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| Tyrant Banderas: Translating a Dictator, a lecture by Peter Bush |
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| Start Date: | 10/11/2012 | Start Time: | 12:30 PM |
| End Date: | 10/11/2012 | End Time: | 1:45 PM |
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Event Description At the height of the Arab Spring a long review of Ramón Valle-Inclán’s Tirano Banderas (1926) appeared in the Barcelona daily, La Vanguardia, which pointed out that Valle’s narrative of a civil war read like a fiction written for our times. Written in reaction to the Primo de Rivera dictatorship in Spain, translated to an imaginary Latin American republic, Valle-Inclán’s story was to be an extraordinarily perceptive anticipation of the Spanish civil war as well as the literary model for subsequent novels of dictatorship written by Miguel Angel Asturias, García Márquez and Roa Bastos.
Peter Bush will discuss his experience of reading the novel and the challenges of writing a new translation – the first into English since 1929 – of Valle’s Cubist, cartoon and camp representation of dictatorship in Latin America.
PETER BUSH is an award-winning literary translator who now lives in Barcelona. He was Professor of Literary Translation at Middlesex University and then at the University of East Anglia, where he directed the British Centre for Literary Translation. Recent translations include Exiled from Almost Everywhere by Juan Goytisolo, A Thousand Morons by Quim Monzó and The Sound of a Hand Killing by Teresa Solana. |
Location Information: Baruch College - Newman Vertical Campus 55 Lexington Ave Room: Room 6-210
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Schools/Departments: Modern Languages and Comparative LiteratureWeissman School of Arts and Sciences |
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