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Identifying varietal differences in Spanish translations of The Great Gatsby

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posted on 2022-03-29, 03:07 authored by Patricia Rodriguez Muyor
This thesis presents a study of the analysis and contrast of literary translations of the same original novel. The study focuses on the Spanish translations of the American novel The Great Gatsby (Fitzgerald, 1925). The aim of the study is to analyse the different strategies applied by various translators when conveying the meaning from English into Spanish and to contrast and analyse the main differences among them. The study starts with an overview of the specific challenges of translating literary texts from English into Spanish, and how there are as many alternatives as Spanish dialects around the Spanish speaking geographic areas (Moreno Fernández, 2009). Furthermore, the Spanish varieties and their role in translation, the different approaches taken by translators (such as domestication and foreignization, Venuti 1995) and other areas that influence the topic of the study are described. The analysis of the dissimilarities and approaches among the translations leads into the analysis and validation of the Retranslation Hypothesis (Chesterman, 2004), to which a conclusion is formulated on the characteristics presented by the translations published between the years 1947 and 2015. A methodology is proposed in the study, which allows the research to identify the existence of specific geographic lexical items, i.e. regionalisms, among the translations as well as the approach followed throughout the translations. These regionalisms are representative of the different Spanish speaking geographical areas included in the study and help identify the translators’ approaches and the imprint that the Spanish varieties have on the target texts. Moreover, corpus-based analysis helps the study to analyse the representative lexical items, and to offer data that helps finding patterns or reasons behind translators’ choices.

History

Table of Contents

1. Abstract -- 2. Statement of originality -- 3. Acknowledgements -- 4. Introduction -- 5. Literature review -- 6. Methodology : lexical items classification and data analysis -- 7. Results and discussion -- 8. Conclusion -- 9. Bibliography -- 10. Appendices.

Notes

Theoretical thesis. Bibliography: pages 62-66

Awarding Institution

Macquarie University

Degree Type

Thesis MRes

Degree

MRes, Macquarie University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Department of Linguistics

Department, Centre or School

Department of Linguistics

Year of Award

2018

Principal Supervisor

Ilija Čašule

Rights

Copyright Patricia Rodriguez Muyor 2018. Copyright disclaimer: http://mq.edu.au/library/copyright

Language

English

Extent

1 online resource (70 pages) tables

Former Identifiers

mq:70720 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1267068