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Translation & Revolution : A Study of Jose Rizal's Guillermo Tell / Ramon Guillermo ;

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Quezon City : Ateneo de Manila University Press, (c) 2009.Description: viii, 283p. ; ; illustrations : 23cmISBN:
  • 9789715505789
LOC classification:
  • PQ 8897.R5 .G85 2009
Summary: The first comprehensive study of Jose Rizal’s 1886 Tagalog translation of Friedrich Schiller’s last and most famous play, Wilhelm Tell (1804). Introduces new computer-aided methods and techniques of discursive and textual analysis to the broad field of translation analysis. Attempts to answer how Schiller’s play, described as the “Agit-prop play of German Idealism,” could have been translated into a language so distant from its original socioeconomic context and so alien from the distinctively German intellectual culture that had produced it. In addition to its methodological contributions, this study is of interest insofar as it may give insight into some of the ideological dynamics constitutive of nineteenth-century nationalism in the Philippines, the implications of which may extend up to the present day.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books DLSU-D HS Learning Resource Center Filipiniana Filipiniana PQ 8897.R5 .G85 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 001417 Available 3HS00000001417

Includes bibliography and index.

The first comprehensive study of Jose Rizal’s 1886 Tagalog translation of Friedrich Schiller’s last and most famous play, Wilhelm Tell (1804). Introduces new computer-aided methods and techniques of discursive and textual analysis to the broad field of translation analysis. Attempts to answer how Schiller’s play, described as the “Agit-prop play of German Idealism,” could have been translated into a language so distant from its original socioeconomic context and so alien from the distinctively German intellectual culture that had produced it. In addition to its methodological contributions, this study is of interest insofar as it may give insight into some of the ideological dynamics constitutive of nineteenth-century nationalism in the Philippines, the implications of which may extend up to the present day.

In English.

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