F u z a i : Culture, Contracts & Cloud Cats In The Japanese Translation Of Kenneth Oppel’s Airborn
- ASU Author/Contributor (non-ASU co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
- Chris Craigo (Creator)
- Institution
- Appalachian State University (ASU )
- Web Site: https://library.appstate.edu/
- Advisor
- German Campos-Munoz
Abstract: In my thesis, I examine the many processes of societal, cultural and linguistic negotiation within Masaru Harada's Japanese translation of Canadian author Kenneth Oppel's 2004 young adult novel, Airborn. By approaching the notion of translation as a theoretical framework, I explore both the source text and its translation across the metatextual, textual and editorial levels, examining the tensions, commentary, and unspoken narratives on audience, culture, and the novel it self that arise from the translation process. Tracing the implications of the translation's phonetic gloss and interventional explanations, I first interrogate both the translation's assumptions about its readership, and the narrative behind the translation's integration of made-up terminology and "politeness levels" exclusive to the Japanese language into the text. I continue with an examination of the parallels between the textualization processes present in the novel's plot and the translation process, discussing the various ways in which the text itself mirrors, and even comments on issues of translation via its own narrative. Finally, I explore the narrative of expectations and assumptions surrounding the text itself with regard to Harada's own commentary about the novel's translation, editorial interventions, and the translation's ultimate commercial reception within Japan. In doing so, I foreground the multilayered nature of translation itself, and further illuminate the ways in which societal, cultural, and linguistic differences are ultimately handled and negotiated within the novel's translation.
F u z a i : Culture, Contracts & Cloud Cats In The Japanese Translation Of Kenneth Oppel’s Airborn
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Created on 1/20/2017
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Additional Information
- Publication
- Honors Project
- Craigo, C. (2016). F u z a i : Culture, Contracts & Cloud Cats In The Japanese Translation Of Kenneth Oppel’s Airborn. Unpublished Honors Thesis. Appalachian State University, Boone, NC.
- Language: English
- Date: 2016
- Keywords
- Airborn, translation, Japanese, Comparative translation, Culture