Claire Chambers is Professor of Global Literature at the University of York, where she teaches twentieth- and twenty-first-century writing in English from South Asia, the Perso-Arab world, and their diasporas. Her books include Imagining Muslims in South Asia and the Diaspora, Britain Through Muslim Eyes, and Making Sense of Contemporary British Muslim Novels. Ipek Demir is Professor of Diaspora Studies and Director of the Centre for Ethnicity and Racism Studies (CERS) at the University of Leeds. Her publications span race, diaspora, migration, decoloniality, and interdisciplinarity. Her research has been funded by the EU, ESRC, and AHRC. She is also the author of Diaspora as Translation and Decolonisation (2022).
This book is a major contribution to the growing interest in the power relations inherent in translation practice. The distinguished contributors, working across a wide range of languages and disciplines, share exciting ideas not only about translation and colonisation, but also about the role of translation in decolonisation today. - Susan Bassnett FRSL, FIL, Professor Emerita of Comparative Literature, University of Warwick and the President, British Comparative Literature Association Translation—the act of dwelling in between, indeed of testing the limits of in-betweenness—has been the subject of a growing body of scholarship loosely named “Translation Studies.” Yet, as the chapters in this book make clear, the problematic of translation traverses a wide spectrum of disciplines from literary studies to sociology. It infuses debates on coloniality and postcolonialism and increasingly figures in projects of decolonisation. This volume is a vibrant contribution to these many attempts at grasping the elusive yet essential workings of translation and translatability. Their attention on decolonisation is especially welcome in a world marked by seemingly irreducible conflicts and genocidal wars. --Vicente L. Rafael, Professor of History and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Washington, Seattle Translation and Decolonisation frames an urgent charge to the humanities and social science disciplines engaged in translation studies: to participate in active intervention and reparation of colonial injustice. The chapters map established and emerging concepts including reparative translation and activist interpretation, contesting the hegemony of global English and the Western institutional spaces in which translation studies was founded. This volume breaks new ground by placing decolonial and postcolonial traditions in productive dialogue and establishing the Global South as the current epicenter of contemporary translation theory. -Isabel C. Gómez, author of Cannibal Translation: Literary Reciprocity in Contemporary Latin America (Northwestern University Press, 2023) A vital and vibrant collection that places translation at the very heart of decolonisation struggles around the world. Leading scholars and translators offer challenging and illuminating insights into the theory of practice of translation on a divided planet beset by the troubling legacies of colonisation. -Michael Cronin, Trinity College Dublin