Entry tags:
Nineteen Ways of Looking at Wang Wei, Week 1 of 2
This week and next, we're looking at Eliot Weinberger's "Nineteen Ways of Looking at Wang Wei". This short book discusses many ways to translate a single, brief Tang dynasty poem and the choices involved therein. We'll look at the first nine poems (or versions thereof) this week, and the remainder the following.
I'll reproduce the translations under discussion here, but c/ping from the pdf is not very reliable and frequently introduces errors. I'm including the text here primarily as a reference point for our discussions: I advise you to look at the book file itself for your reading.
I'll reproduce the translations under discussion here, but c/ping from the pdf is not very reliable and frequently introduces errors. I'm including the text here primarily as a reference point for our discussions: I advise you to look at the book file itself for your reading.
1. Text
In classical Chinese, each'character (ideogram) represents a word of a single syllable. Few of the characters are, as is commonly thought, entirely representational. But some of the basic vocabulary is indeed pictographic, and with those few hundred characters one can play the game of pretending to read Chinese.
Reading the poem Jeft to right, top tooottom, the second character in line 1 is apparently a mountain; the. last character in the same line a person-both are stylizations that evolved from more literal representations. Character 4 in line 1,was a favorite of Ezra Pound's: w:hat he interpreted as an eye on legs; that is, the eye in motion,' to see. Character 5 in line 3 is two trees, forest. SpatiaJ relationships are concretely portrayed in: character 3 of line 3, to enter, and. character 5 of line 4, aboDe or on (top of). '
More typical of Chinese is character 2 of li11e 4, to $hine, which contains an Qf the sun in the upper .left and of fire at the bottom, as well as a purely phonetic element-key, to the word's pronunciation-in the upper right. Most of the other characters have no pictorial content useful for decipherment.
Re: 1. Text
Fuck Ezra Pound