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Retranslating Thucydides as a Scientific Historian: A corpus-based analysis

Henry Jones
- 13 Mar 2020 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 1, pp 59-82
TLDR
The authors explored how these shifts in attitudes towards the proper aims and methods of history writing might have shaped the interpretation and translation into English of Thucydides' History of the Peloponnesian War, a work first written in classical Greek in the fifth century BCE.
Abstract
The nineteenth century was a period of dramatic change in Europe for the idea of history. While from antiquity through to the eighteenth century, historiography had broadly been considered an artistic and rhetorical activity, this view gradually lost ground in the nineteenth century to an understanding of history as a science. This case study aims to explore how these shifts in attitudes towards the proper aims and methods of history writing might have shaped the interpretation and translation into English of Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War, a work first written in classical Greek in the fifth century BCE. The analysis is carried out by means of a corpus-based methodology which, I argue, can better enable researchers to engage with each (re)translator’s overall presentation of the source through the production and interrogation of concordances listing every instance of a given search item as it occurs within digitised versions of the target texts. This is demonstrated through an investigation of the use of the term ‘fact(s)’ which reveals a striking divergence in interpretation between the six translations, with Crawley’s (1874) History in particular appearing to lend a significantly more objective and empirical tone to Thucydides in English.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Peloponnesian War

Journal ArticleDOI

A culture of fact: England, 1550–1720

TL;DR: The system of this book of course will be much easier. No worry to forget bringing the a culture of fact of fact england 155 as mentioned in this paper, which can provide the inspiration and spirit to face this life.
Book

历史的观念 = The idea of history

TL;DR: In this paper, R. G. Collingwood considers how the modern idea of history has grown up from the time of Herodotus to the present day, and how history is not contained in books and documents, it lives only as a present interest and pursuit, in the mind of the historian when he criticizes and interprets those documents, and by so doing relives for himself the states of mind into which he inquires'.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

How Does it Feel? Point of View in Translation. The Case of Virginia Woolf into French

TL;DR: The authors The Case of Virginia Woolf into French (Approaches to Translation Studies, Volume 29), by Charlotte Bosseaux, Amsterdam and New York, Rodopi, 2007, 2...
Journal ArticleDOI

A culture of fact: England, 1550–1720

TL;DR: The system of this book of course will be much easier. No worry to forget bringing the a culture of fact of fact england 155 as mentioned in this paper, which can provide the inspiration and spirit to face this life.
Book ChapterDOI

Herodotus and Thucydides in the view of nineteenth-century German historians

TL;DR: In this view, all epochs were fundamentally the same; each was, as Ranke famously put it, "immediate to God" and each had "its own tendency and its own ideal" as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Thucydides and the Idea of History

TL;DR: In this paper, the Historian's Historian and the Art of History are discussed, as well as the uses and uselessness of history in the context of science and technology.