四字成语与日语莎翁译本的修辞学

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Daniel Gallimore
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Yoji jukugo是由四个汉字(汉字)组成的习语,可以用来增强日语莎士比亚翻译的文本性,无论是回应莎士比亚的修辞,还是作为对翻译倾向于在较低的语域进行的补偿。本文考察了他们在两个译本中的使用,分别是松冈和子(2014)和福田Tsuneari(1960)的《凯撒大帝》和松冈和子(2001)和大岛Yūshi(1983)的《温莎的美妇》;在这两种情况下,松冈都比她的前任使用了更多的yoji jukugo。在恺撒大帝译本中,在第3.2章安东尼和布鲁图斯的演讲中,他们的用法很明显,通常表示卑鄙或野蛮。在《风流娘儿们》的翻译中,它们通常表示放荡的行为,通常是为了达到喜剧效果,甚至在译入语中也会误用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Four-Character Idioms and the Rhetoric of Japanese Shakespeare Translation
Yoji jukugo are idioms comprised of four characters (kanji) that can be used to enhance the textuality of a Japanese Shakespeare translation, whether in response to Shakespeare’s rhetoric or as compensation for the tendency of translation to be carried out at a lower textual register than the source. This article examines their use in two translations each of Julius Caesar by Matsuoka Kazuko (2014) and Fukuda Tsuneari (1960) and of The Merry Wives of Windsor by Matsuoka (2001) and Odashima Yūshi (1983); in both cases Matsuoka uses significantly more yoji jukugo than her predecessors. In the Julius Caesar translations their usage is noticeable in the set speeches by Antony and Brutus in 3.2, and commonly denote baseness or barbarity. In the Merry Wives translations they commonly denote dissolute behaviour, often for comic effect, and can even be used malapropistically in the target language.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
13 weeks
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