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Full Description
International politics is often conducted in two languages or more, and since no two languages are exactly the same, what is possible to say in one language may be impossible to say in another. Translation is at the heart of global politics, and interlingual relations traverse time, space, culture, and state borders. Interlingual Relations builds on emergent literature on translation in International Relations to propose a unique research agenda for scholars of global politics, offering multiple directions and sets of principles for sustained study.
The contributors use various methodologies to explore these interfaces and encounters in different sites, bringing together multiple subfields, approaches, and disciplinary paradigms across IR's history. Together they offer a more truly global perspective on international affairs, going beyond the hegemony of English to demonstrate the interconnectedness between "high" politics and everyday life. They show the role of translation in global politics as one of world-making, whereby social roles, rules, and responsibilities establish the semblance of order despite not sounding or meaning the same to all actors. In establishing Interlingual Relations as a foundational part of IR, the book offers another key to studying global interactions and the high political stakes in the theories, methods, and ethics of translation.
Contents
Contents
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Preface
Iver B. Neumann
Introduction: Global Politics in a Polyglot World
Mauro J. Caraccioli and Einar Wigen
Section I: Translation (and) Theory
Chapter 1: The Interlingual Configurations of International Politics
Einar Wigen
Chapter 2: Translation and Explanation
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson
Chapter 3: The Hidden Politics of Translation: On Interpreters' and Translators' Agency in International Relations
Anatoly Reshetnikov
Section II: Translation (and) History
Chapter 4: Interlingual Relations in a Persianate International Order
Alireza Shams-Lahijani
Chapter 5: Translation Power: Rethinking the Evolution of the International System with Insights from Sino-Tibetan Relations Surrounding the 1914 Simla Convention
Amanda J. Cheney
Chapter 6: Transversing Civilizational Hierarchies? The Introduction of Latin Alphabet in Turkey
Bahar Rumelili and Senem Aydin Düzgit
Chapter 7: Historias for the Empire: Indigenous Translators and the Re-Productions of Linguistic Conquest
Mauro J. Caraccioli
Chapter 8: Kidnap Yourself a Translator: The Social Embedding of Translation in First Encounters
Julia Costa Lopez
Section III: Translation (and) Order
Chapter 9: Morgenthau in Translation: On Languages, Academic Environments and the Making of International Relations in the United States and Germany
Filipe dos Reis and Oliver Kessler
Chapter 10: Constructing Incommensurables: Hebrew's Machiavellian Moment
Daniel J. Levine
Chapter 11: Interlingual Politics of Linguistic Choice
Jelena Subotic
Chapter 12: The most important people here are not us - it's those translators': The Hidden Labour of Afghan and Iraqi Local Interpreters
Sara de Jong
Chapter 13: Interlingual Relations and the Limits of Hegemony: U.S. Public Diplomacy in the Arab World (2002-03)
Jane Darby Menton
Conclusion
Einar Wigen and Mauro J. Caraccioli