TRANSLATOR AS POLEMICIST: THE CLASH OF PARADIGMS IN THE FIRST POLISH EDITION OF SAID’S ORIENTALISM Cover Image

TŁUMACZ-POLEMISTA. ZDERZENIE PARADYGMATÓW W PIERWSZYM POLSKIM WYDANIU ORIENTALIZMU EDWARDA SAIDA
TRANSLATOR AS POLEMICIST: THE CLASH OF PARADIGMS IN THE FIRST POLISH EDITION OF SAID’S ORIENTALISM

Author(s): Weronika Szwebs
Subject(s): Structuralism and Post-Structuralism, Translation Studies, Theory of Literature
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: travelling theory; Edward Said; orientalism; postcolonialism; translation of theory;

Summary/Abstract: The article analyzes the paratextual activity of Witold Kalinowski, the author of the first Polish translation of Edward Said’s Orientalism (1991), paying special attention to his polemical remarks and their relation to the vision of scientific, theoretical discourse. The translator does not strive for invisibility. On the contrary, he uses footnotes and brackets inserted in the main text to comment on different aspects of Said’s work. He signals problems ensuing from the differences between languages and cultures, explains the nature of linguistic difficulties and justifies his own solutions. He also takes on the role of editor and commentator, explaining Said’s allusions, supplementing the discussion with additional information, anticipating readers’ doubts about certain facts that might sound suspicious, and even inserting bracketed additions and clarifications which suggest that the original is unclear or imprecise. Finally, Kalinowski overtly expresses his polemical attitude: he provides certain parts of Said’s discussion with sic! annotation (thus suggesting that the author is wrong) and adds footnotes where he argues with what he sees as the author’s dubious and far-fetched interpretations. The Translator’s Note gives certain insight into the nature of the disagreement between the author and the translator. Explaining why Orientalism is a difficult book to translate, Kalinowski enumerates its troubling features: the combination of different types of discourse and the large number of polemical accents, due to which the book is not fully scientific. The moment of the book’s publication might suggest that such a qualification could have been a result of the then scarce presence of poststructuralist thought and cultural studies in the Polish humanities. However, the analysis of Witold Kalinowski’s articles as well as his doctoral thesis from the 1980s shows both his awareness of the theoretical currents that influenced Orientalism and his critical attitude towards Marxist thought. It is the aversion to the Marxist-inspired interpretations – both Kalinowski’s personal methodological conviction and a widespread attitude in the early post-communist Poland – that seems to be the reason of the clash in the first Polish translation of Said’s work.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 41
  • Page Range: 116-142
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: Polish