Translating the Memory of the Holocaust: Thomas Geve’s Memoir

  • Laura Miñano Mañero Universidad de Valencia

Resum

This paper explores the most significant challenges of translating the memory of the Holocaust, focusing on the difficulties of transferring a survivor’s testimonial account to a different linguistic and cultural system. Because the concentration camp experience is inherently multicultural, and survivors have chosen to pen their ordeal in several languages, translation epitomizes a discipline that intertwines directly with the construction of universal collective memory. Consequently, translating Holocaust memoirs poses challenging questions on hermeneutics and deontology. Throughout the following pages, I will critically analyze my own Spanish rendition of Thomas Geve’s memoir, Guns and Barbed Wire: A Child Survives the Holocaust (1987), so as to delve into the ethical commitments borne by a translator, and into the formal and stylistic complexities inherent to the translation of concentrationary literature.

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Publicades
2020-12-01
Com citar
Miñano Mañero L. (2020). Translating the Memory of the Holocaust: Thomas Geve’s Memoir. Estudios de Traducción, 10, 247-263. https://doi.org/10.5209/estr.68877