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This book explores the intersection of a number of academic areas
of study that are all, individually, of growing importance:
translation studies, crime fiction and world literature. The
scholars included here are leaders in one or more of these areas.
The frame of this volume is imagological; its focus is on the ways
in which national allegories are constructed and deconstructed,
encompassing descriptions of national characteristics as they play
out at the level of the local or the individual as well as broader,
political analyses. Its corpus, crime fiction, is shown to be a
privileged site for writing the national narrative, and often in
ways that are more complex and dynamic than is suggested by the
genre's much-cited role as vehicle for a new realism. Finally,
these two areas are problematised through the lens of translation,
which is a crucial player in both the development of crime fiction
and the formation, rather than simply the interlingual transfer, of
national allegory. In this volume national allegories, and the
crime novels in which they emerge, are shown to be eminently
versatile, foundationally plural texts that promote critical
rewriting as opposed to sites for fixing meaning. This book was
originally published as a special issue of The Translator.
This book explores the intersection of a number of academic areas
of study that are all, individually, of growing importance:
translation studies, crime fiction and world literature. The
scholars included here are leaders in one or more of these areas.
The frame of this volume is imagological; its focus is on the ways
in which national allegories are constructed and deconstructed,
encompassing descriptions of national characteristics as they play
out at the level of the local or the individual as well as broader,
political analyses. Its corpus, crime fiction, is shown to be a
privileged site for writing the national narrative, and often in
ways that are more complex and dynamic than is suggested by the
genre's much-cited role as vehicle for a new realism. Finally,
these two areas are problematised through the lens of translation,
which is a crucial player in both the development of crime fiction
and the formation, rather than simply the interlingual transfer, of
national allegory. In this volume national allegories, and the
crime novels in which they emerge, are shown to be eminently
versatile, foundationally plural texts that promote critical
rewriting as opposed to sites for fixing meaning. This book was
originally published as a special issue of The Translator.
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