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  • Translating Line Breaks: A View from Persian Poetics

    Author(s):
    Rebecca Ruth Gould (see profile) , Kayvan Tahmasebian
    Date:
    2023
    Group(s):
    Comparison, Global Literary Theory, Literary theory, Literary Translation, Persian and Persianate Studies
    Subject(s):
    Persian poetry, Persian literature, Criticism, Translations, Translations, Enjambement, Poetics, Comparative literature, Manuscripts, Persian, Rimbaud, Arthur, 1854-1891
    Item Type:
    Article
    Permanent URL:
    https://doi.org/10.17613/fmsp-7w59
    Abstract:
    Line breaks are arguably the defining feature of poetry, in the absence of which a text becomes prose. Consequently, the translation of line breaks is a decisive issue for every poetry translator. Classical and modern literary theorists have argued that the potential for enjambment, which we understand as the effect that makes line breaks possible in poetry, constitutes the difference between poetry and prose. Yet, the translation of line breaks is among the least studied areas of translation theory. This essay explores the challenge of translating classical and modernist line breaks through examples from Persian and European literary canons. From Shams-i Qays’s classic treatise on Persian prosody to Arthur Rimbaud and William Carlos Williams to modernist poet Bijan Elahi’s poetic rewriting of One Thousand and One Nights, we explore the options open to the translator-poet who seeks to create a new poem in and through translation.
    Metadata:
    xml
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    2 months ago
    License:
    Attribution

    Downloads

    Item Name: pdf linebreaks-2023.pdf
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    Activity: Downloads: 65

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