Abstract

ABSTRACT This article attempts to study how the richness of swearing expressions functions in the Chinese vernacular novel Jin Ping Mei (1617) and how it fares in the two English translations: The Golden Lotus (1939) and The Plum in the Golden Vase (2013). Based on the paradigm of descriptive translation studies, the study describes and compares translational strategies adopted by the translators using textual samples drawn from source and target texts. Findings suggest that the earlier translation is oriented to domestication through omission and attenuation of the original swearwords whereas the latest translation exhibits a foreignizing trend by faithfully rendering as many expletives as possible. Moreover, the study demonstrates that swearing in some ways pushes interlingual translation to face the extremes of its capacity and that both domesticating and foreignizing approaches are not effective enough to convey the intended communicative effects of swearwords and vulgarisms used by fictional characters, which negatively influences the novel’s discursive representation and characterization. Finally, the article not only sheds some light on the interlingual translation of non-standard language varieties in literary works but also proposes a more cautious approach to domestication and foreignization in the sphere of translation studies.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call