
areas of the communication process:
1] The receptor language and culture as a whole
2] The context of the particular message, and
3] The receptor language audience
Though Dynamic Equivalence Translation is the most natural form of
translation, it invo lves two principal areas of adaptation, namely,
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4 B] Lexical
In general, grammatical modifications can be readily made since they are
dictated by the available structures of the receptor language. Similarly, the
lexical structures of the source me ssage are also adjusted to the
requirements of the receptor language. There are three lexical levels to be
considered in Dynamic Equivalence:
1] Terms for which there are readily available parallels (for instance a
river, stone, house, etc)
2] Terms that identify culturally different objects but with somewhat
similar functions. (For instance, the word “book” which in English means
an object with paper bound together and in the New Testament time it
meant a papyrus rolled up in the form of a scroll.)
3] Ter m which identifies cultural specificities (for instance synagogue,
temple, mosque, saree etc.)
The first set of terms involves no problem in Translation. In the case of the
second set of terms that have similar functions, one must use another term
which re flects the form of the original term, though not the equivalent
function of the term. In translating the term of the third set, cultural
associations cannot be avoided. For instance, a term like “baptism,”
‘anointing” or “confession” cannot be translated e asily into Indian
languages while maintaining their cultural significance.
Though Dynamic Equivalence Translation is based on the receptor
language and culture, its problems are not restricted to only grammatical
and lexical features. Some detailed matter s such as intonation, rhythm and
anachronism can create additional problems in Dynamics Equivalence
Translation.
A translation that aims at dynamic equivalence also involves some amount
of formal adjustments. For instance, in translating poetry, more
adjustments in the form would be required than in the translation of prose.
A translation of Dynamic Equivalence confronts some serious restrictions
at the linguistic and cultural levels. The linguistic restrictions involve both
the literary form and the langu age used in the message. The cultural
restriction involves the attitude about the so -called faithfulness in
translating. There are certain areas of tension between Formal Equivalence
and Dynamic Equivalence as they represent two extreme practices in
transl ation. These tensions can be listed as:
1] There may be no object or event in the receptor culture which
corresponds to some referent in the source text, or the equivalent function
could be served by another object or event. For instance, pooja in Indian
culture may be a functional equivalent in the form of prayer in English.
Yet they are two different referents altogether.
2] The receptor culture does possess the same object or event as it is
mentioned in the source message, but in the receptor language, it may munotes.in

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5 have an entirely different function. For instance, a candle in the western
tradition is associated with prayer but in the Indian cultural context, it is
only a means of light.
3] There is no equivalent either formal or functional. For instance, in t he
translation of a sonnet into Indian languages, one doesn’t find a formal
equivalence of the poem in the receptor language/culture nor does one find
any functional equivalence.
1.3 INTRA -LINGUAL TRANSLATION AND INTER -
LINGUAL TRANSLATION
In ‘On Linguistic Aspects of Translation , the Russian -born American
structuralist Roman Jakobson describes three kinds of translation as
follows:
i. Intra -lingual translation, or rewording (an interpretation of words in the
same language)
ii. Interlingual translation or translati on proper. (An interpretation of
verbal signs employing some other language).
iii. Inter semiotic translation or transmutation (an interpretation of verbal
signs through non -verbal sign systems.)
1.3.1. Intra -lingual translation:
Intra -lingual translation or re wording is an interpretation of verbal signs
utilizing other signs of the same language.
This sort of translation is confined to the same language. Paraphrasing of a
play can be rewritten using similar or synonymous words. The Intra -
lingual translation of a word uses either another more or less word or
resorts to a circumlocution. Yet synonymy, as a rule, is not complete
equivalence for example “every celibate is a bachelor, but not every
bachelor is a celibate” A word or an idiomatic phrase word, briefly a code
unit of the highest level may be fully interpreted only through an
equivalent combination of code units i.e. a message referring to this code
unit: “every bachelor is an unmarried man, and every unmarried man is a
bachelor” or “every celibate is bou nd not to marry and everyone who is
bound not to marry is celibate.”
Translation occurs when we rephrase an expression in the same language.
In the following example, revenue nearly tripled is a kind of intralingual
translation of the first part of the sen tence, a fact that is highlighted by the
trigger expression in other words .
In the decade before 1989 revenue averaged around [NZ] $1 billion a year
while in the decade after it averaged nearly [NZ] $3 billion a year – in
other words , revenue nearly triple d. Intralingual translation, however, is
outside the scope of proper translation study.
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6 1.3.2. Interlingual translation:
Interlingual translation or translation proper is an interpretation of verbal
signs by means of some other language in which a text o f the SL is turned
into a new text in the TL. In translation studies, inter -lingual translation is
discussed highlighting its methods and theories.
According to Bertrand Russell, “No one can understand the word ‘cheese’
unless he has non -linguistic acquai ntance with cheese. If, however, we
follow Russell’s fundamental precept and place our “emphasis upon the
linguistic aspects of the traditional philosophical problem”, then we are
obliged to that no one understands the word “cheese” unless he has an
acqua intance with the meaning that is assigned to this word in the lexical
code of English. Any representative of a cheese -less culture will
understand the English word “cheese” he is aware that in this language it
means “food made of pressed curds” and if he h as at least a linguistic
acquaintance with “curd” We never consumed ambrosia or nectar and
have only a linguistic acquaintance with the words “ambrosia”, and
“gods” - the name of their mythical users; nonetheless, we understand
these words and know in what contexts each of them may be used.
The meaning of the words “cheese”, “apple”, “nectar”, “acquaintance”,
“but”, “mere” and of word or phrase is to be mere precise and less - a
semist fact Against those who assign (signature) not the sign but to the
thing itself the simple truest argument would be that nobody has even
smelled or tasted the meaning of “cheese” or “apple” There is no signatum
without signum. The meaning of the word “cheese” cannot be inferred
from a non -linguistic acquaintance with cheddar o r with camembert
without the assister of the verbal code. An array of linguistic signs is
needed to introduce a word. Mere pointing will not teach us whether
“cheese” is the name of the given specimen, or of any box camembert or
sumembert in general, or an y cheese, any milk product any food, any
refreshment or perhaps any box irrespective of contents. Finally, does a
word simply name the thing in question or does it imply a meaning such as
offering sale, prohibition, or malediction?
For linguists and ordina ry word -users, the meaning of any linguistic sign
is its transaction into some further alternative sign, especially a sign “in
which it is more fully developed” as price, the deepest inquirer into the
essence of signs insistently stated. The term “bachelor ” may be converted
into a more explicit designation, “Unmarried man” whenever higher
explicitness is required. We distinguished three ways of interpreting verbal
signs which may be translated into other signs of the same language into
another language, or into another system of symbols. These three kinds of
translation are to be differently labeled.
Most frequently, however, translation from one language into another,
substitutes messages in one language not for separate code -units but for
entire message i n some other language. Such translation in a reported
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7 another source. Thus, translation involves two equivalent messages in two
different codes.
It is the interlingual translation, betwee n two different verbal sign
systems, that has been the traditional focus of translation studies. The
question of what we mean by ‘translation’, and how it differs from
‘adaptation’, ‘version’, ‘transcreation’ ‘localization’ and so on, is a very
real one. M uch of translation theory has also been written from a western
perspective and initially derived from the study of Classical Greek and
Latin and Biblical practice. For instance, in India there is the Bengali
rupantar (= ‘change of form’) and the Hindi anuv ad (= ‘speaking after’,
‘following’), in the Arab world tarjama (= ‘biography’) and in China fan
yi (= ‘turning over’).Each of these construes the process of translation
differently and anticipates that the target text will show a substantial
change of for m compared to the source.
1.4 QUALITIES AND STRATEGIES OF TRANSLATOR
A good translator is not born but made. With a little care and some labour,
a person can acquire the skills of a good translator. Some of the qualities
that distinguish a good and succe ssful translator from a bad or
unsuccessful translator are mentioned below.
Faithfulness to the Original Text and the Author : A competent
translator should try to get into the mind of the writer of the original text
in the source language. S/He should als o fully understand the sense and
meaning of the original author. S/He should try to put in every effort to
ensure that the translation resembles the original text or is very close to the
original text in terms of its sense and message. Expert and experienc ed
translators know the requirements of a text and make changes to
communicate the style and essence of a text with minimal variations from
the original. While trying to be faithful to the original text, s/he should not
try to find difficult equivalent wor ds in the hope that this will add to the
perfection of your translation. A faithful translator should act like the
author's mouthpiece in a way that he knows and comprehends fully
whatever the original author has said in his text. The translation should
have all the ease of the original composition.
Technical Expertise: The translator has to be an analytical person with
the necessary flexibility, adaptability and expertise in the use of
technology so that s/he can pay close attention to all details and ada pt
whenever there is a need. Moreover, s/he should have a thorough
knowledge of the subject that s/he deals with. A person translating the
biography of a great personality should have thorough knowledge of the
life and achievements of the person concerned. A translator should be an
excellent writer with good research and language skills so that s/he can
find out things that s/he requires and make use of them in appropriate
places. Writing skills help a translator make intelligent choices concerning
words, s tructures and expressions. The translator should use forms of
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8 comprehend them properly. Finally, s/he should choose and order words
appropriately to produce the correct tone and convey the desir ed meaning.
Using the Right Tools: Experienced translators know how to use the tools
like good monolingual and bilingual dictionaries, encyclopaedias, e -
dictionaries, glossaries of technical and standard works, etc. about the SL
text and style guides to h elp him/her out in moments of difficulty. One
should start using them from the beginning so that in course of time it
becomes easy to find out the equivalent terms without wasting much time
and energy on them. Having dictionaries on the computer can also s ave a
lot of time and labor.
Focus on Creativity: Expert translators are always creative. They always
try to put the text in the target language in a new and attractive garb to
make it more acceptable to the audience in the target language. They do
this b y using a new vocabulary, new expressions and structures whenever
necessary to make the translated text more appealing to the audience. It is
because of the creative component and the amount of liberty involved in
an act of translation, a translator finds his/her job very rewarding and
intellectually stimulating.
Focus on Reading as an Important Pre -requisite: A serious translator
should read a lot to have an in -depth understanding of the nuances of the
languages s/he deals with (both the source language a nd the target
language). This habit is essential to help a translator gain command of the
language. In the list of reading materials, one may put the classics,
newspapers and digital material available online on the internet.
Linguistic Competence: A seas oned translator should be well -conversant
with the grammatical, syntactic, semantic and pragmatic features as well
as the socio -cultural contexts of both the source language and the target
language. S/He may have the liberty to interpret an idea differentl y but in
no case should try to insert his/her ideas or personal impressions in the
new product. Moreover, s/he should take care that the style chosen for
translation is appropriate for the target audience and should sound natural
and spontaneous to the rea ders of the translated text.
Specialization: A mature translator should have sound knowledge of the
discipline to which the target text belongs, particularly the materials which
have a highly technical vocabulary. You should be familiar with the new
termi nology and the latest developments in the discipline in which you are
working. If one has expertise in translating literary texts, s/he will have
difficulty in translating medical or business reports or technical reports.
Giving a Finishing Touch : In an a ct of translation, you should have
enough patience and have to do the job sincerely. You may also like to
discuss your problem areas with the persons you think are competent to
address the problems. Before preparing the final product, you should go
through the translated work two or three times and see if any last -minute
changes can be made to make it look more accessible and acceptable. You
may like to change a few words, expressions or forms to improve the
quality. Before letting the work out for publicat ion, you should ensure that munotes.in

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9 the product is suitable for the intended purpose and audience. You may
have to change the style or language following the audience and purpose.
Once you are satisfied with the work, you should put the original passage
aside and listen to/read your translation with the ears tuned in, as if it were
a passage originally written in the target language. You may also ask a
friend of yours or an expert in the target language to listen to the
translation and give suggestions for improvem ent. After incorporating the
changes suggested, submit it to the agency or the organization that had
assigned you the job.
1.5 CONCLUSION
Eugene Nida and Roman Jacobson have contributed substantially to the
field of translation studies. The two types of eq uivalence given by Nida
viz: Formal and dynamic are very important for non -literary and literary
translation respectively. Intra -lingual and inter -lingual translations
categorized by Jacobson are significant in understanding the translation
proper. The rol e, qualities, and responsibilities of a translator and the
strategies s/he uses while translating especially a literary text need an
attention of a student while studying translation theories.
1.6 CHECK YOUR PROGRESS
Write Short notes on:
1. Principles govern ing Formal Equivalence and Dynamic Equivalence.
2. Features of Dynamics Equivalence Translation.
3. Limitations of Formal Equivalence Translation
4. Intra - and inter -lingual translation
5. Qualities of a good translator
6. Qualifications of a good translator
7. Responsibili ties of a good translator



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TERMS & CONCEPTS - II
Unit Structure
2.0 Objectives of the Unit
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Lexicography and Bilingual Dictionaries
2.3 Commercial and Collaborative Translation
2.4 Audio Visual, Subtitling and Dubbing
2.5 Conclusion
2.6 Check Your P rogress
2.7 Bibliography
2.0 OBJECTIVES
 To introduce the learners to the concept of lexicography
 To introduce the learners to the concept of bilingual dictionaries
 To orient the learners to the concept of commercial translation
 To orient t he learners to the concept of collaborative translation
 To introduce the learners to the nuances of commercial translation thus
guiding them on the path of application of the concept
 To introduce the learners to the nuances of collaborative translati on
thus guiding them on the path of application of the concept
 To introduce the learners to the nuances of audio visual, subtitling and
dubbing thus enabling them to apply the theory to actual practice
2.1 INTRODUCTION
The scope of translation is not confined to the practice of translating a text
from one language to another but the study is also inclusive of an
important practice that in a way contributes to the building of harmony
between different languages, conveying meanings of words from
a langua ge into another. Use of dictionaries is a common practice in
learning and getting acquainted to a foreign or any other language
different from one’s mother tongue. Dictionaries thus play an important
role in bridging the gap between two languages. The art of producing
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11 an important part of the translation studies. The notion of bilingual
dictionaries and the way these dictionaries are organized and produced
also becomes an interestin g area to know about.
Especially with the advent of technology and globalization, as we are
aware, the practice of translation has gained tremendous importance
commercially. Electronic devices and the internet have significantly
contributed to the concep t of global village. Treasures of knowledge and
literature confined to different regional and national languages are
thus getting opened up to the international readership. This has led to
creation of opportunities for translators to translate different ki nds of texts
in legal, commercial and other such areas. Commercial translation is
further boosted by a number of online tools for translation which also help
the concept of collaborative translation come to reality.
Screening is an undeniable part of the life in 21st century. Like the
knowledge and literature, films, TV serials and such commercial shows
also look forward to catch the international audience. Though a little more
demanding from technological point of view, this scenario has paved new
ways f or translators in the form of audio -visual subtitling and dubbing.
As a part of this paper in Translation Studies, then, one needs to
understand what all these terms exactly refer to.
2.2 LEXICOGRAPHY
The term ‘Lexicography’ refers to the act of editin g and also of producing
dictionaries or other reference texts. The scope of its meaning is further
expanded to include the compilation and study of dictionaries.
The origin of the concept is rooted in the practice of recording word lists
on clay tablets in ancient Sumeria. It is interesting to know that this
practice was followed in order to teach people the structure of cuneiform,
the system of writing prevalent in the ancient Middle East. People in
ancient Greece, India and Egypt also used similar such methods to teach
their own languages. The practice thus went on evolving as the languages
of these ancient civilizations did.
Gradually, as different civilizations in different parts of the world came
into each other’s contact and as there was a need to interact with people
from other civilizations, there arose a need for translation. The discipline
thus accommodated translations as a part of it.
In the semantic and functional sense, the term lexicography can be
categorized under
• Practical Lexicograp hy
• Theoretical Lexicography
The former deals with producing dictionaries and includes the act of
‘compiling, writing and editing dictionaries for general as well as
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12 helping peop le with an authoritative reference for the meaning of words
and also of guiding them on the way those words to be pronounced and
spelt.
The latter studies the organization of dictionaries. The discipline, in short,
aims at research that can contribute t o creation of better dictionaries. It
helps in improving the organization and structure of information provided
thus making it more usable. The discipline also includes a needs analysis
of the users in specialized industries and the way in which dictionary
information is accessed. For example, Webster’s New World Medical
Dictionary includes the terminology used in medical profession.
Unfortunately, the art of lexicography is considered a job that requires
“neither the light of learning, nor the activity o f genius” (Johnson: 1747
cited in Hausmann). As Hausmann puts it, the art is ‘often overlooked and
relegated to being a mere craft rather than an academic discipline.’
European Association of Lexicography (EURALEX), at its XVII
International Congress, hel d in 2016, adopted a resolution addressing the
UNESCO, governments of all the nations as well as research funding
agencies and universities to acknowledge lexicography as an academic
discipline. The resolution mentioned the need of ‘novel types of
dictio naries’ in the present multilingual world and also emphasized the
fact that without proper recognition and support, it is not possible to have
such dictionaries.
The term finds an essential space in the context of translation studies
because, as already mentioned in the introduction, translation performs an
important function of bringing harmony between two languages. These
two disciplines have much in common yet there are differences too. Rigual
and Calvi (2014) point out that considering the important a spect of
equivalence which is common in both translation and lexicography, the
former expects it to be context -based whereas in the latter, context is ‘left
aside’. But still, the two share an important relationship.
The tools used by translators inclu de different types of dictionaries besides
encyclopaedia. Bilingual dictionary is one such used very commonly.
Bilingual Dictionaries
A bilingual dictionary also known as translation dictionary is used
specifically for translating words or phrases from one language to another.
It lists the meanings of words of a language in another and can also allow
translation to and from both languages. The dictionary that performs both
these functions is known bidirectional bilingual dictionary. It generally
include s two sections each of which lists words or phrases of a language
alphabetically with its translation. The part of speech, gender, verb type
and other grammatical clues are also indicated in the bilingual dictionary
in addition to the translation of the wo rd. Apart from this, list of phrases,
usage and style guides, verb tables, maps and grammar references also
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13 According to Mackintosh (1998), bilingualized dictionaries are the best
tool for specialized translation into L2. Manning (1990:159 cited in
Gauton: 2008) has also called it the translator’ basic tool which acts as the
bridge making ‘interlingual transfer possible’. Pinchuck (1977:223) has,
however, called it a ‘very dangerous tool’ for translator though he accepts
the importance of the tool. According to Swanepoel (1989), bilingual
dictionary has limitations because it falls short in providing sufficient
information as regards the user’s overall competence in the target
language and cannot contribute to e nrich his/her ‘grasp of the text’s socio -
cultural context’. As the process of translation requires total
communicative competence on the part of translator for this overall grasp
of the text, bilingual dictionary cannot be the best tool.
Zgusta (1971:323 ) and Al -Kasimi (1983:61) as cited in Gauton (2008),
suggest that the bilingual lexicographer may not always find the necessary
equivalents in the TL like for culture -bound words. It is also applicable to
the grammatical categories and parts of speech as l anguages differ in this
sense. There can be some lexical units which may not have an equivalent
in another language. For example, in an Indian language, a person can use
an expression like ‘ vahi to ’ to assert what s/he has already said. But to
translate th e same, s/he cannot get an equivalent in English and merely has
to say, ‘ exactly ’ which is not an exact equivalent for the unit.
Gauton(2008) opines that the translator faces almost similar problems as
those faced by the lexicographer while compiling a bilingual dictionary.
Pinchuck (1977) has cautioned the translators that they always need to
remember that a dictionary is always out of date and many of the recorded
expressions may not be in common use. A possibility is also mentioned
by Pinchuck that the expressions considered as colloquial or non -standard
might have found a place in formal usage and the expressions newly
introduced in the language might not have been recorded in the
dictionary. Neubert (1992) therefore advises the user to possess a realistic
attitude. It is thus suggested by Neubert that bilingual dictionary needs to
‘choose between either defining the meaning of an L1 item or translating
it by way of L2 material.
Pinchuck expects the user of a bilingual dictionary to extend max imum
possible co -operation and contribute maximum understanding of his/her
mother tongue so as to successfully interpret the bilingual dictionary and
opines that the bilingual dictionary should be used as a last resort.
However, in spite of these shortc omings of a bilingual dictionary,
Pinchuck has listed some features of a good bilingual dictionary wherein
he has mentioned that possibly wide range of application for each item
should be furnished by the dictionary. It should also provide its complete
grammatical details and the level of usage of the equivalent provided.
Considering the limitations of bilingual dictionaries in terms of lack of
equivalents (known as anisomorphism), Baker and Kaplan (1994 cited in
Gauton: 2008) suggest an alternative i n the form of a new type of
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14 translated versions of monolingual dictionaries. These translate the
explanation into the TL or the user’s mother tongue.
2.3 COMMERCIAL AND COLLABORATIVE
TRANSLATION
Commercial Translation:
According to Koby (2012), when a text is translated from the source
language into another target language by a professional translator for a
commercial purpose and for remuneration, often with short deadlines, it is
called commercial translation. There are translation agencies that assign
translation jobs to freelance translators using a ‘translate -edit-proof’
model. Thus, a translator translates a text, a second translator in the same
language pair verifies the accuracy and revises the translation done and
then a proof reader again verifies the target text for correctness.
However, as mentioned in the 51 Types of Translation by Pan Tranz,
commercial translation is a very generic, wide -ranging type of translation
and includes other more specialized forms of translation like legal,
financial and technical.
Considering the present global and technologically advanced scenario of
business and any other field of work, especially when people heavily
depend upon electr onic reference services, a translator needs to possess a
good technical ability to use maximum possible online tools. The treasures
of knowledge, information as well as creative content available in
different regional and national languages are finding its way to the global
readership through translated texts. Translation, in this way, has gained
much importance in the present world. Following are some of the digital
tools available for translators today:
• Linguee: It combines a dictionary with a search engine. It also helps with
a web search for relevant translated documents and thus guides on how
a word is translated throughout the internet. The best part is that it also
uses Google Images with the linguistic items so as to help the
translators.
• The Free Dictionary: It provides a dictionary, thesaurus and
encyclopaedia in one. • Fluency Now
• MemoQ
• Translators Café
However, while dealing in the international market, the translator needs to
be very careful so that the content becomes easy for t he target audience to
understand. Baldridge (2020) is of the opinion that to make one’s content
globally acceptable, it is necessary for the translator to concentrate on
internationalization than on localization.
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15 Collaborative Translation:
This practi ce is as old as translation but has recently attracted the attention
of scholars in the field of Translation Studies. (Cordingley and
Manning:2017 cited in Huss, 2018) Technological innovations have made
it possible for multiple participants to collaborat e on the same text
simultaneously with the help of computer. Thus, collaborative translation
is a technique of translation involving multiple translators simultaneously
using computer assisted translation interface which also in cludes tools for
collabora tion. Collaborative translation is often confused with
crowdsourcing techniques. But it is necessary to remember that
collaborative translation is, as mentioned earlier, the technique of
involving multiple translation participants with shared resources. O n the
other hand, crowdsourcing means assigning translation tasks to a group of
individuals via a flexible open call. Collaborative translation helps in
reducing the total time of translation lifecycle whereas crowdsourcing
aims at simplifying the trans lation assignment phase of the lifecycle and
to reduce translation rates.
One of the disadvantages is the result of this activity. Generally it may
lead to a lower quality of translation as all of the translators may not be
certified translators. Some companies may use this system and abuse it so
as to save money by getting the documents freely translated.
For example, the website cucumis.org provides an opportunity to different
people and their different linguistic skills to be connected online.
Such collaborative platform brings people together breaking down the
barriers.(Passos: 2019). Such a collaborative activity reduces the tedious
task of retranslating and editing as more than one translators collaborate
for a better translation and thus wil l not need any second thought to be
given to the translated text. It is the best combination of humans and
machine working together.
2.4 AUDIO VISUAL SUBTITLING AND DUBBING
Due to the advent of globalization and technological innovations, the
makers o f a movie or a TV series, post release in the country of its origin,
aspire to reach out to the international audience with the onscreen
product. This has created a huge demand for the audio -visual translation
services. The technological advancement and the rise of media -streaming
companies like Netflix have further boosted this activity. Subtitling and
dubbing are the two major types of such translation. Audio -visual
translation mainly aims at synchronization of verbal and non -verbal
components.
The translators working on audio -visual translation assignments need to
consider several aspects of media art like sound effects, image and
atmosphere of the video, apart from the text.
According to Chaume (2013), audio -visual translation is a ‘mode of
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16 interlingually or intralingually.’ It is relatively a new area of translation
studies as compared to the translation of literary works. The terms
‘subtitling’ and ‘dubbing’ refer to the translation of an audio dialogue
available in video format like an online video clip, movie or a TV show.
Subtitling involves a written translation of spoken dialogue displayed on
screen simultaneously with the audio. According to Cintas (2006),
subtitl es are ‘mostly condensed translations of original dialogue which is
displayed on the screen as lines of text generally towards the foot of the
screen. Dubbing, on the other hand, refers to replacing the spoken
dialogue with a simultaneous spoken translati on. It is many times
confused with the term ‘voiceover’. Dubbing can be done post-production
and post -release of the audio -visual. Scrooge or Marley’s Ghost (1901)
was the first movie with inter -titles.
Subtitling is far less expensive as compared to du bbing. But the main
disadvantage here is that the audience concentrates on the text of these
subtitles more and thus may miss on the actual visual experience.
Subtitling is a translation process taking pl ace at two levels, between
languages and between the spoken and written word. Generally subtitling
does not aim at exact translation but it is a more concise translation.
In case of both, subtitling and dubbing, choice of words may happen to be
tricky in the situations where there is no equivalent in the TL. For
exampl e, humour that depends on puns or play on words in one language,
the foreign audience belonging to different linguistic group may find it
difficult to understand the punchline thus leading to the film to lose its
original appeal and impact. S ome other problem areas faced by the
translators in AV translation are characters’ speech peculiarities full of
dialects, accents and slang s. It is a major challenge for them as regards the
reproduction of all cultural and linguistic specifications in the translation.
In case of writing subtitles, the translator always needs to b e aware of the
average reading speed of the viewers.
Dubbing involves post synchronized re -voicing. Voices of the persons
other than the on screen actors who speak in a language d ifferent from the
source language are recorded in synchronization with the film image. The
original spoken text an d the target text are adjusted to fit the visual lip
movements of the original utterance.
Sometimes, sound effects or spoken lines by the or iginal act ors in the
source language are also called dubbing. This takes place when the sound
quality of the original recording is poor. P. Reich (2006) mentions that the
translation for dubbing is no t the final product offered to the audience and
that it is “a half -finished product” which requires further work.
2.5 CONCLUSION
The field of lexicography and the act of producing/ compiling the
bilingual dictionaries, though sound uninteresting, do have to its credit
multiple opportunities to be explored alo ng with interesting challenges for
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17 area for a research -oriented mind. One’s acquaintance with the terms like
commercial and collaborative translation certainly enriches the vi sion and
motivates the would -be translators to explore such opportunities
commercially. The field of audio -visual translation in the form of
subtitling and dubbing opens up one more door to commercial
opportunities in the field of translation.
2.6 CHECK YOUR PROGRESS
1. Define Lexicography. Explain how lexicography is an interesting area
to be explored in the field of research.
2. Write a note on Bilingual Dictionaries.
3. Explain how commercial translation is an upcoming prospective career
for the tran slators in the present world.
4. Write a note on Collaborative Translation.
5. ‘Audio visual translation in the form of subtitling and dubbing is a
challenging yet interesting store of opportunities for translators.’
Explain.
2.7 BIBLIOGRAPHY
 Audio -visual Translation: Dubbing or Sub -titles? (2018).
 https://termcoord.eu/2018/05/audiovisual -translation -dubbing -or-
subtitles/ Accessed on 15th November, 2022.
 Fontenelle, T. Bilingual Dictionaries: History and Development .
 https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordh b/9780199691630.013.4 (2016)
 https://academic.oup.com/edited -volume/34561/chapter
 abstract/293267571?redirectedFrom=fulltext
 Gabriel, J. 16 Online Translation Tools Recommended by Translators.
gengo.com/community/15 -online -translation -tools -translators / (2019).
Accessed on 12th November, 2022.
 Gauton, R. Bilingual Dictionaries, the Lexicographer and the
Translator. Lexikos 18 (AFRILEX -reeks/series 18: 2008): 106 -118.
 https://www.ajol.info/index.php/lex/article/view/47246/33626
Accessed on November, 8th, 2022.
 Hausmann, Franz J. Once Again Why Lexicography is Science.
 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/331645953_Once_Again_W
hy_Lexicography_Is_Science Accessed on November, 6, 2022. munotes.in

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18  Huss, J. Collaborative Translation. Routledge Handbook of Lit erary
Translation. (pp. 389 - 406). (May, 2018).
 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/324964040_Collaborative_T
ranslation \
 Jorge Diaz Cintas, Díaz Cintas, Jorge. (2006). Audiovisual Translation
in the Third Millennium. In: Anderman , G. & Rogers, M . (Eds)
Translation Today: Trends and Perspectives . Beijing: Foreign
Language Teaching and Research Press. 192 -204 (Beijing: Foreign
Language Teaching and Research Press., 2006), 192 –204
 Koby, G. (2012). Commercial Translation.
 https://onlinelibrary.w iley.com/doi/10.1002/9781405198431.wbeal015
6 Accessed on November, 8th, 2022.
 Lexicography History, Focus & Importance
 https://study.com/learn/lesson/lexicography -history -focus -
importance.html . Accessed on 8th November, 2022.
 Matkivska, N. Audiovisual Translation: Conception, Types,
Characters’ Speech and Translation Strategies Applied. Studies about
Languages . (2014).
 https://kalbos.ktu.lt/index.php/KStud/article/view/8516/4304 Accessed
on 14th November, 2022.
 Olohan, M. Commercial Translation. Handbook of Translation Studies
Volume 1 (2010), pp. 41 –44. ISSN 2210 -4844 | E -ISSN© 2010 –2016
John Benjamins Publishing Company.
https://benjamins.com/online/hts/articles/comm1 Accessed on 14th
November, 2022.
 Passos, L. 3 Benefits of a Collaborative Tra nslation Platform. (2019).
https://www.bureauworks.com/blog/3 -benefits -of-a-collaborative -
translation -platform -fc/. Accessed on 12th November, 2022.
 Pettit, Z. The Audio -Visual Text: Subtitling and Dubbing Different
Genres. (2004). https://id.erudit.or g/iderudit/009017ar Accessed on
15th November, 2022.
 Rigual, C. and Calvi, M. Translation and Lexicography: A Necessary
Dialogue. MonTI 6 (2014: 37 -62). ISSN 1889 -4178.
http://dx.doi.org/10.6035/MonTI.2014.6.1 . Accessed on 11th
November, 2022.
 Supardi, M . and Putri, D. A. Audio -Visual Translation: Subtitling and
Dubbing Technique - Movie Soundtrack in Frozen: Let it go. Buletin
Al-Turas . https://journal.uinjkt.ac.id/index.php/al -
turats/article/download/8621/4968 Accessed on 16th November,
2022. munotes.in

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19  Tranz, Pan. 51 Types of Translation.
 https://www.infomarex.com/uploaded_files/159879466851%20types%
20of%20translation.pdf Accessed on 12th November, 2022.
 Voice -over and dubbing.
https://www.linguaserve.com/en/multilingual -services/
 Xavier Michel. Collaborati ve Translation: A New Approach to
Translation. https://mastertcloc.unistra.fr/2017/04/10/collaborative -
translation/ (2017). Accessed on 12th November, 2022.
 https://www.bell -foundation.org.uk/eal -
programme/guidance/effective -teaching -of-eal learners/grea t-
ideas/bilingual -dictionaries/. Accessed on 8th November, 2022.
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_translation
 https://www.acclaro.com/blog/subtitling -and-dubbing/


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20 3
TYPES OF TRANSLATION -PROCESS AND
PROBLEMS - TRANSLATION OF PROSE,
FICTION AND POETRY
Unit Structure
3.0 Objectives
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Process of Translating Prose Text
3.3 Process of Translating Poetry
3.4 Conclusion
3.5 Check Your Progress
3.0 OBJECTIVES
● To acquaint the readers with the process of translation of fiction and
prose.
● To make the reader aware of the problems encountered by the
translator while translating fiction: novels, short stories and essays.
● To analyze linguistic , aesth etic and cultural problems while translating
fiction and prose.
● To make the reader aware of the problems encountered by the
translator while translating poetry
● To analyze Linguistic, Aesthetic and cultural problems while
translating poetry.
● To acquaint the students with the loss and gain in literary translation
and the strategies applied.
● To make the readers aware of the typical issues the translator faces as
drama is a performing art.
3.1 INTRODUCTION
Translation involves a transfer of mea ning from one language to another.
Hence, the process of translation involves various stages of decoding and
re-coding. Further, translation involves various steps that are related to
reading, revision, proofreading and finding equivalence. This process of
literary translation is described, in detail, in this unit. Further, munotes.in

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21 Translating literary works has always been more difficult than translating
other types of text because literary works have specific values called
aesthetic and expressive values. The aes thetic function of the work
emphasizes the beauty of the words (diction), figurative language,
metaphors, etc., on the other hand, expressive functions deal with the
writer's thought (or process of thought), emotion, etc. When it comes to
translation issue s, the translator should try, at his best, to transfer these
specific values into the target language.
Translating literary works has always been more difficult than translating
other types of text because literary works have specific values called
aesthet ic and expressive values. The aesthetic function of the work
emphasizes the beauty of the words (diction), figurative language,
metaphors, etc., on the other hand, expressive functions deal with the
writer's thought (or process of thought), emotion, etc. W hen it comes to
translation issues, the translator should try, at his best, to transfer these
specific values into the target language.
As a literary genre, drama is only realized in performance. As a literary
form, it is designed for the theatre because c haracters are assigned roles
and they act out their roles as the action is enacted on the stage. Drama is
also said to be a theatrical craft. In the domain of literary translation,
poetry is the most challenging of all genres. The translator using her / h is
skill and creativity can apply the strategies to overcome the problems of
translation. Ultimately, it is the meaning and also the form of the texts that
need to be transferred. Let’s discuss the issues one by one.
3.2 PROCESS OF TRANSLATING PROSE TEXT:
In the case of experimental fiction particularly the prosaic one, a translator
has to be very careful in bringing out the qualities of the SL text into TL
text. Hillaire Belioc has laid down six rules for the translator of prose
texts.
1) The translator should not plead on, word by word or sentence by
sentence but should block his work that is to consider the work as an
integral unit.
2) The translator should translate idiom by idiom.
3) The translator should render intention by intention.
4) Belioc warns against less fund amiss, those words or structures that
may appear to correspond in both SL and TL but accurately do not.
5) The translator is advised to translate boldly.
6) The translator should never embellish.
Newmark suggests that a short story is the most difficult one in translating
as the translator has to bring in the clonelike effect in TL text.
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22 3.2.1. Problems in Translation of Prose and Fiction
The issues in translating prose are less complicated than issues in fiction.
Through the centuries many theories have been formulated by experts in
the field to help translators make better translations. But no theory is so
comprehensive that the translators do not have any problems. The
translation is a challenging activity and few difficulties emerge throughout
the translation process since every language diversely portrays the world
and has its grammar structure, grammar rules and syntax variance.
A translator of fiction has to bear certain points in mind before setting
ahead with the act properly. Instead of beginning at the beginning of the
text right away, he must study the work thoroughly and analyze its
underlying significance. He must be able to identify the spirit and the
varying tones. He must study stylistic factors such a s sentence
arrangement, word order, use of pronouns, questions, repetitions etc. He
must take care to abstain from making negative shifts like
misinterpretation, superficial interpretation, sub -interpretation etc. His
preoccupation should not be only with content. Instead, he must view the
work as a whole. He must view every individual sentence, and every word
as a part of the total structure. He must be able to identify the symbolic,
metaphoric or deliberately decharacterised terms, repetition, and their
purpose and role in making up the text. If the translator is concerned only
with the content, then he is likely to lose the other dimensions of the
novel.
The most particular problems that the translators face include - illegible
text, missing references, s everal constructions of grammar, dialect terms
and neologisms, irrationally vague terminology, inexplicable acronyms
and abbreviations, untranslatability, intentional misnaming, particular
cultural references etc. Nonetheless, some theorists think that ‘li teral
translation is not possible. They present three main reasons supporting
their stance:
1. Because a particular word in one language often contains meanings
that involve several words in another language. For example, the
English word ‘wall’ might be rendered in German as Wand (inside
wall) or as Mauer (exterior wall),
2. Because grammatical particles (verb tenses, singular/dual/plural, case
markers etc.) are not available in every language, and
3. Because idioms of one language and culture may be utterly perplexing
to speakers from another language and culture.
Translation of fiction involves the exchange of the social experience of
individuals in the fictional world with readers in another culture or society.
Both the social factor and the auth orial factor (authorial individualism) are
emphasized in the process of fiction translation. The two kinds of style
i.e., authorial style and text style concern both social and authorial factors
of fiction and distinguish one novel/short story from another . Therefore,
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23 the core of the translation of fiction. It is also a difficult task for the
translator of fiction to explore the style of a novel/short story and the
message the aut hor conveys about social life, human relationships, etc.
Prose fiction has a much greater social influence than the other two
literary genres. Translation of fiction depends largely on various factors,
including aesthetic conventions, historical and cultu ral-social
circumstances, authorial individualism and the author's worldview, among
which reproduction of the fictional style is regarded as its core. Neither the
linguistic, communicative, nor philological approach can cover all the
features of fiction tr anslation. Although the introduction of literary
stylistics to the translation of fiction brings out a new perspective in the
study of fiction translation and particularly emphasizes stylistic analysis, it
is limited to the study of the translation of the text style, leaving out the
authorial style, which has a wider scope involving social, cultural and
ideological factors. The socio -semiotic approach takes into consideration
various aspects of the philological, linguistic, communicative, and other
approach es of translation and extends considerably the base for
recognizing the meaningfulness of both lexical contents, rhetoric form and
cultural -social value. Therefore, it is relatively comprehensive. We
consider it the best approach to studying the translatio n of fiction and
solving the potential problems in the translation of fiction.

3.2.1.1 . Culture -Based Problems in Translation
From a particular translated work of art, the readers can understand the
bliss and sufferings of the native people. The TL reade rs can also
understand the culture followed by a particular group of people. Through
the translated works even common people can know about the culture,
behaviour, sufferings, and gender harassment of other natives. Culture is
the way of living of a partic ular sector of people. ‘Cultural language’ is to
be distinguished from ‘Universal language’ and ‘Personal languages.
Universal words such as “breakfast”, “embrace”, and “pile”, often cover
the universal function but not the cultural description. “thali”,
“kunggumam”, “chittappa”, “metti” are all culture -based words. These
above SL words cannot be translated by replacing the exact TL words.
In any TL text, a total linguistic or cultural equivalence is difficult to be
achieved. The translator has to integrate various strategies to communicate
most effectively. Ivir (1987) lists procedures and strategies to fill up the
cultural ‘gaps. In ‘Ghisa’ the translator adopts various strategies but at
times due to cultural differences, linguistic inequality occurs and t herefore
cultural communications suffer. For example -
SL Text Words SL Text Words
Lipa-poti This expression is peculiar to mud houses but
when translated as ‘Plastered and painted’ the rustic flavor is lost. Ghara When translated as ‘jar’ fails to bring the exact
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24 Kurta English has no substitute for the word ‘Kurta’
in fact it is translated as ‘Shirt’.
Dakshina In English culture, this concept does not occur.
The word “Tribute” appears to be imprecise.

Hence to convey the proper culture, sometimes the dialectic al words of SL
are translated as it is to give the cultural image effectively. Some other
words such as ‘Namaskar’, ‘Jalebi’, and ‘Guru Saheb’ are used in the
same form in TL to maintain the cultural effect.
The encounter with an alien culture world, in t he first instance amounts to
a confrontation of two heterogeneous sensibilities which are conditioned
by the intrinsic value system of their respective culture. Such a
confrontation would most probably evoke resistance to experience the
alterity or the oth erness of the alien cultures.
Translation from language to language is in fact translation from culture to
culture. Bassnett believes that translation must take place within a
framework of culture. Translation as cross -cultural communication must
be ma de both on a linguistic basis and a cultural one because language and
culture are so interdependent that one implies the other.
Surveying the cultural structure, we categorize the implicit assumptions
and premises that govern the behaviors of human being s into the deep
structure of culture i.e., the psychological system including worldviews,
value systems, national characteristics, aesthetic standards and thinking
patterns, and their sub -categories which are the crucial cultural mechanism
that produces th e differences in psychological characteristics at the
individual level. And it is this deep underlying structure that makes each
culture unique, affects the ways the mind works, and determines the way a
person perceives, processes and responds to the infor mation from the
environment. Thus, when we see translation as cross -cultural
communication, we first all see translations as the valid transfer of cultural
psychology on the base of fidelity. Then come up with two translation
principles - fidelity and valid ity.
Let us illustrate with Rajender Bedi’s novel “Ek Chadar Maili Si ” and
Khushwant Singh’s translation of it as “ I Take This Woman”. The central
issue in “Ek Chadar Maili Si” is the accepted social practice of a younger
brother marrying his elder brothe r’s widow, the meaning of which is
symbolically revealed in the word “Chadar” and the half -protection it
offers, the vulnerability it both protects and exposes in emotional and
economic terms is accentuated by the word “Maili”. The Urdu title
literally mea ns “A Soiled Sheet or Mantle”. The translated title does not
contain the sense of compulsion and necessity underlying this social
practice. It shifts the emphasis to the final one of conflict which is present
in the novel.
The viewpoint of the author, the theme of the work, and the lingual and
extra -lingual methods used thus form a threefold base on which the
creative act stands. And it is on this base alone that the translator can munotes.in

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25 construct the translated structure. The translator has no liberty to add or
take away anything. Thus, if the creative writer has used symbols and
images the translated work should be communicable without further
explanation.
A dialect is a form of language which is spoken in a particular part of a
country and contains some differ ent words, grammar and pronunciation
from other forms of the same language. No language is monolithic in
character; there are varieties within each language. No single language is
superior or inferior to another language on any grounds. Some particular
features of one language may differ from another language.
The distinction can be observed in the use of Kinship terms . If the speaker
of the SL passage is addressing the lady of her neighbouring house as
“mami” or as “mama”. The use of kinship terms” mami” o r “mama” is not
necessarily used only among the relatives. In the TL also, such reference
among non -relatives exists and so the SL term “mami” or “mama” has
been translated as “aunty” or “uncle” respectively in its informal
reference. Such non -linguistic s ocietal customs should be taken into
consideration by the translator. In the SL, kinship term like “cittappa” is
referred to using only the TL kinship term “uncle”. Some sector people
address other ladies as “mami” even though they are not relatives.
Likew ise, the SL terms like “attai”, “mami”, “citti” have only one referent
in the TL, i.e., aunt.
The translation of fiction struggles with the problem of conveying the
peculiar use of language - especially idioms, and phrases from one social
context to anothe r. For example, the word ‘neech’ - to few is a person of
so-called ‘low -caste’ but to some, it may mean ‘cunning’. Similarly, the
word ‘gharjamai’ can hardly be explained by translating it literally as
‘son-in-law’ staying in the house of ‘in -laws’, whereas in the Indian
context it is taken in a derogatory insulting sense.
3.2.1.2. Linguistics -Based Problems in Translation
A general comparison of the phonological character of English and
Marathi is interesting. It seems that the Marathi word has a greater load of
vowels and consonants than English. A passage from Eliot (translated by
Vilas Sarang) contains 154 words in Engli sh and 125 words in the Marathi
translation. The original passage has 222 vowel sounds in English while in
Marathi translation it has 366 vowel sounds. The original has 362
consonant sounds in English and 399 consonant sounds in the Marathi
translation.
English has a large number of monosyllabic words while Marathi has
relatively few. Secondly, the use of inflections makes Marathi words
longer. Eliot’s line - ‘woods move, music move, only in time. The English
word ‘move’ has 2 consonants and 1 vowel sound. T he Marathi equivalent
‘saraktet’ has 5 consonants and 4 vowel sounds. Marathi is phonologically
more cluttered than English. Thirdly, Marathi seems to be more saturated
with vowels than English. One reason could be the greater existence of
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26 two consonants. English seems to give the impression of certain crispness
while Marathi has a large flood of vowel sounds.
In transcribing Hindi proper names, one has to be aware of the
phonological syste m of both Hindi and English. If the transcribed form
happens to be homophonous to another word in English which sounds
objectionable then the translator must modify the transcription of the
word. The Hindi proper name ‘Dixit’ should not be transcribed as
‘Dikshit’. However, the problems of transcription from Hindi into English
are not as troublesome as problems at other levels of grammar.
Syntactic Fragmentation
Marathi is a highly inflected language, but English is not. An inflected
language gives greater freedom to its uses since the change in the order of
words does not necessarily affect its grammatical structure.
Ambiguity in English -Marathi translation may also occur due to the
absence of definite and indefinite articles in Marathi. A simple proverb
like “An apple a day keeps the doctor away” can be translated as “Roz ek
safarchand khaoo, doctor pasun dur rahu”. Here actually the meaning of
the proverb is related to health and cannot be translated as it is in Marathi.
Syntactic Suspense
This is relat ed to the direct address technique in the writing of fiction
which is commonly seen in English and suspense is created. But in Hindi
or Marathi, it is difficult to achieve.
For example : “Oh! My love I die for thee”. When translated into Marathi
or Hindi t he essence of the direct address and the intense effect in the
sentence is lost.
Syntactic Elaboration
A major difference between the structure of an English sentence and that
of a Marathi sentence is that in English the main verb normally occurs
fairly e arly, whereas in Marathi it occurs at the very end of the sentence.
For example - In Marathi, the sentence “Mala changle Marathi yete” when
translated into English - is “I know Marathi properly”. Here the verb ‘yete’
occurs at the end of the sentence whereas in English the verb ‘know’
occurs at the start of the sentence.
Phrase Structure
Hindi does not have articles, either definite or indefinite. Definiteness is
indicated by other grammatical devices, such as the use of demonstrative
pronouns and the numeri cal “one”. Definiteness can also be part of some
grammatical constructions such as the relative clause construction and to
some extent, topicalization. Correlative Relative Clauses in Hindi are
indefinite, whereas Restrictive Relative Clause is definite. T herefore, a munotes.in

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27 translator should not use a Restrictive Relative Clause for a Hindi
Correlative Relative Clause.
For example (a reference to the Hindi novel - Maila Aanchal) - “Jo jotega
so boyega”, should be translated as “Whoever tills will sow” and not as
“the one who tills will sow”.
Lexical Problems
The simple difficulty of finding equivalent terms, words, phrases while
translating from one language to another is called lexical problem. The
dictionary is an obvious help, but it is of limited use -
❖ Words have no exact equivalents in another language.
❖ Even language reflects social and cultural needs.
❖ Words evolve in meaning over some time. What we do is the shades of
meaning. For example - In English - Home, House, and Shelter.
In Marathi - Ghar, Hindi - Makan, Ashiyana
Some words describing social customs and practices are difficult to
translate because they attain exactness.
For example -
Dahej - Dowry
Ghar Jamai - son-in-law living at in -laws
Bahu beti ki izzat - Honor of daughter -in-law and daughter
Greeting word s- Namaskar, Namaste
In English ‘Hello’, ‘Hi’ makes no difference whether it is greeted by an
older person or younger. The word ‘you’ in English is equivalent to all age
group people and with the same respect whereas in Urdu we have words
like ‘tu’, ‘tum’, and ‘aap’ according to age group and a mark of respect.
The translator should use slang and Dialects in the colloquial language of
TL.
The meaning of a word in Hindi does not accurately map onto the domain
of a similar English word. For example - ‘hasna’ in Hindi means ‘laugh’ as
well as ‘smile’ in English. In translation it is hard to decide between
“Baldev said it with a smile” and “Baldev said it with laughter” (Novel -
Maila Aanchal).
Idiomatic phrases are always a problem. For example, consider “log haste
haste lot pot ho gaye”. A literal translation would be “people rolled on the
ground with laughter. Actually, it should be translated as, “people burst
into laughter”.
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28 3.3 PROCESS OF TRANSLATING POETRY
The translator of a poetic text first reals / translates the SL and then
through a further process of decoding, translates the text into the target
language in it, he is not doing less than the reader of the SL text alone, he
is doing more, for the SL text is being approached through more than is set
of systems. The interlingual translation is bound to reflect the translator’s
creative interpretation of the SL text. Moreover, the degree to which the
translator reproduces the form, meter rhyme, rhythm, tone, register and so
on of the SL text will be determined by the TL system as by the SL system
and will also depend on the function of the translation. Andre Lefebvre
catalogues seven different strategies for translating a poem.
1) Phonemic translation, which attempts to reproduce the SL sound of the
TL while at the same time producing an acceptable paraphrase of
sense.
2) Literal translation, where the emphasis on word -for-word translation
distorts the sense and the syntax of the original.
3) Metrical trans lation where the criterion is the reproduction of the SL
meter.
4) Poetry into prose, where distortion of the sense is communicative
value and syntax of the SL text results from this method.
5) Rhymed translation, where meter and rhyme are the main
consid erations of the translator.
6) Blank verse translation, where restrictions are imposed on the
translator by the choice of the structure.
7) Interpretation which includes theme and form.
3.3.1. Problems in the Translation of Poetry
Among all literary work s, poetry has something special compared to the
others. In a poem, beauty is not only achieved with the choice of words
and figurative languages like in novels and short stories, but also with the
creation of rhythm, rhyme, meter, and specific expressions and structures
that may not conform to the ones of the daily language. In short, the
translation of poetry needs 'something more than translating other genres
of literature.
Compared with fiction and drama, the terse culture -specific use of words
in poetry makes it relatively difficult to achieve any adequate or definitive
translation. Different rhetorical devices such as symbol, analogy, allusion,
simile, or ironic counterpoi nts produce complexity in poetry. A poem
employs a variety of influences, which are literary and cultural, historical
and mythical, and universal and topical. The use of a foreign language for
translating distorts some of the subtleties of the native exper ience. Since
English does not have as strong a cultural basis as a regional poetic
tradition has concerning the use of the resources of folk culture and folk munotes.in

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29 tradition, poetry translation poses a series of problems and difficulties.
Despite such problems i n poetry translation, various attempts have been
made to make translate poetry into different languages.
Translatability is a major issue in the context of literary genres. As literary
language has a balance between form and content, and it relies on a hi dden
network of suggestions; the translator has to be alive to the nuances of the
text. It is, as Robert Scholes points out “a complex structural system
working within the larger structure of literature as a whole. The translator
has to recognize the balan ce between these often -dialectical systems. It is
to be noted that the translator is first a reader of the text and then an
interpreter.”
Gayatri Spivak in her essay The Politics of Translation discusses
translation as the most intimate act of reading. She writes, “I surrender to
the text when I translate. ” (Venuti: 398). The translator has to read with
care and sensitivity and note the cultural context in which the text is
rooted. To an extent, this reading also involves interpretation. This
surrendering to the text brings out several issues in translation which are
mainly on three levels:
1- Linguistic Issues
2- Literary or Aesthetic Issues
3- Cultural Issues
3.3.1.1. Linguistic Issues:
The linguistic problems in translating verse are twofold; the words a nd
meaning, on one hand, whereas the flow and rhythm on the other hand.
The words and meaning embody certain issues related to the images,
similes, metaphors, culture -specific words, phrasal verbs, idioms, punned
expressions, enjambment and grammar of both the TL text and the SL
text.
The most difficult challenge while translating literary texts is found in the
differences between cultures. People of a given culture look at things from
their perspective. Larson notes that “different cultures have different
focuses. Some societies are more technical and others less
technical.” This difference is reflected in the amount of vocabulary which
is available to talk about a particular topic (Larson 1984:95). Larson adds
that there may also be both “technical and non -technical” vocabulary that
is available to talk about the same thing within a given society.
Other difficulties of translation are regarding the idioms and phrasal verbs.
An idiom is an expression peculiar to a language and not readily
understandable from its grammatical construction or the meaning of its
parts. It is considered that the living language of any country is idiomatic.
According to the structuralist point of view, grammar is the study of the
rules governing the use of a language. That set of rules is also called the munotes.in

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30 grammar of the language, and each language has its distinct grammar.
Hence, for any translator, grammar becomes a matter of concern. As the
complete language system of any society depe nds on its grammatical
rules, so, for the translator, grammatical knowledge of both, the TL and
SL become necessary.
Flow and rhythm cause another problem in translation. As the rhyme,
rhythm, alliteration, assonance, consonance, etc., produce musicality i n
any poem, hence its existence becomes important. But most of the time it
is observed that these musical elements, which are the beauty of the
poems, are somewhat lost in translation.
The problem of sounds and cadence confronting the translator with
difficulties cannot always be fully overcome. Sounds make poetry
translation even more difficult due to the particular meaning, and the
music, attached to them. Specifically, alliteration limits the strength of
translation. There are many cases where translator s have to sacrifice both
sound and cadence to keep to meaning.
The highly rhymed poems constitute another hindrance for the translator
of poetry, not to mention for the translator of English where it is harder to
find rhymed poems than in most languages. I n this case, the translator
should answer the question of how important it is to keep to the poet’s
rhyme and how necessary it is to find rhymes in the target language to
match the rhymes of the original. The same applies in the case of meter
where the tra nslator has to decide whether the poems in meter have to be
in meter too when translated, taking into consideration that meter is not
natural in all languages. The issue of the meter is even more important
since the meter sets the tone and mood of the whol e piece. The translator
should also take into consideration the purposes for which both rhyme and
meter have been used. Tense too matters a lot in the translation of poetry.
The translator faces a challenge when he has no equivalent linguistic
means to cre ate the same effect. The issue of whether he can add an image
of his own as an equivalent one for the target language then arises. It is at
this point that translating becomes a challenging task.
However, we should not dismiss the translation of poetry as “impossible”.
On the contrary, translation has advanced and enriched civilizations by
breaking down barriers of time, place, language and cultural differences. If
the translator applies the correct translation tools, poetry translation is a
feasible task. The evidence of masterly created translations indicates that a
skilled translator can achieve a high -standard translation with the majority
of the source text’s features kept intact and only a partial semantic and
stylistic loss.
The verse is an integral p art of poetic form. It is the minimum requirement
that differentiates prose from poetry. Some poems by their versification
are not amenable to translation for instance: -
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31 "A is for apple which lies in the grass,
B is for beer which forth in the glass,
C is for curry which we love to eat,
D is for dumplings which are a real treat".
Such poems where there is a verbal play on the alphabet of a particular
language cannot be rendered into another language. Then, there are poems
with a special rhyme scheme which poses an insurmountable hurdle in
translation. A traditional rhyme for preschool children is a case in point: -
"One, two, buckle my shoe
Three, Four, shut the door
Five, six, pick up sticks
Seven, eight, lock the gate
Nine, ten starts again"
A translation of these lines is almost impossible for obvious reasons in the
above -quoted instances, the style and sense are so well blended that it is
hardly translatable. More importantly, a strictly personal or language -
based poem allows no translation. The translat ion is required of poetry
which transcends barriers of time and clime and heightens our perception
of existence and experience as manifest in such lines.
"To see a world in a grain of sand
And heaven in a wildflower
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand
And eternity in an hour"
When a poet exhorts the readers in this way, his words reverberate through
any mind that captures their sense and significance.
Such pieces are translatable and should be translated. This is the reason
why myriads of readers withou t knowledge of Latin and Greek have
enjoyed the works of Homer and Virgil. But even the translation of such
poems is not sans its share of constraints and problems for the translator.
A translator of poetry first decides what constitutes the total structur e and
then resolves the problems in one way or another, through a pragmatic
approach, while translating a type of poetry that relies on a series of rules
that are non -existent in the TL.
English meter differs radically from the Marathi meter. In English, stress
is the basic element whereas in Marathi the length of the syllable is
important. For example, in Marathi the meter i.e., ‘2 Maatra’ is a long
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32 The most common meter in Marathi is the ‘Pedukalaka’ - consisting of 16
lines with a rhythmic break in the middle of each line dividing it into two
equal parts. The verse forms of traditional, devotional and folk poetry like
‘abhang’ and ‘ovi’ are more natural to Marathi poets. Most of the Marathi
poets write in free verse. For a translator translating such type of piece into
English becomes a challenging task for the translator.
Here is an example of Karandikar’s translation of some of his ‘abhangs’ in
English in the form of the original. The result is not encour aging.
Let the neck escape/ from the hook of I//
With this anguished cry/ for truth//
The search for truth for truth/is sweet like fire; /
The seeker, on this pyre, / can’s rest//
In English dislocation of words and order is liable to create ambiguities. In
Gray’s famous “Elegy”, the line - “And all the air a solemn stillness
holds”, is grammatically ambiguous. One may read it as “all the air holds
a solemn stillness” or as “a solemn stillness holds all the air”. In Marathi,
on the other hand, such ambiguit y would not arise for the object of ‘holds’
as it takes the appropriate inflection.
Dr. Sarang illustrates this by taking a famous line from modern Marathi
poet- Mardhekar - “pipat mele olya undir” which can be roughly translated
as “rats (or mice) died in the wet barrel”. If the word order is retained it
becomes “in the barrel died wet rats” resulting in a misinterpretation of the
text implying that ‘not’ is the attribute of ‘rats’ while the correct rendering
is “rats died in the wet barrel”. Dilip Chitre t ranslates it as “mice in the
wet barrel died”. Here the original effect is lost.
Phrase structures too matter. Let us consider the example from “The
Waste Land”. We observe that prepositions are placed at the beginning of
the phrase in English whereas in Marathi they become inflections that end
a phrase.
Dialect reflects the speaker’s social background. Dr. Sarang refers to
Marathi work which uses English and Hindi in Dialect form.
Surve’s poem on Nehru’s death has a dialogue between two prostitutes.
The dialogue is in ‘Bombay Hindi” which is translated into English by
Dilip Chitre where it loses its effect.
Example -
“What happened, Sundari? (Asks a harlot)
“Don’t burn the incense today. Nehru’s gone!
Answer to other
“Really? O.K. then we’ll take a night off?” munotes.in

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33 Here the naturalistic authenticity and the distinctive flavor of Bombay
Hindi are lost.
3.3.1.2. Literary or Aesthetic Issues:
Aesthetic values or poetic truth in a poem are conveyed in word order and
sounds, as well as in the cognitive sense (logic ). And these aesthetic
values have no independent meaning, but they are correlative with the
various types of meaning in the text. Hence, if the translator destroys the
word choice, word order, and sounds, s/he impairs and distorts the beauty
of the origin al poem. Delicacy and gentleness, for instance, are ruins if the
translator provides crude alliterations for the original carefully -composed
alliterations. So, the problem in translating a verse is how to retain the
aesthetic values in the TL text.
The fir st factor is poetic structure. It is important to note that the structure
meant here is the plan of the poem as a whole, the shape and the balance
of individual sentences of each line. So, it does not have to relate directly
to the sentential structures or grammar of a language, even in fact it is very
much affected by the sentential structure. Thus, maintaining the original
structure of the poem may mean maintaining the original structure of each
sentence.
Another literary or aesthetic factor is sound. As stated before, the sound is
anything connected with sound cultivation including rhyme, rhythm,
assonance; onomatopoeia, etc. a translator must try to maintain them in the
translation. As Newmark (1981:67) further states, “In a significant text,
semantic tr uth is cardinal [meaning is not more or less important, it is
important!], whilst of the three aesthetic factors, sound (e.g., alliteration or
rhyme) is likely to recede in importance... rhyme is perhaps the most
likely factor to ‘give’ -- rhyming is diffic ult and artificial enough in one
language, reproducing line is sometimes doubly so.” In short, if the
translation is faced with the condition where s/he has to make a sacrifice,
s/he should sacrifice the sound.
Metaphorical expressions are also one of the issues. It means any
constructions evoking visual, sounds, touch, and taste images, traditional
metaphors, direct comparisons without the words "like' and "as if", and all
figurative languages. Intentionally, th e writer does not use the term
metaphor in the sub -heading since it has a different meaning for some
people. What is generally known as a (traditional) metaphor, for example,
is not the same as the metaphor meant by Newmark.
The possible question arising n ow is 'how far a translator can modify the
author's metaphorical expressions?' It depends on the importance and
expressiveness. If the expressions are very expressive in terms of
originality, the expressions should be kept as close as possible to the
origi nal, in terms of object, image, sense, and metaphor.
Further, as it is known, there are two kinds of expressions: universal and
culturally -bound expressions. Universal expressions are the ones that
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34 the world. Engkaulah matahariku, for example, is a universal expression
for every culture that sees the sun as the source of light, source of energy,
and source of life. Therefore, the expression can be simply transferred into
'You are my sun'.
3.3.1.3. Cultural Issues:
In translating culturally -bound expressions, like in other expressions, a
translator may apply one or some of the procedures: Literal translation,
transference, naturalization, cultural equivalent, functional equivalent,
description equivalent, classifier, componential analysis, deletion,
couplets, note addition, glosses, reduction, and synonymy. In literal
translation, a translator does the unit -to-unit translation. The translation
unit may vary from word to larger units s uch as phrases or clauses.
One applies the ‘transference procedure’ if s/he converts the SL word
directly into TL word by adjusting the alphabet (writing system) only. The
result is the ‘loan word’. When s/he does only adjust the alphabet but also
adjusts it into the normal pronunciation of the TL word, s/he applies
naturalization.
In addition, the translator may find the culturally equivalent word of the
SL or, if s/he cannot find one, neutralize or generalize the SL word to
result in “functional equivalen ts”. When the translator modifies the SL
word with a description of form in the TL, the result is description
equivalent. Sometimes a translator provides a generic or super ordinate
term for a TL word and the result in the TL is called a classifier. And
when the translator just supplies the near TL equivalent for the SL word,
s/he uses synonymy.
In the componential analysis procedure the translator splits up a lexical
unit into its sense components, often one -to-two, one -to-three, or more
translations. More over, a translator sometimes adds some information,
whether he puts it in a bracket or other clause or even a footnote or even
deletes unimportant SL words in translation to smooth the result for the
reader.
3.3.2. Illustrations of Translated Poems
1) Look at the translation of Wordsworth's poem ‘The Solitary Reaper’
The solitary reaper
Behold her, single in the field,
Yon solitary Highland Lass!
Reaping and singing by herself;
Stop here, or gently pass!
Hindi Translation -
एकात लावक
उस े िन हार ना , े म एक , munotes.in

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35 य ोन एकात हाईल ड लड़क !
कट ाई और ख ु द स े गा ;
य हा ँ ब ंद करो , या धी र े पास !
Marathi Translation -
एकट ा कापणी करणारा
ितया बघ , ेात एकल ,
पलीकडचा एकट ा डगराळ द ेश म ु लगी !
Reaping आिण वत ार े गात ;
य ेथ े था ं बा , िक ं वा हलय ा पास !
In the above example the tra nslator faces linguistics, aesthetic and cultural
problems. It’s difficult to maintain sentence structure, rhythmic pattern,
meter, and sound pattern. Cultural and geographical differences matter.
There are no equivalent words for ‘Yon’ and ‘Highland’ in H indi or
Marathi. Either one retains the use of the same words or tries to give the
most equivalent words to it.
2) I would further like to give examples of the translation of Urdu
verses done by David Matthews and show how he has achieved
equivalence in t ranslation and also the loss that occurred during the
process of translation:
Dile Nadah tuje hua kya hai?
Aaakhir is dard ki dawa kya hai? My foolish heart! What has
become of you?
No cure for this pain? What
Can I do?
Hum hai mushtaak aur who
bezaar
Ya Illahi ye manjra kya hai? I am eager. She is quite
offhand.
What’s this, my God? How
can I understand?
Mai bhi muuh mei zabaan
rakhtahun
Kaash pucho ki muddah kya
hai? I have a tongue to speak, I too
aspire.
If only she would ask me my
desire.
Jab ki tum bin nahi koi maujud,
Fir ye hangama, ae Khuda kya
hai? You are One in all entirety;
So, then what means this
strange variety?
(Mirza Asadullah Ghalib) (David Matthews)
Following is the translation by Dr. Ambreen Kharbe:
Oh My foolish heart what has happened to you?
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36 I am eager and you indifferent.
Oh my God! What’s the matter?
I too have tongue to express.
I wish how my desire would have been asked?
There is none beside her presence;
Then Oh my God why this strange variety?
In the above Gazal, the translation will face linguistic, aesthetic and
cultural as there are two languages involved in the form of SL and TL.
The background of the translator matters a lot. He should know the cul ture
of both the language and of course a deep knowledge of linguistic aspects
of language. Metaphorical meaning too matters. In the second couplet, the
use of the word ‘woh’ is misinterpreted by David Matthews. He has used
the word ‘she’ for ‘woh’. It can be general. The poet might have used it
for King, any ruler, any person, or maybe a beloved.
3.4 CONCLUSION
Generally, the translator's objective is indistinguishable from that of the
writer. He has to make several assumptions about the target language
readership, their familiarity with the topic and the culture. It remains a
tightrope walk for a translator. As translation is simultaneously a theory
and a practice, the translators, besides dealing with the difficulties inherent
to the translation of prose, must think about the artistic features of the
text, its exquisiteness and approach, as well as its marks (l exical,
grammatical, or phonological). They should not forget that the stylistic
marks of one language can be immensely different from another. Finally,
the translator should produce a coherent version that is reasonably
readable, fairly faithful and if po ssible, a work of art in itself. Such a text
can only be produced by a combination of art, craft and creativity.
Translation of poetry is not easy because the differences between a poem
and its translation start right from the storage of conception. The ca use of
a poetic piece is mostly intuitive and spontaneous and the reason for the
translation is initiative and advertent. A poet writes about a particular
thing or experience because a penetrating perception of something or a
situation moves the poet so de eply that he gives a verbal expression to his
experience.
Thus, it is the poet's own emotional, imaginative or intellectual
apprehension of facts and experiences which a poet tries to express.
Hence, there is a vital difference between the activities of o riginal
composition, which in the case of original poem, intuition was the cause of
conception of the composition, in the case of the translation the cause of
conception is the original poem. The original work stimulates the
translator to such an extent th at he experiences a deep affinity for the work
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37 language. Yet, the most frequent criticism against translation is that it
lacks the spontaneity and power of the original work. It is tru e that no man
can think or feel exactly in totality as the other man and this is not what is
expected of a translator either. A good translator of poetry has to be a man
of imagination who should be able to pursue and interpret a poem and
clothe it in the beauty and freshness of creativity once again.
3.5. CHECK YOUR PROGRESS
1) Discuss the linguistic issues in the process of fiction translation.
Highlight the cultural problems the translator encounters while
translating fiction and prose from SL to TL.
2) Analyz e the major issues a translator has to undergo while translating
fiction.
3) Explain the major problems in the process of translating fiction and
prose. Give suitable examples.
4) Discuss the linguistic and socio -cultural issues in the process of
translating fic tion. Illustrate with suitable examples.
5) Discuss the linguistic issues in the process of poetry translation.
6) Highlight the aesthetic and cultural problems translator encounters
while translating poetry from SL to TL.
7) Analyze the major issues a translator has to undergo while translating
poetry.
8) Explain the major problems in the process of translating poetry. Give
suitable examples.
9) Discuss the linguistic, aesthetic and socio -cultural issues in the process
of translating poetry. Illustrate with suitable exa mples.


❖❖❖❖ munotes.in

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38 4
PART -II: TYPES OF TRANSLATION -
PROCESS AND PROBLEMS:
TRANSLATION OF DRAMA
Unit Structure
4.0 Objectives
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Problems in the translation of Drama
4.3 Illustrations of Translated Dramatic Texts
4.4 Conclusion
4.5 Check Your Progress
4.0 OBJECTIVES
● To acquaint the students with the loss and gain in literary translation
and the strategies applied.
● To make the readers aware of the typical issues the translator faces as
drama is a performing art.
4.1 INTRODUCTION
As a literary genre, drama is only realized in performance. As a literary
form, it is designed for the theatre because characters are assigned roles
and they act out their roles as the action is enacted on the stage. Drama is
also said to be a theatrical craft. In the domain of literary translation,
poetry is the most challenging of all genres. The translator using her / his
skill and creativity can apply the strategies to overcome the problems of
translation. Ultimately, it is the meaning and also the form of the texts that
need to be transferred. Let’s discuss the issues one by one.
4.2 PROCESS OF THE TRANSLATING DRAMATIC
TEXT
Translating dramatic texts is a risky one as it is a public art that demands
scrutiny of its functions. Philip's principal criteria for translating dr amatic
texts appear to have been
1) Playability
2) The relationship of the play to the established conventions
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39 The translator has to be very careful about scenes speech function of the
first scene, the introduction of plot liners so on. With theatre translation,
the problem of translating literary texts takes on a new dimension of
complexity, for the text is only one element in the totality of theatre
discourse. The language in which the play text is wr itten for voice, the
literary text contains also a set of paralinguistic systems where pitch,
nation, speed of delivery, accent etc are all signifiers.
In addition, the play text contains within it the under text or what we call
subtext that determines the movement of action. It is not only the context
but also the coded gestural patterning within the language itself that
contributes to the actors’ work, and the translator who ignores all systems
outside the purely literary is running into serious risks in the first scene
introduction of plot lines and so on with theatre translation, the problem of
translating literary texts take on a new dimension of complexity, for the
text is only one element in the totality of theatre discourse. The language
in which the play text is written for voice, the literary text contains also a
set of paralinguistic systems where pitch, nation, speed of delivery, accent,
etc. are all signifiers.
Drama is different from other genres of literature. It has unique
characteristics tha t have come about in response to its peculiar nature. It is
difficult to separate drama from performance because, during the stage
performance of a play, the drama brings life experiences realistically to the
audience. It is the most concrete of all genres of literature. The playwright
does not tell a story. Instead, one gets the story as the characters interact
and live out their own experiences on stage.
The text of a play is but one component of what we generally call drama.
The non -verbal part plays a crucial role in the eventual appreciation of a
play. How is a play to be translated? As a purely literary text or as a
comprehensive work that has verbal and non -verbal components? There
are people like Anne Ubersfeld who believe that text and performance
cannot be delinked and any translation that looks at text alone is a highly
inadequate one. Peter Bogatyrev has pointed out how a character's social
situation is brought out not just by the text alone but by extra -textual
factors like “the actor's gesture s, finished off by his costumes, the scenery,
etc” (qt in Bassnett 122). The dramatic text also has undertones that reveal
the nature of relationships or the mental state of a character. It is these
nuances that tend to slip through the gaps of translation . The good theatre
translator cannot afford to ignore these paralinguistic aspects of dramatic
performance. It can also not be denied that certain texts like Shakespeare's
have been translated as written texts without much attention to the
performance aspe ct. The plays of Bernard Shaw with their long speeches
also tempt the translator to focus only on the written part. What is
significant about these plays is that they are largely taught as academic
texts without their performance component. In terms of tra nslatability, the
difficulty level posed by dramatic texts would come second to poetry.
From the perspective of poststructuralist or deconstructionist approaches
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40 considered to be ope n, and often subject to multiple or diverse
interpretations by the target audience. From this perspective, it can be said
that to some extent, such open texts are incomplete as the target audience
plays a major role in enriching and completing them (Umbert o Eco 1985).
However, of all the literary genres, the drama text is an incomplete text
par excellence, whose incomplete nature has a significant incidence on its
translation.
The mission of a translator of a dramatic work is slightly different from
any oth er literary piece. A dramatic text is written in order to be performed
on stage. The translator of such a text has therefore to bear in mind that the
readers (i.e., the audience in this case) shall not only follow the written
form of the script but also an d primarily its spoken version. This fact
influences the work of a translator to a great extent. He has to choose
words that are easily pronounceable by actors and comprehensible to the
audience. At the same time, he ought to aspire to maintain the meaning
and form of the original as much as possible so that the translation
represents the goal and effort of the original author. Each translator aims
at a maximal realistic authenticity, including both the inner (author’s and
director’s notes) and outer langua ge of the drama.
There is a close relationship between the author and the translator of a
literary work. Both of them have their style of writing and expressing their
thoughts. Nevertheless, the translator shall always be subordinate to the
author whose te xt is considered the base of a dramatic text and its further
stage production.
In the development of the art of reproduction two norms have been applied
according to Levý (Levý 1963, p.52): the norm of reproduction (i.e., the
requirement on authenticity an d accurateness) and the norm of “art”
(requirement on beauty). This basic aesthetic contrast proves
contrapositive to translational authenticity and freedom. The authentic
method (i.e., the literal) represents a procedure of work of such translators
who as pire to reproduce the original precisely, whereas the free method
(adaptative) aims at beauty, i.e., the aesthetics and thought proximity to
the reader and creation of original work in a target native language. For a
realistic translation, both norms are n ecessary: the translation has to be an
exact reproduction of the original as possible but above all, it should be a
valuable literary piece of work.
The translator of a dramatic text has to respect the specialty of a spoken
word. Dialogues do not narrate a nd depict actions or situations as in prose
but they form them. They do not narrate how people meet and make
relationships but perform the people acting and communicating with each
other. The structure of a sentence of dialogue is simple as could be; the
sentences are usually practically connected, often without conjunctions.
Many unfinished sentences and ellipsis may appear. So -called contact
words are very important as well. Various modal particles and expressions
that might have multifarious context mean ings are characteristic of the
language of dialogue. In this case, dictionaries shall not be that useful for
the translator for the language of drama is very specific and often peculiar. munotes.in

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41 Newmark (Newmark 1988, p.172) suggests that a translator of drama in
particular must translate into the modern target language if he wants his
characters to ‘live’, bearing in mind that the modern language covers a
span of, say, 70 years. If one character speaks in a bookish or old -
fashioned way in the original, written 500 years ago, he must speak in an
equally bookish and old -fashioned way in the translation, but as he would
today, therefore with a corresponding time gap – differences of register,
social class, education, temperament, in particular, must be preserved
betwe en one character and another. Thus, the dialogue remains dramatic,
and though the translator cannot forget the potential spectators, he does
not make concessions to them.
Slang represents a specific language field within each language and a
specific problem for translators to be solved. It often includes emotional
elements and thus characterizes the speaker. According to Knittlová
(Knittlová 2000, p.111), the collation of s lang words that have various
system relations in different languages is very difficult. In slang
(especially of young people) we can notice an effort to be outlandish and
to exaggerate expressive gestures. Slang wants to shock, and provoke, it is
a sign of revolt or disobedience. It is presented via overexposing some
categories of expressions, hyperbole, metaphorical phraseology, colloquial
metaphors, irony, comicality, folk expressions, and above all playfulness
with the language.
The boundary between sla ng and colloquial English is rather movable and
indistinct. Slang is an extract of colloquial language, it is not tied in with
the rules of standard English, but it is rated as vivid, colorful, more full -
bodied for the diction, and more flexible. It arises from a natural need for
the creation of new words that emotionally affect the utterance and
express a subjective evaluation of reality. Nevertheless, slang is not a
secret code; an English speaker understands it easily but does not consider
it something q uite correct. Knittlová concludes that it is therefore a
distortion of style if a translator replaces the English slang with offensive
words or even by vulgarism.
The continual change in the concept of performability is another aspect
that the translator o f theatre texts faces. It is a well -known fact that since
performance is determined by the various developments in acting style,
playing space, the role of the audience, the altered concepts of theatre, and
the national contexts, the translator has to cons ider time and space as
variables in the changing concept of performance. A central consideration
for the theatre translator, therefore, must be the performance text and its
relationship to the contemporary audience (Bassnett: 132). The presence
of the audi ence indicates that the function of theatre transcends the strictly
linguistic level found in other types of texts and reveals the public
dimension of the challenges
a theatre translator faces when attempting to achieve an effect: "The
translator must tak e into account the function of the text as an element for
and of performance." (ibid) munotes.in

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42 In theatre text translation, there are two types of problems. The first type is
common in the translation of theatre texts as well as the translation of
other types of l iterary productions. In "Practical Approaches to Translating
Theatre", Zatlin lists some of the problems of theatre translation (See
Zatlin 2005: 67).
They are -
(1) Investigating copyrights and acquiring permission before deciding to
translate a play. In addition to securing the right to translate, it is
important to
(2) Identify the appropriate version of the text (ibid.: 67).
(3) The choice of the translated text: Many factors determine the choice of
the source text. It is chosen for a certain purpose and the guidelines of
translation are defined to serve this purpose by the translator and/or by
those who initiate the translating activity. Most translation projects are
initiated by an actor of the domestic culture such as state ideology, cultural
clima te, the expectation of the target audience, economic and social
reasons, etc (Aksoy2002: 4 -5). Almost always the translated source texts
in Iraq are selected by the translators themselves and the main factors in
this selection are personal taste and the fa miliarity of the authors of the
source text.
(4) There is another problem that the translator faces; namely, the lack of
institutional framework within which the translations are produced
(Lefevere:1992:135). The position of translation as a literary acti vity in
Iraq is a case in point. Neither the government nor the Ministry of Culture
has a role in channeling the efforts of the translators into an
institutionalized project on a national scale.
(5) There is also the problem of cultural differences. As Al an Thomas
says, "It is evident that cultural borders, as much as language, form
barriers to good translation." (Zatlin.: 9). Pavis similarly observes: "We
cannot simply translate a text linguistically; rather we confront and
communicate heterogeneous cultu res and situations of enunciation that are
separated in space and time (ibid.). Moreover, Eugene Nida believes that
"differences between cultures may cause more severe complications for
the translator than do differences in language structure."(In Kate Jam es
2000: 2).
Bassnett points out, the written text is a functional component in the total
process that comprises theatre and is characterized in ways that distinguish
it from a written text designed to be read in its own right. She stresses the
theatrical aspect of drama and argues:
“A theatre text, written with a view to its performance, contains
distinguishable structural features that make it performable, beyond the
stage directions themselves. Consequently, the task of the translator must
be to determin e what those structures are and to translate them into the munotes.in

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43 target language, even though this may lead to major shifts on the linguistic
and stylistic planes (In Bassnett,122 - 123).”
This is why a detailed structural analysis is necessary for the translatio n
process. If a translator has a better understanding of the structure, many
problems can be avoided from the beginning. It is noteworthy that various
parts of the play text vary concerning their translatability. For instance, in
most cases, stage directio ns as a part of the play text do not cause special
problems in the process of translation. Stage directions are the
playwright's descriptions or commentaries (Burkhanov: 408) explicating
the setting or dramatic personae's emotional states and peculiarities of
behaviour. There are also stage directions indicating "stage business," i.e.,
physical actions or movements performed by a character, intended to
establish an appropriate atmosphere, reveal his or her state of mind or
explain a situation. Burkhanov bel ieves that it is "the instances of dramatic
speech forming the verbal exchanges between the characters that need the
translator's ultimate attention and effort."
Unlike the conversational style in the other literary types, the dialogue in
the theatre text is special. The characteristics of this theatrical dialogue
such as rhythm, intonation, patterns, pitch and loudness may not be
immediately apparent from the straightforward reading of the written text
in isolation. Robert Corrigan, in a rare article on t ranslating for actors,
argues that at all times, the translator must hear the voice that speaks and
take into account the 'gesture' of the language, the cadenced rhythm, and
pauses that occur when the written text is spoken (Bassnett: 122). In line
with th is, Pavis (2005: 219) believes that the words spoken by the actor (or
any other kind of stage utterance) must be "analyzed in the way they are
concretely stated on stage, colored by the voice of the actor, and the
interpretation of the scene, and not in th e way we would analyze them if
we had read the written text."
The nature of the relationship between the written text and its audience is
another problem the translators of theatre texts face. In this regard, Ortrun
Zuber succinctly observes, "a play is de pendent on the immediacy of its
impact on the audience." (qt. in Zatlin: 1) Unlike the readers of the
translated novels, spectators in the theatre must grasp immediately the
sense of the dialogue. In this respect, Clifford Landers correctly states:
"Even s tyle, which is by no means unimportant in dramatic translation,
sometimes must yield to the reality that actors have to be able to deliver
the lines convincingly and naturally” (ibid.).
Susan Bassnett distinguishes five types of drama translation strategi es:
1) Treating the theatre text as a literary work.
2) Using the SL cultural context as a frame text.
3) Translating ‘performability’.
4) Creating SL verse drama in alternative forms.
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44 In the translation of te xts that are categorized as literary, the loss of some
literary features or some shift from the source may be natural but the
translated version may contain some unique features that result from the
translator’s attempts to retain or recreate the literary effects of the original.
Cook’s comment on the translation of literary texts seems to be relevant
here:
Literariness will reside at times in the unique linguistic choice, and at
times in the fictional world. Thus, in practice, some literary features are
lost in translation; others survive through well -chosen equivalents; others
are unique to the translation; others are in the story itself. (Cook 1994: 98)

Shakespeare’s plays written nearly four centuries ago have linguistic and
cultural features, some of which might have disappeared long ago. Yet
numerous adaptations and rewritings of Shakespeare's plays in Assamese
since 1888 indicate that some kind of familiarity of experiences, feelings
and emotions expressed through the content, and to be sure, a littl e
strangeness of the atmosphere, as well as the content, might have been
appealing to the new readers from an entirely different culture. In the
following, we will look at several types of such “interventions” in the
original ST to accommodate the new read ers.
A modern translator of a Shakespeare play needs to be aware of several
problems that arise in translating (not adapting or domesticating as most
early translators did) a literary text produced in an alien culture. In such a
text contextual clues may n ot be readily available to the average non -
native reader, certain expressions in the text may evoke what is implicit
and what the native speaker intuitively knows. As T. R. S. Sharma notes,
“A context not fully internalized in the text, but that surrounds the text and
is often suggested by a keyword or an image, this semiotics of culture that
envelops the text, is often lost in translation” (Sharma 2004: 150). For
example, in the following extract from Hamlet the word nothing can be
easily replaced by an ap propriate functional -linguistic equivalent such as
eko nai, eko nahoi in the TL, Assamese, but the problem arises from the
ambiguity created by the not -so-explicitly stated context of the word.
Ophelia: What is, my Lord? (Hamlet 3.2.115)
Hamlet: No thing.
No equivalent can bring out the connotations of the English word no thing
(the thing was commonly used to refer to the sexual organ of either a man
or a woman) in this context. So, some kind of explanatory note needs to be
added, foregrounding, not oblit erating, the foreignness and cultural
distance.

Although the differences between the structures of the source and target
language do not automatically lead to poor translations, they present many
difficulties for the translator. One problematic language pair is English
and Finnish as their structures are quite different. Pennanen (1967, p. 168)
argues that Shakespeare’s Finnish translator faces serious problems,
especially with verse, since the structures of the English and Finnish munotes.in

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45 languages differ radica lly; in fact, they are opposites. The morphology and
syntactic structure, and also the word formation of English are analytical,
whereas Finnish is synthetic in its structure; its words are long, usually
much longer than the English words. Moreover, in Eng lish, the typical
meter is the iambic one, whereas in Finnish the emphasis is on the first
syllable which makes the trochee, that is, a downward meter, natural for
the Finnish language. It could be said that the Finnish translator faces
insuperable difficu lties, but the practice has proved this assumption wrong
as numerous translations of high quality are made from English into
Finnish.

One aspect of drama must be taken into account in every drama and
theatre translation: how the translation works on stag e. Déprats (2004a)
emphasizes that the translation needs to follow the rhythm of the breath to
work on stage. He quotes a French Shakespearean actor, Jean Vilard, who
says that translators cannot find the rhythm which characterizes good
plays and that tran slations do not “breathe” so that the actor could be
carried along on the breath of the text (p. 137). Déprats reminds us that
Shakespeare’s plays are above all written for the stage and for the actors
who utter the lines. Therefore, the theatrical dimensi on of the play, that is,
its vocal energy, must be preserved when translating for the stage. In my
opinion, this can also be applied when the translation is not aimed at the
stage only; the theatrical dimension must be preserved in all translations
whether for a specific theatre production or a book; otherwise, the
translation does not fulfill its function of representing a play, or it has a
different function (e.g., modifying the play to a tale).
Translation of plays involves a peculiar problem. While pros e fiction
could be considered as a ‘fully round unit’, a play could be read -only as
‘something incomplete’ because the full potential of the text is realized
only in performance. In other words, the text of the play and its
performance are inseparable. Jir i Veltrusky in his book Drama as
Literature explains this relationship:
The relationship between the dialogue and the extra -linguistic situation is
intense and reciprocal. The situation often provides dialogue with its
subject matter. Moreover, whatever t he subject matter may be, the
situation variously interferes with the dialogue, affects the way it unfolds,
brings about shifts or reversals, and sometimes interrupts it together. In its
turn, the dialogue progressively illuminates the situation and often
modifies or even transforms it. The actual sense of the individual units of
meaning depends as much on the extra -linguistic situation as on the
linguistic context. (Veltrusky, 10).
In the Becket play Waiting for Godot, for instance, much of the dialogue
depends on the situation of endless waiting. Besides the situation, there is
also other extra -linguistic item like rhythm, intonation, pitch and loudness
which affect the dialogue and the meaning of the text of the play. The
relationship between these items and the dialogue of a play may not be
visible when one views the text in isolation. To grasp the relationship, the
translator, as Robert Corrigan argues “must hear the voice that speaks and munotes.in

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46 take into account the ‘gesture’ of the language, the cadence, rhyt hm and
pauses that occur when the written text is spoken” (McGuire,112). Peter
Bogatyrev in his article “Fewer Signs du Theatre” even lists down the
costumes of the characters as well as the scenery as extra -linguistic signs
that affect the meaning. Beside s these, the complexity of the text is
increased by the changing concepts of performance and acting styles as
well.
The task of the translator, considering this special complexity added to the
text of the play by the extra -linguistic items of such a wide v ariety,
becomes a difficult one. To translate a dramatic text possible, the
translator must identify and take into consideration the extra items. Also,
because of these items, the translator must be prepared to make major
shifts in the linguistic and styli stic planes. However, if the text is
translated for a reading public, then literalness and linguistic fidelity could
be the principal criteria of the translation. Otherwise, the linguistic
element must be translated bearing in mind its function in theatre
discourse as a whole.
4.3 ILLUSTRATIONS OF TRANSLATED DRAMATIC
TEXTS
Let us take a review of Brecht’s Caucasian Chalk Circle and its Marathi
adaptation by Late C T Khanolkar as Ajab Nyaya Vartulacha . Gruscha in
Caucacian Chalk Circle is called Hamsie galh in Khanolkar’s Marathi
version. When Gruscha takes the child of the Governor, she undergoes a
long march to reach the village of her brother – Hamsie in Khanolkar’s
Marathi version reaches her brother’s house after a long march. The wife
of her brother as ks her >Whose child are you carrying with you? If it were
yours, where is your Mangalsutra? < By making her sister -in-law ask her
about the mangalsutra, the plot is transferred into the milieu of
Maharashtra by Khanolkar. The dramatist, doing translation, is in search
of equivalence.
To make the recipient of the target language accept the experience through
the work, the translator has to take care to make the experience in the
work sound it to be his own. For this, a lot of recontextualization has to be
done by the translator.
Further, let’s have a look at Vijay Tendulkar’s plays originally written in
Marathi. Ghashiram Kotwal has been translated into several Indian and
European languages; Hindi, Kannada and Bengali are among the Indian
languages and India n and German are among the European languages.
When the play was performed in Delhi production by Abhiyan in Hindi,
according to Tendulkar the play had a different impact; it had less
entertainment value, less music and greater impact as a serious play. Th us,
any performance that drops music, truncates the impact almost
completely. The music, the dialogue and the voice culture used in the
Marathi play are in a way inseparable because they communicate quite a
lot at the sub -cultural level to keep on adding i nstantaneously layers of
meanings, innuendoes and culture -specific additives that enrich the munotes.in

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47 magical experience in the theatre. Music is inseparable from the structure
of the play, the form of the play as it is conceived. The play is not a
serious play but a play that keeps on commenting on the power dynamics
and the way they operate by presenting what goes on happening at the
surface level in a way that is very entertaining and this is in keeping with
the Marathi folk tradition. The bathos, the ludicrous i n the situation is
brought to the fore as much as the cruelty in it, the first act accentuating
the first and the second act bringing out the second aspect.
Language and songs cannot be ignored. There are a lot of verbal ironies
which are difficult to mai ntain in the other language. The additional
feature is the voice of ‘Nana’ (the character of the play). Mohan Agashe
who played the role of ‘Nana’ made use of two different voices. One for
the public performances and one for the domestic and erotic exchang es.
The later one was the nasal voice commonly found among the Chitpavan
Brahmins of those times, adding a localized edge to the depiction of the
character. Much of this would be lost, as the English translation has
omitted these songs completely.
If ther e was a loss in subtleties the nuances in the performances in the
translated version from the other Indian languages would certainly be
multiplied in the English translation. In performance -oriented play, the
problem is critical. The form of the play itsel f thus demands the
dramaturgical capacity to work in several dimensions at once,
incorporating visual, gestural, aural and linguistic signifiers into the text.
4.4 CONCLUSION
For a ‘stage’ translation to attract the public and pull a large audience and
guarantee its success, it must have an appeal, such that after watching the
play the audience can say it was a beautiful play. Consequently, rather
than describing or characterizing page and stage translations as aesthetic
and commercial respectively, it co uld be more elucidating for the drama
translation scholar to regard both types as endowed with aesthetic qualities
but differing in the rewriting or recreation strategies used by the translator
to meet different (though sometimes incompatible) objectives.
4.5 CHECK YOUR PROGRESS
● Comment on the performability or speakability problems faced by the
translator while translating drama.
● Why is the structural analysis of drama necessary? What are the
problems faced by a translator in this process?
● Highlight the issues related to linguistic and cultural features in the act
of drama translation.
● How is the translation of dramatic work slightly different from other
literary pieces? Illustrate. munotes.in

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48 ● Examine the hindrance that occurred due to dialogues/spoken words,
music and songs faced by a translator in the process of translating a
dramatic text.
● What are the major problems in Theatre Text Translation?
● Discuss the problems a translator faces in translating a dramatic text in
an alien culture.
❖❖❖❖
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49 5
TRANSLATED LITERARY TEXTS: PART -
I: PREMCHAND'S SHORT STORY
"GULLI -DANDA " TRANSLATED FROM
HINDI INTO ENGLISH
Unit Structure
5.0 Objectives
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Introduction of original writer and text
5.3 Introduction of translator and translated text
5.4 Comment on Degree of Faithfulness
5.5 Comments on Gain and Loss in the Act of Translation
5.6 Conclusion
5.7 Check Your Progress
5.8 Bibliography
5.0 OBJECTIVES
● To make the reader aware of the concept of translation through the
prescribed short st ory- Gulli -danda by Premchand
● To make a comparative analysis of the text at the thematic and
linguistic level
● To analyze the degree of faithfulness achieved in the process of
translation
● To analyze gain and loss in the act of translation regarding the shor t
story, Gulli -danda.
5.1 INTRODUCTION
The translation is not like mathematics once you know the formula, you
can do it. Yet it is a science. However more than science, it is a skill, craft
and above all an art. Hence students in this unit are expected to know and
study the practical problems the translators come across and how they
overcome them. Translation, being a game of loss and gain, the students
will realize that with a little loss, much is gained. Therefore, should study
and compare the given text with its translation examining the loss and gain
of meaning thereby exploring the beauty of this art. munotes.in

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50 5.2 INTRODUCTION OF ORIGINAL WRITER AND
TEXT
Dhanpat Rai Srivastava, better known by his pen name Premchand; was
born on 31st July 1880 and was an Indian writer famous for his modern
Hindustani Literature. A pioneer of Hindi and Urdu social fiction as he
was, he also was one of the first authors to write about caste hierarchies
and the plights of women and labourers prevalent in the society of the late
1880 s. He is one of the most celebrated writers of the Indian subcontinent
and is regarded as one of the foremost Hindi writers of the early twentieth
century.
His first novella, Asrar -e-Ma'abid was first published in Awaz -e-Khalq , an
Urdu Weekly, after which he became associated with an Urdu magazine
Zamana, writing columns on national and international events. The writer
is mainly recognized for his creations that always contained a social
message and raised a voice against the social evils pertaining to Ind ian
society. His creations brought the era of realism to Indian literature at a
time when only fantasy fiction and religious writings were dominating it.
Premchand embodied the social purpose and social criticism in his
characters that are subjected to dif ferent circumstances and act
accordingly. He wrote at a period when Gandhiji was not only leading a
decisive battle against the British Raj but also working on the removal of
untouchability and communal politics perpetrated by the Hindu
Mahasabha as well a s the Muslim League. His works include Godaan,
Karmabhoomi, Gaban, Mansarovar, and Idgah . His first collection of five
short stories was published in 1907 in a book called Soz-e-Watan.
Hindi literature was never as open to caste and gender inequalities as
Premchand enriched it through his writings. Premchand's influence on
Indian literature cannot be overstated. As the late scholar, David
Rubin wrote in The World of Premchand (1969), "To Premchand belongs
the distinction of creating the genre of the serious short story —and the
serious novel as well —in both Hindi and Urdu. Virtually single -handed he
lifted fiction in these languages from a quagmire of aimless romantic
chronicles to a high level of realistic narrative comparable to European
fiction of the time ; and in both languages, he has, in addition, remained an
unsurpassed master.”
Premchand loved books and was a voracious reader so it is no surprise that
he took to writing. His first novel appeared in 1901 and his first short story
in 1907. He continued t o write for the rest of his producing 300 short
stories, dozens of novels, several essays, articles, editorials, screenplays,
plays and translations in a relatively short span of 36 years. In the world of
his stories, love for humanity is the greatest reli gion. The most authentic
and penetrating of Premchand’s portrayals centers around village life.
Most of the characters are poverty -stricken. Thus, Premchand always was
a man of people and his soil. The values that shine through the finest of his
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"Gulli -Danda " Translated from
Hind i into English
51 Published in Sarasvati in 1925, Gulli -Danda is a short story revolving
around a man who returns to his village after many years and tries to re -
live his childhood days by playing Gulli -danda with his childhood
companions. But due to social and economic disparity among them, he is
treated differently and a fair match is not possible. This short story was
later translated by Anupa Lal.
The students are expected to compare the texts of गुली-डंडा (in Hindi by
Premc hand) and Gulli -Danda (translated in English by Anupa Lal) and to
analyze the different aspects of the process of translation.
Summary of Gulli Danda :
Two friends from childhood times used to play Gilli Danda together. One
of them is an engineer and a top government officer now and twenty years
later visits the same village where the other one "Gayaa chamaar" is a
servant of another government official.
When the engineer returns to the same village where he spent his early
time, he feels the smell of the sand, the voices of Gulli -danda team, and
the trashy village, everything seems to have lost its charm. He only knew
one person, Gaya, the champion of their team. He meets him once and
plays one game, then back to the village. However, being grown up, he
fails to get a sense of friendship and the spontaneity of the game. The
respect and honor in the mind of Gaya for the officer came in between. In
the game with the officer, the champion seems to have lost the hold on the
game but with others, he displays his championship in the tournament. It
highlights socio -economic differences as well as childhood innocence
which is beyond any such discrepancies in the social system.
5.3 INTRODUCTION OF TRANSLATOR AND
TRANSLATED TEXT
Anupa Lal has been writing for childre n since 1970. She has published
over 20 books including an early re -telling of Ramayan . She has translated
many stories by Premchand and his famous novel, Godaan in English. The
English translation of Gulli -danda takes the reader into the lives of rural
folk of India. She selected fourteen stories from “ Mansarovar” , a
collection of short stories Premchand and published its translation in two
volumes. The story “Gulli Danda” appears in Volume II. Gulli Danda
contrasts the carefree spirit of childhood with th e self -consciousness and
awareness of material status that creeps later into one’s life. There is a
strong autobiographical element running through this story. Anupa Lal’s
translation is ideal for Indian children who have English as a second
language. It i s published by Ratna Sagar Publication. The selected story
“Gulli -danda ” by Premchand is set in rural India.
5.4 COMMENTS ON DEGREE OF FAITHFULNESS
Literary translation has to do with translating texts written in a literary
language, which abounds in ambig uities, homonyms and arbitrariness, as munotes.in

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52 distinct from the language of science or that of administration. Literary
language is highly connotative and subjective because each literary author
is lexically and stylistically idiosyncratic and through his power o f
imagination, he uses certain literary techniques such as figures of speech,
proverbs and homonyms through which he weaves literary forms.
The literary translator is therefore a person who concerns himself with the
translation of literary texts. A litera ry translator, according to Peter
Newmark (1988:1) generally respects good writing by taking into account
the language, structures, and content, whatever the nature of the text. The
literary translator participates in the author's creative activity and the n
recreates structures and signs by adapting the target language text to the
source language text as closely as intelligibility allows. He needs to assess
not only the literary quality of the text but also its acceptability to the
target reader, and this s hould be done by having a deep knowledge of the
cultural and literary history of both the Source and the Target Languages.
Fidelity in translation is the passing of the message from one language into
another by producing the same effect in the other langu age, (in sense and
form), in a way that the reader of the translation would react exactly as the
reader of the original text. The relationship of fidelity between the original
and its translation has always preoccupied translators, but the problem is,
as far as translation is concerned, one should decide to whom, and to what
the supposed fidelity pertains. Is it fidelity to the proto -text, to the source
culture, to the model of the reader, or the receiving culture? Is it possible
to have the same translatio n of the same text done by different translators?
And/or to what extent can a translator be accurate or exact in his
translation? The majority of translators agree that translators should be
adequately familiar with both the Source and the Target Language, but
there is less agreement on 'faithful' translation and how linguistics should
be employed.
The eminent critic in Translation Studies, Eugene Nida gives two types of
translation: Formal and Dynamic. The dynamic translation is meant for
literary texts. A ll great works of literature are translated following the
principle of Dynamic equivalence resulting in faithful as well as beautiful
translations. However, Anupa Lal’s translation seems to be unfaithful to
the original seeking lot of liberty.
Dryden has classified translation into three categories: Translation,
Adoption and Adaptation. The present translation, I think, falls in the
second category: Adoption. Looking at it from an adoption point of view,
it is a very good adoption and Anupa Lal is success ful in adopting
Premchand’s Gulli -Danda in Hindi into English. Hence it is not a
translation of the story. Probably, she tried to simplify it so that it becomes
comprehensible to children who study English as a second language. It
seems, her goal of transl ation is building vocabulary and acquainting the
learners with the structural pattern of the second language. As a result, her
translation has lost the message that the story has to give. Because the
story subtly highlights how the innocence and joy of chi ldhood are killed
as the person reaches adulthood. The ideas of status, post, money and munotes.in

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Hind i into English
53 prestige that are absent in childhood take a front seat in adult life. These
things construct a wall between any two personalities while forming a
loving, long -term rel ationship. Hence, although the narrator has all the
joys of life, he misses the joy of friendship and innocence. He cannot
relate to Gaya not only because of caste distinction but also because of
economic class.
5.5 COMMENTS ON GAIN AND LOSS IN THE ACT OF
TRANSLATION
Along with the concept of equivalence is the notion of loss and gain in
translation. Implicit in most translation theories is the assumption that
something is lost when you carry a text from one language into another.
There is always the possib ility of miscommunication in the act of
communication that is translation; if the receiver goes slightly askew in
the decoding, the chances are that the message will not be carried across
correctly. Certain elements can be added or left out. Robert Frost’s famous
definition of poetry is notable: “Poetry is what gets lost in translation”.
The basis of Frost’s statement is the concept of the creative originality of
the poet who creates a work where the meaning lurks somewhere beneath
the surface of words. The translator, it is assumed, cannot ever hope to
capture the ‘meaning’ of the original SL which tends to fall through the
gaps of the TL. Overenthusiastic translators can also inadvertently pad up
the text by adding more to it than is necessary with the res ult that the
translation might have more allusions in it than was originally thought of.
The problem of loss and gain is again due to the cultural dissimilarity
between two linguistic groups. Something very common in a particular
community might be rare i n another. It is said that the language of the
Eskimos has more than one hundred words to describe ‘snow’. These
subtle distinctions they make between various types of snow cannot be
brought out in a single Hindi word. The reverse is also applicable. For
instance, the word ‘ godhuli’ in Hindi cannot be translated with the help of
a single English word. It needs to be explained as the ‘hour at which the
cattle return home causing the dust to rise by their hooves’. There is of
course the word ‘dusk’ but that b ecomes only an approximation; what is
lost here is the suggestion of Indian village life where dusk is the holy
time when cattle return home and lamps are lit. Here there is a loss in
translation.
This is one of the major challenges facing a translator who is translating a
literary work. Literary language, besides being informative and factual, is
also allusive and elliptical. The translator has to be vigilant to these
resonances in the SL text and attempt.
Anupa Lal’s translation of Gulli -danda is meant f or children. Since the
target readers in the mind of the translator are the one who is learning
English as a second language, the selection of the structure and vocabulary
has an advantage and limitations too. The first sentence “I consider Gulli
Danda, th e king of all sports!” is the translation of “हमार े अ ँ ेजी दोत munotes.in

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54 मान या नमान म तो यही कह ँ गा िक ग ुली -ड ंडा सब ख े ल का राजा ह ै । He begins
the story with “I consider” while the verb in the source text is, “कहँगा”, and
translated as “considered”. T he original Hindi sentence ends with a full
stop while translated one ends with an exclamatory mark. The number of
paragraphs in the target text is too many compared to the source text. The
word “thapi” in the fifth line is completely absent when the autho r lists
various instruments such as lawn, court, net etc.
Roman Jacobson points out the innermost difficulty on every level of
translation such as linguistic, cultural etc. Since any translation is an
operation in both languages (SL and TL). The problems o n the linguistic
level are enormous as SL and TL, English and Hindi belong to two
different linguistic families. In the present story, being in Hindi, the
words, phrases, and references are indigenous and some are untranslatable.
The phrases and idioms suc h as हमजोिलय, अमीरानाचो चल are either missing or
lost in translation.
Even when Gaya is addressing the speaker, he uses the term “सरकार” which
is kept as it is in the translated text. The word ‘Sarkar’ is a term used in an
Indian scenario to address someon e holding a higher authority of some
sort. The translator has kept the word as it is to portray the tone of respect
that is evident in the original text.
The short story is set in pre -independent India. The setting is not native to
the target language. The process of finding an equivalent for a particular
term that’s deeply rooted in culture or is exclusive to only a certain
community in a language that’s not native is not always possible. As
mentioned prior, the term ‘ गुली-डंडा’ can be considered as an example.
Also, terms like ‘गाली’ are translated as ‘curse’ in the translated version,
which is a swear word.
Even in the case of the structure of sentences in TL, Anupa Lal has taken
complete liberty, e.g., the divisio n of paragraphs is plenty, but the syntax
of the sentence and morphology and phonology etc are not taken care of.
The dialogues and punctuation marks of SLT are different from TLT. In
short, linguistically it is not, a faithful translation at all.
Langua ge is deeply rooted in culture. The Indian culture of SL and the
English culture of TL are completely different. As a result, it is a
challenge to tran slate culturally loaded terms . To find the exact
equivalence and to transfer the perfect sense of “cham ar” that will transfer
the sense of untouchability and the caste system of India together, is next
to impossible. To facilitate, the translator borrows the terms from the
English game of cricket such as batting, fielding etc and supported it with
pictures in the story so although the translator is successful in
communicating the sense, she has failed to give a faithful translation.
Translation of the title:
Anupa Lal doesn’t translate the title of the story and just transliterates it.
There is hardly any fo rmal or dynamic equivalence to this very sense, the munotes.in

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Translated Literary Texts: Part-I: Premchand's Short Story
"Gulli -Danda " Translated from
Hind i into English
55 native game of India. The narrator is very fond of this game and hence
tries to prove its superiority by comparing it with English games. As the
game of cricket has been transliterated into the Indian lan guage, the
translator has left the title, “Gulli danda” without translation.
5.6 CONCLUSION
It is an accepted fact that the translator faces problems when he or she
translates culture -specific terms, or terms related to dialects. It is not
incorrect to say that the translator is accomplishing a complicated task of
recreating a replica of the original work, where he or she is trying to use
words like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle to bring to life a picture as seen by the
author himself. There are no set paramete rs to judge a translation, but
when it comes to literary translation, as stated above, the process may look
like an attempt to make a replica of an original piece, the translator makes
all effort to do justice to the text, but we cannot deny the fact that a
masterpiece remains a masterpiece.
The cultural elements are the heart and soul of any original text; they blow
a breath of life into any piece of writing. So, the translator has to
accomplish the mammoth task of translating also thrive with life like t he
original text, by translating the cultural elements, which in a real sense
carry the true essence of any literary work. Incorrect translation of these
elements leads the reader to perceive a different image of the original
work.
Evaluating the present t ranslation, one can say that there is hardly any gain
if it is examined by applying parameters of various critical theories.
However, if it is evaluated from an adoption point of view, it is a big
success. It is so because, in adoption, only the sense has to be transferred
ignoring the linguistic and cultural elements. Various linguistic levels such
as phonology, morphology, semantics, syntactic etc cannot be checked.
Thus, in the end, one can say that it is a very good adoption but a failed
translation.
5.7 CHECK YOUR PROGREE
1) Analyze the degree of faithfulness between the original and translated
text of Premchand’s “ Gulli -Danda ”
2) Compare and contrast SLT and TLT at the level of thematic and
linguistic aspects in the story of “ Gulli -Danda ”
3) Examine the gain a nd loss achieved in the process of translation of
“Gulli -”.
4) Compare and contrast SLT and TLT at the level of thematic and
linguistic aspects applying to the text prescribed for you.
5) Compare the various aspects between the original text and the
translated text of the story “ Gulli -Danda ”. munotes.in

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56 6) Critically evaluate the loss and gain in the short story “ Gulli -Danda ”
by Premchand translated by Anupa Lal.
7) Assess how far the translator Anupa Lal i s successful in doing justice
to the source text while translating Premchand’s “ Gulli -Danda ”.
5.8 BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Premchand's Selected Stories 1, Translated and adapted by Anupa Lal,
Ratna Sagar, P. Ltd. New Delhi 1995.
2. https://archive.org/stream/in.ern et.dli.2015.185016/2015.185016.The -
World -Of-Premchand_djvu.txt
❖❖❖❖
munotes.in

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57 6
TRANSLATED LITERARY TEXTS:
PART -II: NISSIM EZEKIEL’S POEM
“NIGHT OF THE SCORPION”
TRANSLATED FROM ENGLISH INTO
MARATHI (ADHUNIK STOTRA BY
PRADEEP DESHPANDE)
Unit Structure
6.0 Objectives
6.1 Introduction
6.2 About the Poem and the Poet
6.3 About the Translator
6.4 Summary of the Poem
6.5 About the Translation of 'Night of the Scorpion’
6.6 Check Your Progress
6.7 Bibliography
6.0 OBJECTIVES
● To acquaint the students to a translation of a literary text from English
to Marathi.
● To enabl e the students to understand the nuances of translation of a
poem
● To illustrate how a literary text is translated from one language to
another
● To enable the students to analyse different aspects of translation in the
prescribed translated poem
6.1 INTRODUC TION
Nissim Ezekiel, a poet well -known for his realistic sensibility and subtle
expressions, has contributed to the history of Indian English poetry
especially to the foundational years of post -colonial Indian literature. His
poem ‘Night of the Scorpion’ h as been translated and is included in the
collection of his translated poems in Marathi by Pradeep Deshpande. The
translated version is included as a part of this paper with a view to
introduce to the students how a literary text is translated from one munotes.in

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58 language into another. It is very interesting to analyse whether the
linguistic and cultural aspects of translation as a process have impacted the
equivalence between the original and the translated versions of the poem.
It is also important to know whether t he translator has found it easier to
transfer the essence of the original poem in English into the Marathi
version due to the cultural resemblance.
6.2 ABOUT THEPOEM AND THE POET
The original poem ‘Night of the Scorpion’ in English, while depicting the
horrifying scenario in the darkness of night in an Indian village, presents
the poet’s observations on the superstitious approach of the villages in a
simple narrative yet candid manner. The poet, a Jewish Indian, narrates the
incident from a house in rural I ndia in present tense. A small incident like
sting of a scorpion and the resultant pain and suffering, in an Indian
peasant’s life represents a host of religious, cultural, traditional aspects of
Indian life. Superstitions and beliefs were and possibly sti ll are an integral
part of the village life in India which is highlighted throughout the free -
flowing verse. A detached yet curious observer with an eye for minute
detail, the poet has described the scene with a rare sensibility and insight
towards the way social lives of Indians are influenced by superstitions.
The poem is so powerful in its technique of description, choice of diction
and the manner of presentation that the reader can visualize the incident
right in front of his/ her eyes. The context and the incident are quite
ordinary - a very common experience in rural India - sting by a scorpion
and the suffering caused. The poet’s mother is stung by the scorpion
which is treated and reacted to in two opposite ways by two different
kinds of temperaments. One of these is that of the neighbouring peasants
who have carried certain beliefs as transferred to them by previous
generations and impulsively begin to follow those beliefs in order to treat
the poet’s mother. Each of their moves is described by the poe t in minute
details in such a manner that the reader is presented with his deep sense of
observation and analysis of human behaviour.
The poem has been looked upon by many as a critique of the way
superstitions influence the lives of Indian peasants. Howev er, it is
necessary to look at the poet’s approach as a silent observer who instead
of being judgemental is able to compare the traditional beliefs and the
scientific approach of his father.
“My father, sceptic, rationalist,
trying every curse and blessing ,
powder, mixture, herb and hybrid.
He even poured a little paraffin
upon the bitten toe and put a match to it.”
There is no rhyme scheme followed in the regular sense of the term munotes.in

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Translated Literary Texts: Part-II: Nissim Ezekiel’s Poem
“Night of t he Scorpion”
Translated from English i nto
Marathi (Adhunik Stotra By
Pradeep Deshpande)
59 throughout the eight stanzas of the poem. The fifth and the sixth stanzas
where the poet has employed the device of anaphora, a repeated refrain
successfully evoke a soporific impact among the readers through the
prayer -like in cantation.
“May he sit still, they said
May the sins of your previous birth
be burned away tonight, they said.
May your suffering decrease
the misfortunes of your next birth, they said.
May the sum of all evil
balanced in this unreal world
against the sum of good
become diminished by your pain.
May the poison purify your flesh”
The poem presents the incident as a first -person narrative in free verse.
Multiple figures of speech like alliteration, antithesis, hyperbole, simile
and metaphor as well as personification enrich the text. Interestingly, the
poet has used the simile of ‘swarms’ for the villagers in th e neighbourhood
as he describes the incident of stinging by scorpion.
Apart from presenting the fact of superstition as an integral part of rural
India, the poem also highlights Indians’ belief in the philosophy of Karma.
This is reflected when the peasant s believe that the poet’s mother was
stung by scorpion because of her sins in the past birth. The philosophy of
Karma entails a belief that when a person is rewarded or punished, it is the
result of sins committed by him/ her in the past.
The belief that s ufferings bring about purification is also highlighted as the
neighbours say that the poet’s mother can attain purity from her bodily
desires and material ambitions thus bringing her soul close to the divinity.
The poem proves to be thought provoking for t he reader as the simple,
innocent world of peasants in rural India highly influenced by
superstitions and the super natural is juxtaposed very realistically with the
intellectual world of rational and scientific temperament in the form of the
boy’s father. Though the reader may somewhat be made to look at the
description of the peasants’ behaviour as critical, the conclusion reveals
the beautiful aspect of the reality - in the world of superstition, full of pain
and suffering, the motherly affection of the w oman remains intact as she
says,
‘Thank God the scorpion picked on me and spared my children.’
As known for being genuinely Indian, Ezekiel has made this poem a
typical piece of Indian English literature in its theme, style and
presentation.
Nissim Ezekiel (1924 -2004), according to Keki Daruwalla, was the first
Indian poet to express modern India’s sensibility in a modern idiom. He is munotes.in

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60 also known to be the father of modern Indian poetry. A Jewish Indian, he
wrote poems like The Unfinished Man (1960)which, in the initial days of
his career, were full of images of ‘city’ which are characteristic of modern
Indian poetry. (Hussain and Zaidi:2016). However, his poetry is equally
rich with the images from Indian landscape and culture. As pointed out by
Hussain and Zaidi, he has successfully expressed his Indianness through
his writing as Indian values, customs, philosophy, language, spirituality
and Indianness is ‘in his blood’.
He is known for his experimentation with the idioms and the language of
Indians. (Hussai n and Zaidi:2016). A Time to Change (1952), The Exact
Name (1965), Hymns in Darkness (1976) are some of the published
anthologies of Nissim Ezekiel. Apart from alienation, love, marriage, exile
from himself are some of the prevalent themes in his poetry. Un like other
Indian poets who mostly are bilingual poets, Ezekiel has written only in
English.
Beginning his career in journalism as an assistant editor of The Illustrated
Weekly of India in1953, he also worked as an advertising copywriter and
the general ma nager of a picture frame company. He was the art critic with
The Times of India and also edited The Poetry India (1966 -67). Ezekiel
won the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1983 and was awarded Padma Shri in
1988 for his contribution to Indian English writing.
Ezek iel is known for his experimental use of Indian idioms and language
in poetry. He is known for an eye for minute details, ironical and
humorous presentation and yet sympathetic approach towards humanity.
As rightly mentioned by Hussain and Zaidi, though ir ony is a favourite
mode in his poetry, it is not bitter and pungent but gentle and soothing. His
poetry is Indian in true sense as it draws its thematic and contextual
material from Indian history, traditions, beliefs and myths. His subtle
observations on human life in India enrich his poetry with a simple
description of situations in the lives of Indians. As mentions Kashikar,
Ezekiel plays a genuine commitment to the craft, authenticity of
articulation and sincerity of purpose.
Jewish by birth, he has con sidered India to be his own land. “India is
simply my environment. A man can do something for and in environment
by being fully what he is. By not withdrawing from it. I have not
withdrawn from India.” (Twentieth Century Indian Poets: R.
Parthasarathy: 199 9 cited in Kashikar). A man with a rare sensibility
deeply rooted in the land where he was brought up, he reveals a genuine
humanistic approach throughout all the poems. Every poem, thus, crafted
with great care yet simplistic, rich in imagery concludes on a humanistic
note. The rootedness of his poetic approach can be explicit in the
following lines from his own poem Enterprise :
‘Our deeds were neither great nor rare home is where, we have together
grace.’
Night of the Scorpion too is deeply rooted in the Indian soil, culture,
philosophy and beliefs. As mentioned earlier, the poem reflects Ezekiel’s munotes.in

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“Night of t he Scorpion”
Translated from English i nto
Marathi (Adhunik Stotra By
Pradeep Deshpande)
61 humanistic approach towards the whole scene of the boy’s mother’s
suffering after getting stung by the scorpion and the typical rural Indian
way to treat her.
6.3 ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR
This very Indian poem in English by Nissim Ezekiel has been translated
into Marathi by Pradeep Deshpande as a part of the translation of his
anthology Latter -Day Psalms into Marathi entitled ‘आधुिवकतोि ं ‘published
by Sahitya Ak ademi. The translated version of the poem is 'विवंचवाचीरा '.
Prof. Pradeep Deshpande who retired as the Head, Dept of English from
S.B. Science College, Aurangabad has remained a prolific translator who
has more than 350 translations of poems to his cred it. Apart from poetry,
he has also translated stories from English to Marathi and has critical
articles to his credit in the field of translation and comparative literature.
‘आधुिवक तोि ं ‘was the first publication by Sahitya Akademi that was
honoured by Sahitya Akademi as the best translation in 1995 as the juries
found it apt to break from their convention of not awarding the
publications by Sahitya Akademi.
He began his journey in the field of translation in 1974. He translated the
poems of Kazi Sali m from Urdu into Marathi which was prescribed as a
text in the syllabus of Comparative Literature at University of Pune.
Deshpande has tried hands at translations from different languages to
Marathi as well as from Marathi to English. He co -edited आजच े िव सािहय : एक
ओळख with Dr. Sudhakar Marathe and Ravindra Kimbavne which was
specifically commissioned by British Council and was published by
Oxford University Press. It was an attempt to acquaint the Marathi
readership to the contemporary British literature in Marathi.
He has translated 11 poems by American poet Wallace Stevens in Marathi
as well as has to his credit, Marathi translations of two well -known poems
of T.S. Eliot, namely, Preludes and Rhapsody on a Windy Night. The
translations were i ncluded in a special edition of Lokmat , a Marathi daily,
on the occasion of Eliot’s birthday. He has also translated English poems
by Ted Hughes, David Gaskoi and the Czech poet Vitezslav Nezval into
Marathi.
Praadeep Deshpande has an important contributio n to an anthology of
Medieval Indian Literature edited by Ayyappa Panicker and published by
Sahitya Akademi in the form of his translations of the poetry by legendary
saint poets in Marathi, Namdev, Dnyaneshwar, Ramdas, Shridhar,
Moropant, Sawata Mali, Jan abai, Muktabai and Chokha Mela.
His translations of modern Marathi poets like Narayan Surve, Keshav
Meshram, Bhalchandra Nemade, Narayan Kulkarni Kavathekar, Manohar
Oak and Rajni Parulekar have been published in Indian Literature
published by Sahitya Akad emi. In a different issue of the same journal, he
has also translated Hindi poems by Chandrakant Devtale. Poetry in Urdu
by Kazi Salim, Akhtar -ul-Iman, Sayyed Arif and Balraj Komal has been
translated by him into Marathi. munotes.in

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62 Apart from this venturing into the realm of poetry, he has also translated
the stories by Sham Manohar, a Marathi author, into English which was
published in Indian Literature . He has also penned articles like Myth in
the Novels of Vilas Sarang and Bhalchandra Nemade (2003).
With this vast experience in the practice of translation to his credit, he has
been invited as are source person in Translation Studies at refresher
courses organized by the Academic Staff Colleges of various universities
in Maharashtra like that of Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur and Jalgaon.
Interestingly, his insightful treatment of the original poetry and a careful
and mature approach towards original and target language as well as
towards process of translation is clarified very well in the preface to his
translated version of Latter -Day Psalms in Marathi. He mentions that the
poems The Patriot and Irani Restaurant Instructions could not and should
not be translated into any regional Indian language according to him. This
is because, as Deshpande mentions, the unintentional humo ur created by
the errors in spoken English by Indians is the thematic characteristic of
these two poems. He says that the English language spoken in the Indian
metropolis has distanced itself away from its grammar and purity. He
points out that English is used in India is for the purpose of
communication and as a false status symbol. In short, it is used as a need
in India by maximum. Ezekiel’s wit and sense of humour has caught the
anomalies in such use of English full of errors and presented it beautifull y
in English through these two poems. According to Deshpande, then,
getting those poems back again into the regional Indian language would be
meaningless and would lack the charm completely as the commentary and
humour expressed naturally in English cannot match the canvas of
regional language.
He further mentions the need to understand the basic relation of the
language and terminology used in the poems by Ezekiel with the Biblical
concepts. One cannot interpret those words in English in denotative sense
as used in the prevalent usage but it is necessary to understand the Biblical
connotations of those words which, a she specifically mentions, he has
followed. This introduction to his role as a translator helps the reader in
interpreting the translated vers ion with a sense of comparative analysis of
the original language and the target language. Deshpande also mentions in
the preface that he has taken great care to be faithful to the original
version.
6.4 SUMMARY OF THE POEM
The poem Night of the Scorpion be gins with a memory, a reflection by the
speaker (the poet presents the whole scene in the first -person narrative). It
is the description of this memory of the night when his mother was stung
by a scorpion. The context is rural Indian house in the rainy day s. To
escape from the heavy rain outside, the scorpion had sought shelter below
the sack of rice in the speaker’s house and biting his mother, it again
slipped out in the rain. The evil nature of the scorpion and its sting is
suggested by the word ‘diaboli c’ tail and the word ‘streak’ used to munotes.in

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Translated Literary Texts: Part-II: Nissim Ezekiel’s Poem
“Night of t he Scorpion”
Translated from English i nto
Marathi (Adhunik Stotra By
Pradeep Deshpande)
63 describe its speed. As the narrative begins, there is no scorpion seen as it
had already escaped.
The neighbouring peasants who come to the house are described as
‘swarms of flies’ and their concern for the boy’ smothe r is reflected in the
way they start applying their conventional, superstitious beliefs to treat
her. As they are compared to the swarms of flies, their enchantments to the
God are looked upon as buzzing. According to their belief, their reciting
the name of God hundred times would paralyze the evil in the poisonous
scorpion.
A belief among rural Indians that the movement of the scorpion makes the
toxin move in the blood of the victim of the sting is narrated here. To stop
the movement of the scorpion, thus , in order to reduce the spread of toxin
in mother’s body, they keep hunting for the scorpion with lanterns and
candles on the ‘mud baked walls’. But they can’t locate it. Different ways
are tried to help soothing the pain and agony of his mother but none seems
to work.
They also keep chanting some hymns that create a soporific effect. They
express a wish for the scorpion to be still somewhere and also that the
sting should prove to be a purifier thus burning all the sins committed by
his mother in her prev ious birth. They also pray for the agony to reduce
the probable misfortunes she is supposed to face in her next birth.
According to them, this sting should lead to the purification of her worldly
desires.
This narration of their superstitious treatment is followed by the mention
of the speaker’s father who is a sceptic and rationalist and a non -believer.
He tries different scientific ways to treat his wife like different herbs,
mixtures, paraffin, etc. The speaker then watches the holy man who
performs his holy rites to ‘tame the poison with an incantation’ which is in
vain.
The sting, finally, loses its toxic impact after twenty hours and the mother
is relieved of the agony. While expressing her gratitude to God for helping
her out of this poisonous experie nce, it is not for herself that she thanks
the God but the relief for her is that her children were saved of the sting
and instead she was attacked. The poem thus concludes on an emotional
note displaying the unconditional love of a mother, a universal tru th that a
mother always has her children and their wellbeing in her thoughts.
Apart from dealing with rational and irrational, superstitious and scientific
approach, the poem displays concern, care and love. The thread of
humanity runs in every individual, be it the rational father or the
superstitious peasants or even the mother who perhaps, being a peasant
woman, is not so educated.
6.5 ABOUT THE TRANSLATION OF ‘NIGHT OF THE
SCORPION’
The original poem in English is translated in Marathi as 'विवंचवाचीरा ' by
Pradeep Deshpande. Though the medium is English, the context of the munotes.in

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Translation Studies -Theory
and Practice -II
64 poem is specifically Indian. Rural India wherein the people do neither use
English in their daily conversation nor can many of them read or even
understand the language. Nissim Ezekiel still has been successful in
helping the reader visualize the whole scene narrated in the poem. The
simple, vivid description in English (though a foreign tongue for the land)
as well as the thematic richness and the content make it typical ly an Indian
poem. The translated version in Marathi has successfully transferred the
content as well as the theme of the original English poem.
Considering the form, the translator has remained sincere to the concept of
equivalence. The free verse metrica l pattern of the original poem has
effectively been kept intact by the translator in Marathi.
“I remember the night my mother
“मला आठवत े माया आईला व िवंचू चावला होता”
Was stung by as scorpion. Ten hours
ती रा दहा तासाया सततधार पावसाम ुळं
of steady r ain had driven him
सरपटत यावं लागल ं होतं याला
to crawl beneath a sack of rice.”
तांदळाया पोयाखाली ”
Generally, there is a risk for the translator to lose the semantic richness
while concentrating upon the form and the syntax of the original to be
intac t in the translated version. But he has successfully performed this
difficult task of transferring meaning to the TL. The meticulously crafted
work displays his rich sense of interpretation and of responsibility as a
translator to convey the meaning of the original through the TL.
In order to convey the exact meaning of some words in English, he uses
very specific Marathi words which adequately shows his expert command
on the TL as well as deep understanding of the language of the original
text. For example , to convey the unbearable, horrifying nature of the pain
caused by the scorpion’s sting, he translated ‘flash of diabolic tail’ as 'आसुरी
नांगीतया िवषाचा लोळ'. The words' आसुरी’ for diabolic and ‘लोळ' for flash transfer
the very essence of its meaning. T he translator’s familiarity with the
context, theme and his command over the TL have certainly proved to
transfer the meaning skillfully.
The neighbours are compared to the swarms of flies by Ezekiel. The
translator has skillfully transferred the simile without making any changes
even in the metrical pattern.
The’ mud baked walls’ in Ezekiel’s poem become 'उहात रापलेया भती' in the
Marathi version thus expressing the simplicity of the village life and the
close affinity to the nature. The mud used for walls doesn’t need to be
dried or baked but the bright sunshine does the job. The mud is not only
dried but even gets the tanned look thus symbolizing the life of a peasant.
munotes.in

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Translated Literary Texts: Part-II: Nissim Ezekiel’s Poem
“Night of t he Scorpion”
Translated from English i nto
Marathi (Adhunik Stotra By
Pradeep Deshpande)
65 Considering the context, the translation of the poem comes as a fine piece
of literary craft successfully transferring the semantic, syntactic, thematic
and contextual essence of the original poem. The last part of the poem, the
mother’s gratitude to God for saving her children from getting stung
proves the universality of motherhood and the motherly love.
6.6 CHECK YOUR PROGRESS
1. Discuss how the original poem Night of the Scorpion has successfully
been translated in Marathi bringing alive the semantic, metrical and
contextual essence of the original into the TL.
2. Write a note on the treatment of original poem in English in its
translation into Marathi.
6.7 BIBLIOGRAPHY
● https://smartengli shnotes.com/2020/12/17/night -of-the-scorpion -by-
nissim -ezekiel -summary -paraphrase -analysis -and-
questions/#Theme_of_the_poem
● https://genius.com/Nissim -ezekiel -night -of-the-scorpion -annotated
● Hussain, Z. and Zaidi, R. Socio -cultural Ethos and Indianness in the
Poetry of Nissim Ezekiel: An Overview. American International
Journal of Research in Humanities, Arts and Social
Sciences. (2016).https://www.academia.edu/36929796/Socio_c ultural_
Ethos_and_Indianness_in_the_Poetry_of_Nissim_Ezekiel_An_Overvi
ewAccessedon 22ndNovember,2022.
● Kashikar, Y. Indianness in the Poetry of Nissim
Ezekiel. https://www.academia.edu/11008464/_INDIANNESS_IN_TH
E_POETRY_OF_NISSIM_EZEKIEL_Accessed on 22ndNove mber,
2022.
● Khanna, M. Critical Tenets of Nissim Ezekiel’s Poetry: A
Perspective. International Journal of English Language, Literature
and Humanities. Vol. III, Issue VII.
● (2015).https://www.academia.edu/37758720/Critical_Tenets_of_Nissi
m_Ezekiels_Poetry_ A_PerspectiveAccessed on 22ndNovember, 2022.
● Special acknowledgement to the translator, Pradeep Deshpande, who
made the text of the translated version available on request and also
was kind to share his thoughts in a telephonic conversation regarding
the p rocess of translation, the problems faced by him while translating
Ezekiel’s poetry.

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