The author as translator. Olga Martynova`s multilingualism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18778/1427-9681.11.20Keywords:
Olga Martynova, poetics of translation, multilingualism, cross-cultural relationsAbstract
Olga Martynova writes in two languages: poetry in Russian and prose in German. Writing poetry, as Martynova states, requires very quick thinking, which is only possible for her in the Russian language. In spite of this limitation, she translates her Russian verses into German – in collaboration with Elke Erb. To consider an example, in “Verse von Rom (3)”, the Russian rhymes “инеем – именем – выменем” are rendered on the one hand literally, as “Raureif – Name – Euter”, and on the other as ‘visual rhymes’: “Namen – Kolonnaden – oben”. The paper aims to show how Martynova practises a poetics of translation. She is not afraid of coming across as a “flat” poet in translation (as for example Flaubert said about Pushkin in Turgenev’s renditions: “Il est plat, votre poète”). Instead, she writes books in German and Russian, books which are linked to each other. Another language important for her works is the language of birds. The paper analyses in what sense Martynova can be viewed as an author-translator (within a broader typology of writers).References
Beilis, Viktor. Predislovie. In: Martynova, Olga. O Vvedenskom. O Chvirike i Chvirke. Issledovaniya v stikhakh. Moskva: Tsentr sovremennoi literatury, 2010.
Brežná, Irena. Die undankbare Fremde. Berlin: Galiani, 2012.
Dabić, Mascha. Reibungsverluste. Wien: Edition Atelier, 2017.
Emerson, Caryl. The Cambridge Introduction to Russian Literature. Cambridge et al.: Cambridge University Press, 2008.
Ginsburg, Mikhal Peled. Portrait Stories. New York: Fordham University Press, 2015.
Gryasnowa, Olga. Der Russe ist einer, der Birken liebt. München: Hanser, 2012.
Haines, Brigid. “Introduction. The Eastern European Turn in Contemporary German-Language Literature”. German Life and Letters, No. 68/2 (2015): 145–153.
Hausbacher, Eva. Von Tschwirik und Tschwirka. Zum transkulturellen Potenzial von Olga Martynovas Vogelstimmen. In: Lyrik transkulturell, ed. E. Binder, S. Klettenhammer, B. Mertz-Baumgartner. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2016: 289–310.
Martynova, Olga. Dichter im Porträt. Olga Martynova. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hr4HVOuULE&feature=youtu.be
Martynova, Olga. O Vvedenskom. O Chvirike i Chvirke. Issledovaniya v stikhach. Moskva: Tsentr sovremennoi literatury, 2010: 9–14.
Martynova, Olga. Sogar Papageien überleben uns. München: btb, 2012 [Graz, Wien: Droschl, 2010].
Martynova, Olga. Von Tschwirik und Tschwirka. Gedichte. Graz, Wien: Droschl, 2012 [=Martynova 2012b].
Martynova, Olga, Schwarz, Jelena. Rom liegt irgendwo in Russland. Zwei russische Dichterinnen im lyrischen Dialog über Rom. Gedichte Russisch / Deutsch, trans. E. Erb, O. Martynova. Wien, Lana: Edition per procura, 2006.
Pearson, Irene. “Raphael as Seen by Russian Writers from Zhukovsky to Turgenev”. In: The Slavonic and East European Review, No. 59/3 (1981): 346–369.
Radaelli, Giulia. Literarische Mehrsprachigkeit. Sprachwechsel bei Elias Canetti und Ingeborg Bachmann. Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 2011.
Shishkin, Mikhail. Venerin volos. Moskva: Vagrius, 2005.
Ulitskaya, Lyudmila E. Daniel Stein, perevodchik. Moskva: Eksmo, 2006.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2018 Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Rossica

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.



