What
The project explores the overlap between philology and translation studies: two fields that have much in common but, at present, very little interdisciplinary dialogue. I take philology to be the study of textual crises, meaning that the discipline is dedicated to undoing whatever problems prevent us from reading a given text. In the case of ancient poetry, that often means a whole range of problems, from missing sections to divergent manuscripts. In this project, I explore how the crises that define philology make their way into translation, studying the strategies that translators use to depict - or more commonly, obscure - the problems of the sources. All those strategies rest on often unstated theoretical assumptions and can have wide-ranging implications for the study of literature.
Why
The efforts of philologists and translators often goes unappreciated, partly because their work tends to make itself invisible: to casual readers, a translation often seems to be a single stable text, scrubbed clean of all traces of the processes that produced it. In this project, I will develop new strategies for giving non-specialist readers more access to the editorial choices that go on behind the scenes, so that they too can follow how ancient texts move from damaged manuscripts to readable renditions. My aim is to produce innovative, theoretical, interdisciplinary, and workable approaches to the translation of ancient literature, which does not suppress the complexity of the texts but instead uses their crises as an occasion to reflect on how literary aesthetics and meaning are made.
How
The project will consist of two parts: a theoretical study of existing approaches to the translation of ancient literature, drawing on samples from a wide variety of languages and cultures; and an experimental, research-based translation of the Babylonian epic "Enuma Elish", in which I will develop, test, and reflect on a range of new strategies for rendering philological issues that are commonly obscured by the process of translation. I am particularly interested in finding new ways for philology and translation to relay the multiplicity of meaning, the textual variation, and the poetic richness that is found in ancient texts, rather than reducing them to a single, seemingly fixed set of choices.
SSR
The project will provide a set of practical, theoretically informed tools that translators of ancient texts can use when faced with difficult challenges in their sources, such as lacunae, cruxes, and variations between manuscripts. It is my hope that these tools can lead to more informative translations, which give non-specialist readers a better sense of ancient literature as it actually is, in all its variety and richness. The project is especially focused on ancient literature from outside the Western world, taking as its case study a major work of Babylonian poetry: it will thereby help to broaden both the popular and the academic sense of literary history, so that, instead of flowing only through ancient Greece and Rome, it can englobe a much wider group of cultures and languages.