lunedì 22 agosto 2011

Susan Bernofsky's 11 rules for translators

The Babel Fish
This interesting article was published a few weeks ago on the blog Arabic Literature (in English), which has many great posts about translation. 

Susan Bernofsky is one of the best translators from German into English, and writes about translation in her blog Translationista. I was curious to know what her 11 rules for translators might be, and if I agreed with them. The answer is mostly yes. How could I not! So here they are, with my comments, written from the point of view of a full-time literary translator from English into Italian:



1. Always be a writer while you are translating, and every time you forget, bring yourself back to it.
[I love this one. Translators do have a personality, and they don't have to be completely invisible. They just should have a good instinct for balance, and shouldn't have too big of an ego. (But then, no one should have too big of an ego.)]

2. The most important thing about the structure of a sentence is the order in which the bits of information arrive.
[Very important. But this applies more to the writer, I think. If I follow his/her structure, I should be safe.]

3. If the original text is not well-written, you are doomed; feel free to despair.
[This is strictly connected to rule n.1.When the translator is a better writer then the writer he/she is translating, it can be extremely frustrating. It's okay to keep your ego at bay, but this is too much!]

4. If the original is well-written, make sure you understand exactly what’s good about it, i.e. what constitutes this writer’s characteristic style.  Getting the tone right is key.
[Yes!]

5. Get up from your computer at least once every hour to stretch and walk around.  Translating in a stupor isn’t going to work out to anyone’s satisfaction.
[Mmm... and what about vacations? Get away from your computer at least once a... month? A year?]

6. The most important reference work you can own is a Roget’s International Thesaurus.  Indexed, not in dictionary form.  Yes, it does make a difference.  And no, there is no dictionary of synonyms available online that can hold a candle to a good Roget’s.
[Indispensable for translators into English. Translators from English will have to make do with a good thesaurus in their own language.]

7. No, it’s not good enough yet, keep revising.
[I know it's not good enough, I'll tell the publisher I need more time and more money.]

8. I can’t believe you’re asking again already.  Revise some more.
[The publisher said no already.]

9. Read everything you translate aloud, preferably to a bookloving listener who can be trusted to furrow a brow when a phrase is off.
[I used to do this at the beginning. Now I'm more confident and I think I can do without it.  Especially because I very soon ran out of bookloving people willing to listen to everything I translate.]

10. Read lots and lots of gorgeous books at all times so that your head will constantly be filled with the cadences of literary greatness.
[Oh, yes, this is fun!]

11. Remember that no matter what hard work it is, translating is supposed to be fun; if you consistently find yourself not having fun while translating, why don’t you try something else that you might actually make some money at?
[Like what? I still have to find it...]

3 commenti:

  1. riguardo al tradurre, un articolo e alcuni commenti che potrebbero interessarti (e sui quali sarei curioso di conoscere la tua opinione).
    http://www.nazioneindiana.com/2011/08/28/tradurre/#more-39460

    RispondiElimina
  2. Matteo, sì, avevo visto l'articolo e l'avevo doverosamente postato su feisbuc. Poi, spronata dal tuo commento, ho anche cercato di leggerlo, ma poi ho visto che aveva anche un sacco di lunghi commenti e... confesso, non ce l'ho fatta. Quando le cose si fanno troppo teoriche mi annoio subito. Vediamo se riesco a farmi perdonare segnalandoti un paio di libri interessanti che ho appena scoperto: "Is That a Fish in Your Ear?" di David Bellos (in uscita, credo che ne parlerò presto in un post. Ha anche il valore aggiunto di avere un titolo ispirato al Babel Fish di The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, libro da cui al momento sono ossessionata) e "Through the Language Glass: Why the World Looks Different in Other Languages" di Guy Deutscher (appena ordinato, se mi piace poi parlerò anche di questo).

    RispondiElimina
  3. Capisco perfettamente. Anch'io, alle volte, ho lo stesso problema.
    Grazie per le segnalazioni!

    RispondiElimina