Publisher's Synopsis
This edited book examines three main understandings of the concept of modernity in relation to translation: "modernity as translation" (transformational process where modernity itself is conceptualized through translation), "translation of modernity" (object of transformation; that is, modernity as the object being translated across different contexts), and "modernity in translation" (contrastive modernities existing within ongoing translation processes). With these three axes of reflection in mind, the authors address two main sets of questions regarding modernity.
On one hand, despite the advent of post-modernity, they ask why modernity is still such a prolific concept epitomizing novelty and originality? Why is modernity so attractive in postcolonial and non-western locales, considered synonymous with progress, knowledge advancement and wealth? What are the modern concepts and ideas that have travelled and were exported from the west to different parts of the world and vice versa?
On the other hand, they ask in what capacity is translation an effective concept to represent and problematize the notion of modernity? How does the concept of translation encompass the course of a moving and widely diffused idea such as modernity? What may be the effects of the application of an analytical prism such as translation upon modernity throughout the world and throughout modern history?
This book is primarily focused on translation studies, but it also relates directly to disciplines including intellectual history, political and social philosophy, religious studies, (inter)cultural studies, postcolonial studies, literature, communication, and artificial intelligence, and it will also be of interest to readers in these fields.