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The Art of Bible Translation

Robert Alter

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Religion/Theologie

Beschreibung

From the recipient of the National Jewish Book Award for Lifetime Achievement, a "hugely entertaining and irreverent" (Adam Gopnik, New Yorker) account of the art of translating the Hebrew Bible into English

In this brief book, award-winning biblical translator and acclaimed literary critic Robert Alter offers a personal and passionate account of what he learned about the art of Bible translation over the two decades he spent completing his own English version of the Hebrew Bible.

Alter’s literary training gave him the advantage of seeing that a translation of the Bible can convey the text’s meaning only by trying to capture the powerful and subtle literary style of the biblical Hebrew, something the modern English versions don’t do justice to. The Bible’s style, Alter writes, “is not some sort of aesthetic embellishment of the ‘message’ of Scripture but the vital medium through which the biblical vision of God, human nature, history, politics, society, and moral value is conveyed.” And, as the translators of the King James Version knew, the authority of the Bible is inseparable from its literary authority.

For these reasons, the Bible can be brought to life in English only by re-creating its literary virtuosity, and Alter discusses the principal aspects of style in the Hebrew Bible that any translator should try to reproduce: word choice, syntax, word play and sound play, rhythm, and dialogue. In the process, he provides an illuminating and accessible introduction to biblical style that also offers insights about the art of translation far beyond the Bible.

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Schlagwörter

Goy, Metonymy, Verbosity, Everett Fox, Biblical poetry, Matthew Carter, Phrase, Noun, Biblical Hebrew, Esau, Poetry, Usage, Psalms, Hebrew language, Vocabulary, Martin Buber, Potiphar, Bible translations into English, Joab, Alliteration, Ehud, Elohim, Suggestion, Translation, King James Version, Septuagint, Books of Samuel, Adjective, Jacob and Esau, Euphemism, Circumlocution, Animal sacrifice, Modern English Version, Verb, Word play, Font Bureau, Writer, Inference, Book of Deuteronomy, Hebrew Bible, Etymology, Ecclesiastes, Revised English Bible, Parataxis, Poetic diction, Modern English, New English Bible, Vladimir Nabokov, Biblical literalism, Diction, Bible, Consonant, English poetry, Narrative, Pun, J. (newspaper), Prose, Writing, Rashi, Franz Rosenzweig, Illustration, Absalom, Flood myth, The Other Hand, Amnon, Jephthah, Ambiguity, Bible translations, Typeface, Decorum