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A New Article by Prof. Duncan James Poupard
 
Prof. Duncan James Poupard’s new article, In defense of Ezra Pound’s “graphological” translations, has been published online by The Translator journal this April. The Translator is a reputed refereed international journal indexed in SSCI and A&HCI.
 
The abstract of the paper is as follows: The Chinese translations of Ezra Pound, particularly those which feature his method of deconstructing individual Chinese characters, have frequently been criticised by scholars of sinology, and his translations have as such been classified as something ‘other’ (as ‘poet’s versions’ or ‘re-creations’) within translation studies. This paper attempts to reclaim Ezra Pound’s ‘etymographic’ translations as translation proper, at the same time widening the scope of the near-defunct term ‘graphological translation’. It will be shown that graphological translation can be performed when visual semantics are given priority over lexical semantics, and as such graphological translation cannot be judged by the successful (or otherwise) transfer of lexical meaning. It is easiest to approach Pound’s treatment of Chinese (as a semantically charged ‘motivated’ writing system) using his previously ignored translations out of the highly visual Naxi script, a minority writing of southwest Chinese, that can be seen in his late poetry notebooks. Pound treats both character scripts as essentially ideographic and in translation highlights the graphological semantics of the source writing.
 
For more information, please visit: https://doi.org/10.1080/13556509.2023.2188697