The Invisibility of Translator’s Presence

Abstract

“I see translation as the attempt to produce a text so transparent that it does not seem to be translated. A good translation is like a pane of glass. You only notice that it’s there when there are little imperfections— scratches, bubbles. Ideally, there shouldn’t be any. It should never call attention to itself.” Norman Shapiro. When a translated text, be it fiction or non- fiction, verse or prose is free of regional, stylistic or linguistic peculiarities, it attains fluency and transparency and gets readily accepted by publishers, reviewers, and readers alike. It reflects the original author’s style, personality and intention in the target language with complete ease, and no longer reads as a translation. This illusory effect of the original that is created by the translator paves way for her own invisibility. The greater the fluency, the greater the invisibility of the translator, and, presumably, the greater the visibility for the original author. Despite being faithful to the original and rendering themselves invisible, translations and translators do not get their due as they are treated as a second order representation, a rewriting, a derivative, a copy. The copyright laws and contractual arrangements between the publisher and translator or author and translator also remain largely unfavorable and ambiguous. In this paper, I would like to focus upon the travails and dilemmas faced by translators, the tight-rope walk that they have to undertake to make the translation seem “natural” and the consequent feeling of being let down/short-changed by the
system.



Author Information
Jyotika Elhance, Vivekananda College–University of Delhi, India

Paper Information
Conference: ACCS2023
Stream: Linguistics

This paper is part of the ACCS2023 Conference Proceedings (View)
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To cite this article:
Elhance J. (2023) The Invisibility of Translator’s Presence ISSN: 2187-4751 The Asian Conference on Cultural Studies 2023: Official Conference Proceedings https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2187-4751.2023.12
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2187-4751.2023.12


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Posted by James Alexander Gordon