Two Korean translations of the Xiaoxue
Free translation or literal translation?
Published online: 10 March 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/babel.61.4.08kim
https://doi.org/10.1075/babel.61.4.08kim
Broadly historical in its approach, this article explores how the Xiaoxue (Lesser or Elementary Learning), or Sohak in Korean, a primary textbook for Confucianism in China, was translated into Korean at two different times with a span of seventy years between the versions in the sixteenth century. It argues that the two different versions of translation of the same book, Beonyeok Sohak and Sohak Eonhae, reflected not only significant differences in the principles and strategies of translation: free translation or literal translation and native words or foreign words, among other things; but they also revealed significant difference in the translators’ – or, for that matter, their commissioners’ – ideologies and worldviews. The two Korean versions of the Xiaoxue was thus a contested battleground for the scholars and the politicians. In sum, it claims that the debate on the methodology of translation is not just an issue specific to Western translation theory but also non-Western translation theory.
References (13)
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Jeong, Ho-wan. 2011. “A Bibliographical Preface.” In The Annotated Beonyeok Sohak, ed. by Jeong Ho-wan, 7–12. Seoul: Committee for the Commemoration of the Great King Sejong.
Jungjong Sillok: A Korean Translation. 1989. Ed. Committee for the Development of National Culture. Seoul: Committee for the Development of National Culture.
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