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Posts Tagged ‘Translations’

18 Books I’ve Been Meaning To Read

In Books, Lists, Literature on செப்ரெம்பர் 9, 2018 at 10:26 பிப

via 21 Books You’ve Been Meaning To Read | Penguin Random House

More: THE GREAT AMERICAN READ, a New Multi-Platform PBS Series, Reveals List of America’s 100 Favorite Novels | PBS

    1. Song of Solomon
      By Toni Morrison
    2. The Shadow of the Wind
      By Carlos Ruiz Zafon
      Illustrated by Jessica Hische
      Translated by Lucia Graves
    3. Don Quixote
      By Miguel de Cervantes
      Introduction by A. J. Close
      Translated by P. A. Motteux
    4. The Picture of Dorian Gray
      By Oscar Wilde
      Illustrated by Coralie Bickford-Smith
      Introduction by Robert Mighall
      Edited by Robert Mighall
    5. The Liars’ Club
      A Memoir
      By Mary Karr
    6. Moby-Dick
      or, The Whale
      By Herman Melville
      Introduction by Elizabeth Hardwick and Rockwell Kent
    7. Gravity’s Rainbow
      By Thomas Pynchon
      Illustrated by Frank Miller
    8. We That Are Young
      by Preti Taneja
    9. Half Gods
      by Akil Kumarasamy
    10. Bless Me, Ultima
      by Rudolfo Anaya
    11. Heart of Darkness
      by Joseph Conrad
    12. Gilead
      by Marilynne Robinson
    13. Doña Barbara
      by Rómulo Gallegos (Author), Larry McMurtry (Foreword), Robert Malloy (Translator)
    14. The Intuitionist
      by Colson Whitehead
    15. The Pilgrim’s Progress
      by John Bunyan (Author), Roger Pooley (Editor)
    16. Siddhartha
      by Hermann Hesse
    17. The Sirens of Titan
      by Kurt Vonnegut
    18. Their Eyes Were Watching God
      by Zora Neale Hurston

Best of Fiction: 23 Short Stories

In Books, Literature on ஜனவரி 29, 2014 at 12:47 பிப

Source: Masterpieces of Short Fiction

1. Excavations—Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado”
2. Hawthorne’s “Goodman Brown” and Lost Faith
3. Under Gogol’s “Overcoat”
4. Maupassant’s “The Necklace”—Real and Paste
5. Chekhov, Love, and “The Lady with the Dog”
6. James in the Art Studio—”The Real Thing”
7. Epiphany and the Modern in Joyce’s “Araby”
8. Babel’s “My First Goose”—Violent Concision
9. Male Initiation—Hemingway’s “The Killers”
10. Kafka’s Parable—”A Hunger Artist”
11. Lawrence’s Blue-eyed “Rocking-Horse Winner”
12. Female Initiation—Mansfield’s “Party”
13. Jackson’s Shocking Vision in “The Lottery”
14. O’Connor’s “A Good Man Is Hard to Find”
15. Paley on Survival and “An Interest in Life”
16. The “Enormous Wings” of García Márquez
17. A New World Fable—Malamud’s “The Jewbird”
18. Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”—A Harlem Song
19. Updike’s “A & P”—The Choice of Gallantry
20. Kingston’s Warrior Myth—”No Name Woman”
21. Atwood’s “Happy Endings” as Metafiction
22. Gordimer’s “Moment Before” Apartheid Fell
23. Carver’s “Cathedral”—A Story that Levitates

List of Tamil Juries for Sahitya Academy: சாகித்ய அகாடெமி ஜூரி பட்டியல்

In India, Lists, Literature, Tamilnadu on ஜூன் 1, 2012 at 8:20 பிப

சாஹித்ய அகாதெமி விருதில் நடுவர் குழுவில் இடம்பெற்றவர் யார்?

இவர்களில் எத்தனை பேர் விமர்சகர்கள்?

இலக்கிய ரசிகர்கள் என்று பெயர் எடுத்தவர் இருக்கிறார்களா?

படைப்பிலக்கியத்திலும் புனைவிலும் ஆளுமைகளா?

பத்திரிக ஆசியர்கள் உண்டா?

எவ்வளவு பேர் எவ்வித அரசியல் சார்பு கொண்டவர்கள்?

அவர்களின் கம்யூனிச, சித்தாந்த சாய்வு நிலை என்ன?

யார் தோழருக்கு நண்பர்?

  1. Dr. Abdul Rahman – அப்துல் ரெஹ்மான்
  2. Dr. E. Sundaramurthi – ஈ. சுந்தரமூர்த்தி
  3. Dr. K. S. Subramanian – கே. எஸ். சுப்ரமணியன்
  4. Dr. M. Palaniappan – எம். பழனியப்பன்
  5. Dr. R. Kumaravelu – ஆர். குமாரவேலு
  6. Dr. S. Chandra – எஸ். சந்திரா
  7. Prof. K. Chellappan – கே. செல்லப்பன்
  8. Smt. Madana Calliyani – மதன கல்யாணி
  9. Sri Kalladan – கல்லாடன்
  10. Sri Kovai Gnani – கோவை ஞானி
  11. Sri Kurinjivelan – குறிஞ்சிவேலன்
  12. Sri Samakodangi Ravi – சாமகோடங்கி ரவி
  13. Sri Tamilnadan – தமிழ்நாடன்
  14. Sri Thopil Mohamad Meeran – தோப்பில் முகமது மீரான்
  15. Sri V. Sabanayagam – வே சபாநாயகம்

 

Indian Literary Award Judges: Sahitya Akademi Jury members for Recdent Years in English Language

In India, Lists, Literature, Questions on ஜூன் 1, 2012 at 8:08 பிப

Who were part of the jury in English Language?

How the last names could impact the choice of winner selection?

Does it have a good mix of different sexes or is it just males in the Judge pool?

What was the prefix like doctor, professor, miss for the decision makers?

From Sahitya Academy website:

The books were selected on the basis of recommendations made by a Jury of three members in the concerned languages in accordance with the procedure laid down for the purpose. According to the procedure, the Executive Board declared the Awards on the basis of unanimous selections made by the Jurors or selection made on the basis of majority vote. The Awards relate to books first published during the three years immediately preceding the year of Award

Some of the distinguished Jury members:

  1. Dr. Amitava Roy
  2. Dr. E.V. Ramakrishnan
  3. Dr. Lakshmi Kannan
  4. Dr. Lakshmi Kannan
  5. Dr. Poonam Trivedi
  6. Ms. C. T. Indira
  7. Ms. Mini Krishnan
  8. Prof. G.J.V. Prasad
  9. Prof. Manju Jain
  10. Prof. Manoj Das
  11. Smt. Prema Nandkumar
  12. Sri Bhaskar Ghosh
  13. Sri Jayanta Mahapatra
  14. Sri M.L. Raina
  15. Sri Tarun Saint

 

S Ramakrishnan: Foreign & World Translations: Top 10 International Kid Books for 2012

In Books, Literature, Tamilnadu on ஜனவரி 15, 2012 at 10:19 பிப

எழுத்தாளர் எஸ்.ராமகிருஷ்ணன் பரிந்துரைக்கும் சிறார்களுக்கான 10 புத்தகங்கள்:

1. குட்டி இளவரசன் – க்ரியா பதிப்பகம்.

2. ஜெனி எனும் சிறுவன் – பாரதி புத்தகலயம்

3. தி மேஜிக் ட்ரீ – பாரதி புத்தகாலயம்

4. ஆயிஷா – பாரதி புத்தகாலயம்

5. மார்ஜினா சத்திரபே – விடியல்

6. குரங்கின் அரசன் – பிரேமா பிரசுரம்

7. புத்த ஜாதக கதைகள் – பூம்புகார் பதிப்பகம்

8. 1001 அற்புத இரவுகள் – வ.உ.சி பதிப்பகம்

9. காட்டுக்குள்ளே மான்குட்டி – என்.சி.பி.ஹெச்

10. தி ஹொய் – சந்தியா பதிப்பகம்

12 Tamil Translations for Astronomy Words

In Science, Tamilnadu on ஓகஸ்ட் 21, 2009 at 3:52 பிப

நன்றி: தமிழினி :: Tamizhini :: வானியல்: கோள் ஆற்றுப்படை – எஸ்.ஆனந்த்

  1. eye piece – கண்ணருகு வில்லை
  2. Comet – வால்வெள்ளி
  3. Long Focal length – அதிகக் குவி நீளம்
  4. Field of View – பார்வை பரப்பு
  5. Festoons – தோரணப்பிரிவுகள்
  6. satellite transit – உபகோள்களின் இடப்பெயர்வு
  7. Elliptical orbit – நீள்வட்டப் பாதைகள்
  8. Space Telescope – விண் தொலைநோக்கி
  9. Polar Ice Cap – துருவப் பனி முகப்பு
  10. Mass – அடர்த்தி
  11. high tide – கடல் ஏற்றம்
  12. Low tide – கடல் இறக்கம்

டாப் 10 மொழிபெயர்ப்பு குளறுபடி

In Blogs, World on பிப்ரவரி 6, 2009 at 5:30 பிப

நன்றி: 2008இன் மோசமான மொழிபெயர்ப்புகள்

Top 10 Translation Fails of 2008

10. Rima Abdelkader of the New York City News Service Blog, penned a gut busting piece on the election’s many buzz words.

Abdelkader highlighted the dizzying translation task facing foreign journalists during the U.S. Election. Here are a few highlights:

Maverick

  • In Arabic, “a bird that sings outside the flock.”
  • In Italian, cane sciolto or “dog without a leash.”

Joe 6-Pack

  • In French, le beauf’ plein de bière, “an uneducated, extremely conservative brother-in-law who is narrow-minded as well as racist.”

Hockey Mom

  • In Spanish, madraza, boisterous mom.

9. ALTA reported on an unfounded mad cow disease scare in Korea in a Beyond Words post. Chosun reported that the U.S. FDA cattle feed rules had been translated to Korean and published only later, much to the chagrin of the Korean Government, to find that the document had left out some very pertinent details from the English source text. As a result, the translated document communicated a much more stringent U.S. feed policy than actually exists.

8. Melanie Phillips, a writer for The Spectator commented on “an appalling mistranslation” committed by Reuters, the source of this BBC story. It misquoted Israeli deputy defence minister Matan Vilnai when he said:

‘The more Qassam (rocket) fire intensifies and the rockets reach a longer range, they (the Palestinians) will bring upon themselves a bigger “shoah” because we will use all our might to defend ourselves’.

Reuters had translated the Hebrew word ‘shoah’ as ‘holocaust’. But, contends Phillips, ‘shoah’ merely means disaster. She continues to state that, “in Hebrew, the word ‘shoah’ is never used to mean ‘holocaust’ or ‘genocide’ because of the acute historical resonance”.

7. The conflict between Russia and Georgia was exacerbated by badly-translated French back in August.

Peter Allen, of Telegraph.co.uk, reported that France’s foreign minister has admitted one reason for the continuation of the conflict was a passage in the Russian translation of the agreement that referred to the security “for” South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The English version speaks of security “in” the two areas.

Allen pointed out the imperative distinction: Russia continued to keep its tanks and armed troops “in” Georgian territory. The international community, in turn, wants security “for” South Ossetia and Abkhazia without the Russian army staying in Georgia.

6. Andrew Jacobs of Herald Tribune, the vice governor was asked about the final student death toll by a foreign reporter. Wei Hong produced a verbose response ending with the number 19,065 (more than double previous estimates and one that would suggest that a quarter of the earthquake victims were children).

The official English translation of Wei’s remarks included the word “student” after the figure 19,065. Rapidly disseminated by foreign and Chinese media, it took only hours to arrive on the central government’s main Web site. This spurred an official clarification, that insisted the data had been “flubbed” via translation. The government contended that the figure 19,065 applied to the number of positively identified victims, not the number of dead students.

5. Officials requested a Welsh translation of a road sign to communicate “No entry for heavy goods vehicles. Residential site only” They emailed their in house translators and promptly received a response. The reply was, they assumed, exactly what they needed.

Hardly. The Welsh translation that ended up being printed and mounted on the street reads: “I am not in the office at the moment. Send any work to be translated“.

4. Google, the world’s best known search engine, found a translation of “Wales” and failed to realize it was in the wrong language. Google Maps thus titled Wales as “An Bhreatain Bheag”, the Irish for Wales, which translates as “Little Britain”. Aww, little Britain.

3. Mark Liberman, of Language Log was tipped by a reader about a humorous quote from a press release about a Chinese Exhibition on solar energy:

“3rd 2008 Asia Solar PV Exhibition attracted many companies come from more than 20 countries and regions, such as Germany, France, Switzerland, the United States, Hungary, with their ears, Italy, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, China Taiwan, and so on.” [emphasis added]

In short: the Chinese practice is to represent foreign names, including country names, using characters whose pronunciation approximates that of the target word. But like all Chinese characters, these are logograms, which (perhaps ambiguously) represent morphemes as well as sounds.

2. The authors of the blog, Wu Wei have cast their ballot for mistranslation of the year:

SUMMARY OF THE ENERGY STRATEGY OF RUSSIA FOR THE PERIOD OF UP TO 2020

* the main control functions… in the state regulation of bowels use;
* perfection of Russian legislative branch, connected with the bowels use;
* checking of financial state of the client when giving him right for bowels use;
* development of measures on the increase of economic responsibility of the bowels users

Here is an explanation for how the blunder occurred: Someone had mistaken the Russian word Nadra, which means subsoil for bowels.

1. Victor Mair, of Language Log, reported earlier this month on MaxPlanckForschung, the journal of the Max Planck Institute. The journal themed its latest issue with a focus upon the nation of China. In stride with this theme, the journals editors requested an elegant Chinese poem to grace the cover. What went to print and subsequently was shipped and distributed was, how shall we say, less than elegant. No sooner had the journal fallen into the hands of Chinese readers than it set off a frenzy of indignation, uproarious laughter, and animated discussion.
This is a rough translation of what the text says:

With high salaries, we have cordially invited for an extended series of matinées KK and Jiamei as directors, who will personally lead jade-like girls in the spring of youth,
Beauties from the north who have a distinguished air of elegance and allure,
Young housewives having figures that will turn you on;
Their enchanting and coquettish performance will begin within the next few days.

The moral of this story, according to Mair, is if one is not deeply versed in Classical Chinese, one would be well advised to refrain from commenting on anything written in it. Especially if the text in question is likely to be distributed all over the world by a renowned institute of scientific research.

Of course, the Chinese officials charged with translating signs for the Olympic Games this year did not exactly set the bar very high for cross-cultural communication. Here are a few examples of their fails:

  • The signs for the emergency exits in the Beijing airport warned visitors:“No entry on peacetime”
  • The Ethnic Minorities Park turned into the “Racist Park”
  • A slippery pavement warning read “Take Notice of Safe; The Slippery are Very Crafty.”