Translating Europe The case of Ahmed Midhat as an Ottoman agent of translation

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Date

2009

Authors

Demircioglu, Cemal

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John Benjamins B V Publ

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Abstract

This paper examines the concept of agency by focusing retrospectively on the diverse translation practice of Ahmed Midhat (1844-1913), who was an important Ottoman novelist, translator, publisher, journalist and the owner of the newspaper Tercuman-i Hakikat [Interpreter of Truth]. Ahmed Midhat's writings provide an exemplary framework for rethinking agency in terms of multiple translation-related practices in a period of Ottoman contact with European culture in the late 19th century. Through the examination of his translation activity and discourse on translation, this paper will emphasize that Ahmed Midhat was a good example of provocative agency, (i) which generated significant dynamism in Ottoman writing, publishing and journalism, (ii) and which functioned as a "mediator" in conveying Western culture to Ottoman society by performing different forms of translation practices. He was also the major provocative figure in the so-called "classics debate" of 1897 which was on translating neo-European classical works into Ottoman Turkish. Thus, in his dialogue with Europe, Ahmed Midhat appears as an agent of translation in the private sphere who made a great contribution to the shaping and modernization of Ottoman culture and literature in the late 19th century.

Description

Demircioglu, Cemal/0000-0003-3819-6232

Keywords

Ottoman translation, Ahmed Midhat, Tercuman-i Hakikat (Interpreter of Truth), Classics debate, Tanzimat

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Citation

15

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Scopus Q

Q3

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Volume

81

Issue

Start Page

131

End Page

159