CLJan 5, 2015

Chasing the Ghosts of Ibsen: A computational stylistic analysis of drama in translation

arXiv:1501.00841v14 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the issue of translation style analysis for literary scholars and computational linguists, but it is incremental as it builds on prior methods applied to new data.

This study tackled the problem of analyzing how characterization is preserved in translations of Henrik Ibsen's plays from Norwegian to German and English, finding that distinctiveness of character contributions can be assessed computationally.

Research into the stylistic properties of translations is an issue which has received some attention in computational stylistics. Previous work by Rybicki (2006) on the distinguishing of character idiolects in the work of Polish author Henryk Sienkiewicz and two corresponding English translations using Burrow's Delta method concluded that idiolectal differences could be observed in the source texts and this variation was preserved to a large degree in both translations. This study also found that the two translations were also highly distinguishable from one another. Burrows (2002) examined English translations of Juvenal also using the Delta method, results of this work suggest that some translators are more adept at concealing their own style when translating the works of another author whereas other authors tend to imprint their own style to a greater extent on the work they translate. Our work examines the writing of a single author, Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen, and these writings translated into both German and English from Norwegian, in an attempt to investigate the preservation of characterization, defined here as the distinctiveness of textual contributions of characters.

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