(In)decorosa alegría: la traducción inglesa de Don Quijote por Phillips de 1687 y la función social del humor

Autores/as

  • Eli Cohen Swarthmore College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24310/TRANS.2017.v0i21.3635

Palabras clave:

Quijote, Traducción, Cervantes, J. Phillips, Humor

Resumen

La traducción del Quijote de John Phillips (1687) ha sido considerada una de las peores traducciones de toda la historia, definitivamente la peor versión de la obra cervantina. Sin embargo, un análisis de la traducción de Phillips en el contexto de la cultura inglesa de la segunda mitad del siglo XVII permite ver en la obra de Phillips una lectura perspicaz tanto de la obra original como de su propio contexto. El texto de Phillips presenta no sólo una traducción lingüística de la obra original, sino también una traducción del mecanismo literario del texto cervantino, según la cual Phillips reproduce el uso de la obra literaria para criticar de modo indirecto el discurso, los usos y los valores contemporáneos.

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Publicado

2017-12-16

Cómo citar

Cohen, E. (2017). (In)decorosa alegría: la traducción inglesa de Don Quijote por Phillips de 1687 y la función social del humor. TRANS: Revista De Traductología, (21), 75–91. https://doi.org/10.24310/TRANS.2017.v0i21.3635

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