Umberto Eco teaches courses on semiotics and communication theory
for Arts students at the University of Bologna. He is one of the leading
cultural and literary critics in Italy (The role of the reader, 1979),
and found a considerable popularity with his novels, the "philosophical
thriller" The name of the rose (1983) and the "divertissement
for initiates" Foucault's pendulum (1989). Eco is also interested
in the rhetoric and ideology behind popular fiction, Il superuomo di
massa (1978), and in alternative academia by co-ordinating a
university without physical structures in the Republic of San Marino.
A rose by any other name
Umberto Eco Translated by William Weaver
There are writers who do not bother about their translations, sometimes
because they lack the linguistic competence; some sometimes because they
have no faith in the literary value of their work and are anxious only to
sell their product in as many countries as possible.
Often the indifference conceals two prejudices, equally despicable: Either
the author considers himself an inimitable genius and so suffers translation
as a painful political process to be borne until the whole world has learned
his language, or else the author harbours an "ethnic" bias and
considers it a waste of time to care about how readers from other cultures
might feel about his work.
People think an author can check his translations only if he knows the
language into which he is to be translated. Obviously, if he does know that
language, the work proceeds more easily. But it all depends on the translator's
intelligence. For example, I do not know Swedish, Russian, or Hungarian,
and yet I have worked well with my translators into those languages. They
were able to explain to me the kind of difficulties they faced, and make
me understand why what I had written created problems in their language.
In many cases I was able to offer suggestions.
The problem frequently arises from the fact that translations are either
"source-oriented" or "target oriented", as today's books
on Translation Theory put it. A source-oriented translation must do everything
possible to make the B-language reader understand what the writer has thought
or said in language A. Classical Greek affords a typical example: in order
to comprehend it at all, the modern reader must understand what the poets
of that age were like and how they might express themselves. If Homer seems
to repeat "rosy-fingered dawn" too frequently, the translator
must not try to vary the epithet just because today's manuals of style insist
we should be careful about repeating the same adjective. The reader has
to understand that in those days dawn had rosy fingers whenever it was mentioned.
In other cases translation can and should be target-oriented. I will
cite an example from the translation of my novel Foucault's Pendulum
whose chief characters constantly speak in literary quotations. The purpose
is to show that it is impossible for these characters to see the world except
through literary references. Now, in chapter 57, describing an automobile
trip in the hills, the translation reads "the horizon became more vast,
at every curve the peaks grew, some crowned by little villages: we glimpsed
endless vistas." But, after "endless vistas" the Italian
text went on: "al di la della siepe, come osservava Diotallevi."
If these words had been translated, literally "beyond the hedge, as
Diotallevi remarked," the English-language reader would have lost something,
for "al di la della siepe" is a reference to the most beautiful
poem of Giacomo Leopardi, L'infinito,which every Italian reader knows
by heart. The quotation appears at that point not because I wanted to tell
the reader there was a hedge anywhere nearby, but because I wanted to show
how Diotallevi could experience the landscape only by linking it to his
experience of the poem. I told my translators that the hedge was not important,
nor the reference to Leopardi, but it was important to have a literary reference
at any cost. In fact, William Weaver's translation reads: "We glimpsed
endless vistas. Like Darien," Diotallevi remarked . . . " This
brief allusion to the Keats sonnet is a good example of target-oriented
translation.
A source-oriented translator in a language I do not know may ask me why
I have used a certain expression, or (if he understood it from the start)
he may explain to me why, in his language, such a thing cannot be said.
Even then I try to take part (if only from outside) in a translation that
is at once source and target-oriented.
These are not easy problems. Consider Tolstoy's War And Peace.
As many know, this novel-written in Russian, of course -begins with a long
dialogue in French. I have no idea how many Russian readers in Tolstoy's
day understood French; the aristocrats surely did because this French dialogue
is meant, in fact, to depict the customs of aristocratic Russian society.
Perhaps Tolstoy took it for granted that, in his day, those who did not
know French were not even able to read Russian. Or else he wanted the non-French-speaking
reader to understand that the aristocrats of the Napoleonic period were,
in fact, so remote from Russian national life that they spoke in an incomprehensible
fashion. Today if you re-read those pages, you will realize that it is not
important to understand what those characters are saying, because they speak
of trivial things. What is important is to understand that they are saying
those things in French.
A problem that has always fascinated me is this: How would you translate
the first chapter of War And Peace into French? The reader reads
a book in French and in it some of the characters are speaking French; nothing
strange about that. If the translator adds a note to the dialogue saying
en francais dans le text , it is of scant help: the effect is still
lost. Perhaps, to achieve that effect, the aristocrats (in the French translation)
should speak English. I am glad I did not write War And Peace and
am not obliged to argue with my French translator.
As an author, I have learned a great deal from sharing the work of my
translators. I am talking about my "academic" works as well as
my novels. In the case of philosophical and linguistic works, when the translator
cannot understand (and clearly translate) a certain page, it means that
my thinking was murky. Many times, after having faced the job of translation,
I have revised the second Italian edition of my book; not only from the
point of view of its style but also from the point of view of ideas. Sometimes
you write something in your own language A, and the translator says: "If
I translate that into my language B, it will not make sense." He could
be mistaken. But if, after long discussion, you realize that the passage
would not make sense in language B, it will follow that it never made sense
in language A to begin with.
This doesn't mean that, above a text written in language A there hovers
a mysterious entity that is its Sense, which would be the same in any language,
something like an ideal text written in what Walter Benjamin called Reine
Sprache (The Pure language). Too good to be true. In that case it would
only be a matter of isolating this Pure language and the work of translation
(even of a page of Shakespeare) could be done by computer.
The job of translation is a trial and error process, very similar to
what happens in an Oriental bazaar when you are buying a carpet. The merchant
asks 100, you offer 10 and after an hour of bargaining you agree on 50.
Naturally, in order to believe that the negotiation has been a success
you must have fairly precise ideas about this basically imprecise phenomenon
called translation. In theory, different languages are impossible to hold
to one standard; it cannot be said that the English house is truly and completely
the synonym of the French maison. But in theory no form of perfect
communication exists. And yet, for better or worse, ever since the advent
of Homo sapiens, we have managed to communicate. Ninety percent (l
believe) of War And Peace's readers have read the book in translation
and yet if you set a Chinese, an Englishman, and an Italian to discussing
War And Peace, not only will all agree that Prince Andrej dies, but,
despite many interesting and differing nuances of meaning, all will be prepared
to agree on the recognition of certain moral principles expressed by Tolstoy.
I am sure the various interpretations would not exactly coincide, but neither
would the interpretations that three English-speaking readers might provide
of the same Wordsworth poem.
In the course of working with translators, you reread your original text,
you discover its possible interpretations, and it sometimes happens - as
I have said - that you want to rewrite it. I have not rewritten my two novels,
but there is one place which, after its translation, I would have gladly
rewritten. It is the dialogue in Foucault's Pendulum in which Diotallevi
says: "God created the world by speaking. He didn't send a telegram."
And Belbo replies: "Fiat lux. Stop."
But in the original Belbo said: "Fiat lux. Stop. Segue lettera"
("Fiat lux. Stop. Letter follows.") 'Letter follows' is a standard
expression used in telegrams (or at least it used to be standard, before
the fax machine came into existence). At that point in the Italian text,
Casaubon said: "Ai Tessalonicesi, immagino." (To the Thessalonians,
I suppose.) It was a sequence of witty remarks, somewhat sophomoric, and
the joke lay in the fact that Casaubon was suggesting that, after having
created the world by telegram, God would send one of Saint Paul's epistles.
But the play on words works only in Italian, in which both the posted letter
and the Saint's epistle are called lettera. In English the text had
to be changed. Belbo says only "Fiat lux. Stop." and Casaubon
comments "Epistle follows." Perhaps the joke becomes a bit more
ultraviolet and the reader has to work a little harder to understand what's
going on in the minds of the characters, but the short circuit between Old
and New Testament is more effective. Here, if I were rewriting the original
novel, I would alter that dialogue.
Sometimes the author can only trust in Divine Providence. I will never
be able to collaborate fully on a Japanese translation of my work (though
I have tried). It is hard for me to understand the thought processes of
my 'target'. For that matter I always wonder what I am really reading ,
when I look at the translation of a Japanese poem, and I presume Japanese
readers have the same experience when reading me. And yet I know that, when
I read the translation of Japanese poem, I grasp something of that thought
process that is different from mine. If I read a haiku after having
read some Zen Buddhist koans, I can perhaps understand why the simple
mention of the moon high over the lake should give me emotions analogous
to and yet different from those that an English romantic poet conveys to
me. Even in these cases a minimum of collaboration between translator and
author can work. I no longer remember into which Slavic language someone
was translating The Name of the Rose, but we were wondering what
the reader would get from the many passages in Latin. Even an American reader
who has not studied Latin still knows it was the language of the medieval
ecclesiastical world and so catches a whiff of the Middle Ages. And further,
if he reads De Pentagono Salomonis he can recognize pentagon and
Solomon. But for a Slavic reader these Latin phrases and names, transliterated
into the Cyrillic alphabet, suggest nothing.
If, at the beginning of War And Peace, the American reader finds
"Eh bien, mon prince ..." he can guess that the person
being addressed is a prince. But if the same dialogue appears at the beginning
of a Chinese translation (in an incomprehensible Latin alphabet or - worse
- expressed in Chinese ideograms) what will the reader in Peking understand?
The Slavic translator and I decided to use, instead of Latin, the ancient
ecclesiastical Slavonic of the medieval Orthodox church. In that way the
reader would feel the same sense of distance, the same religious atmosphere,
though understanding only vaguely what was being said.
Thank God I am not a poet, because the problem becomes more dramatic
in translating poetry, an art where thought is determined by words, and
if you change the language, you change the thought. And yet there are excellent
examples of translated poetry produced by a collaboration between author
and translator. Often the result is a new creation. One text very close
to poetry because of its linguistic complexity is Joyce's Finnegans Wake.
Now, the Anna Livia Plurabelle chapter - when it was still in the form of
an early draft - was translated into Italian with Joyce himself collaborating.
The translation is markedly different from the original English. It is not
a translation. It is as if Joyce had rewritten his text in Italian. And
yet one French critic has said that to understand that chapter properly
(in English) it would be advisable to first read that Italian draft.
Perhaps the Pure Language does not exist, but pitting one language against
another is a splendid adventure, and it is not necessarily true, as the
Italian saying goes, that the translator is always a traitor.
Provided that the author takes part in this admirable treason.
EDITORIAL NOTE
(1) A rose by any other name appeared in the Guardian Weekly
on January 16th, 1994 , p. 20. William Weaver has also translated both of
Eco's famous novels, The name of the rose and Foucault's Pendulum.
This entertaining essay on Translation Theory - and practice - may spoil
the innocent pleasure of those readers who used to enjoy translated works
- who is being betrayed? But it should also stimulate authors in joining
the "splendid adventure", as Teresa Chataway is doing with Bobbio's
works. Convivio is grateful to Umberto Eco and the Washington
Post for allowing the publication of this work.
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