The Bamboos of Blekinge: The Writing of Cultures in Swedish Proletarian Fiction
Författare
Summary, in English
The national identity of the source culture often constitutes an important hermeneutic frame from which a translated text is understood. At the same time, literary texts themselves sometimes have a tendency to resist cultural narratives and stereotypical ideas of a certain nation. This article explores how such a resistance is made in the English translations of four Swedish novels from the 1930s. These novels are all central texts in the history of Swedish literature, as they form the very basis of a literary current that had a huge impact on the development of the Swedish welfare state—proletarian fiction. In the translations of Harry Martinson’s, Moa Martinson’s, Eyvind Johnson’s, and Ivar Lo-Johansson’s breakthrough novels, the Anglophone target reader is faced with different kinds of disruptions of the Swedish national identity. Some of these disturb the conception of Sweden as a unified cultural space; others resist the idea of Sweden as a distinct cultural space. There is, however, no general rule to these disruptions: All four novels have their own, specific way of creating narrative resistance.
Avdelning/ar
Publiceringsår
2015
Språk
Engelska
Sidor
495-504
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Journal of Literature and Art Studies
Volym
5
Issue
7
Länkar
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
David Publishing Company
Ämne
- Languages and Literature
Nyckelord
- Harry Martinson
- Moa Martinson
- Eyvind Johnson
- Ivar Lo-Johansson
- Swedish literature
- proletarian literature
- translation
- national identity
- cultural mobility
- hybridity
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 2159-5836