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Books > Language & Literature > Language & linguistics > Translation & interpretation
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Translation, Biopolitics, Colonial Difference (Paperback)
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Translation, Biopolitics, Colonial Difference (Paperback)
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Translation, Biopolitics, Colonial Difference, the fourth book in
the Traces series, focuses on the problems of translation and the
political dynamics surrounding multiplicity - linguistic, regional,
transnational, and civilizational - today. The international group
of authors deal, both theoretically and empirically, with the
historical obstacles and future opportunities offered by an
emerging global order that is still struggling with the legacy of
the previous four centuries of Eurocentric capitalist development.
The authors amply illustrate that the concept of translation is far
from being singularly determined, and how extremely difficult it is
for philosophy to be distinct from translation. Here translation is
regarded as a general concept, by which the Eurocentric framework
implicit in the existent academic practices of comparison is
problematized and according to which old questions are transformed
into new ones and articulated to one another across disciplinary
boundaries and regional or national borders. This book shows how
the emerging global order might be viewed once we have been
liberated from the Eurocentric perspective; it includes
sociological inquiries into the system of international security
networks and an analysis of the consequences of the transformation
of the nation-state; it deals with the foundation of international
law and its unalienable connection to modern colonial violence, and
the foundational complicity between modern sovereignty and
biopolitics. On an empirical note, the essays in this major volume
deal with the various practices of translation in multiple locales,
the belated constitution of anthropological language, philosophical
discussion on translation, and the sexual aspects of translational
politics. The relations between economics, ontology, and politics
together form the crossroads at which the authors in this volume
meet. As such, the volume will be of interest to an
interdisciplinary audience of readers in the Humanities concerned
with the intersections among politics, economy, philosophy,
postcoloniality, and translation studies, and would above all
attract interest from the emerging readership in biopolitics (under
the field of comparative literature).
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