Cromwell in the Shtetl: Translations of Non-Jewish Literature in Early Hebrew Periodicals for Children Cover Image

Cromwell in the Shtetl: Translations of Non-Jewish Literature in Early Hebrew Periodicals for Children
Cromwell in the Shtetl: Translations of Non-Jewish Literature in Early Hebrew Periodicals for Children

Author(s): Agnieszka Jagodzińska
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, History of Judaism, Translation Studies
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: translation; children’s literature; children’s press; Hebrew revival; Mark Twain; Agnes Giberne; Edmondo de Amicis

Summary/Abstract: This article presents preliminary research on literature translated into Hebrew and published in the early Hebrew press for children. The periodicals under study are Olam Katon (Jerusalem, 1893), Gan Sha’ashu’im (Lyck, 1899–1900) and Olam Katan (Vienna/Cracow, 1901–1904). The article discusses not only what was translated in these periodicals, but also how and why certain pieces were translated. As the majority of the translated children’s literature was written by non-Jewish authors, the author is especially interested in the translators’ strategies of dealing with the sometimes obviously Christian content and how they negotiated the extent of “otherness” to which they exposed Jewish children. In addition to identifying some general tendencies, the author offers a close reading of three translations of stories by Mark Twain, Agnes Giberne and Edmondo de Amicis which serve as illustrations of the discussed problems.

  • Issue Year: 26/2023
  • Issue No: 51
  • Page Range: 69-94
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English