The Medieval Translator
Title Details

208 Pages

23.4 x 15.6 cm

4 b/w illus.

Imprint: D.S.Brewer

The Medieval Translator

The Theory and Practice of Translation in the Middle Ages

Edited by Roger Ellis

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
These studies of the theory and practice of translation in the middle ages show a wide range of translational practices, on texts which range from anonymous Middle English romances and Biblical commentaries to the writings of Usk,Chaucer and Malory. Included among them is a paper on a hitherto unknown woman translator, Dame Eleanor Hull; a paper which compares a draft translation with its fair copy to show how its translator worked; a paper which shows how the mystic Rolle sought to "translate" his heightened spiritual experiences into words; and so on. In a medieval translation the general priority of meaning over form and style enabled, even obliged, the translator to act more like an author than like a scribe. Consequently, the study of medieval translation throws important light on contemporary, attitudes to, and understandings of, fundamental literary questions: for example, and most importantly, that of the role of the author.
Introduction - Roger Ellis
The fortunes of 'non verbum pro verbo': or, why Jerome is not a Ciceronian -
Late medieval English translation: types and reflections - J D Burnley
Chaucer as translator - T W Machan
Prologue and practice: Middle English lives of Christ - Ian Johnson
Dame Eleanor Hull: a fifteenth-century translator - Alexandra Barratt
The Ashmole Sir Ferumbras: translation in holograph - Steven H A Shepherd
Translation as expansion: poetic practice in the Old English Phoenix and some other poems - Anne Savage
Ipomedon to Ipomadon A: two views of courtliness - Rosalind Field
Malory's questing beast and the implications of author as translator - Catherine Batt
Translation and self-canonization in Richard Rolle's Melos Amoris - Nicholas Watson
Transposition: Thomas Usk's Testament of Love - Stephen Medcalf
"The study of translation, in fact, has central value for the understanding of mediaeval literature, involving as it does the very question of originality, of the transformation of received materials, and of the relationship between text and language...interesting and useful reading." MEDIUM ÆVUM 1991

Hardcover

9780859912846

August 1989

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Title Details

208 Pages

2.34 x 1.56 cm

4 b/w illus.

Imprint: D.S.Brewer