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  • Transatlantic Quechuañol: Reading Race through Colonial Translations

    Author(s):
    Allison Margaret Bigelow (see profile)
    Date:
    2019
    Group(s):
    Women also Know Literature
    Subject(s):
    Translating and interpreting, Indigenous peoples, History, Science, United States, 1600-1775, Latin America, Atlantic Ocean Region
    Item Type:
    Article
    Tag(s):
    Seventeenth-century, Mining, Metallurgy, Andes, Translation, Indigenous history, History of science, Colonial America, Atlantic world
    Permanent URL:
    http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/m1xt-4953
    Abstract:
    Translation is often described with opposed terms like loyalty and betrayal, even though the work of translation defies such a description. New research in translation studies argues for the value of mistranslation and untranslatables, especially in recovering Indigenous knowledge production. This study joins these efforts by documenting how technical writers in the colonial Andes used Quechua terms to form a patois called “Quechuañol” (Quechua plus español) and how this hybrid Andean language was obscured in translations of scientific texts in early modern England, Germany, and France. As translators reinterpreted metallic classifications in Quechuañol, including “Pacos, Mulatos y Negrillos” (“paco, mulato, and negrillo metals”), they chose terms that communicated their own, culturally specific ideas about color and categories. Tracing mistranslations in the Atlantic world allows us to document both the Indigenous intellectual contributions to the technical arts and the development of early modern racial classifications.
    Metadata:
    xml
    Published as:
    Journal article     Show details
    Pub. DOI:
    https://doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2019.134.2.242
    Publisher:
    Modern Language Association (MLA)
    Pub. Date:
    2019-5-13
    Journal:
    PMLA
    Volume:
    134
    Issue:
    2
    Page Range:
    242 - 259
    ISSN:
    0030-8129
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    3 years ago
    License:
    Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike

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