100 Refutations | Essay | Poetry
April, 2018Welcome to the third week of 100 Refutations. For one hundred days, we’re publishing a daily poem from one of the countries recently denigrated by the president of the United States. Lina M. Ferreira C.-V., who conceived and compiled the series and translated many of its poems, has been working tirelessly on this enormous project, with the help of several collaborators, since the president’s comments in January. We’re accompanying the daily poems with a weekly essay by Lina, and the third one is featured here.
– InTranslation editors
100 Refutations | Essay | Poetry
April, 2018Welcome to the second week of 100 Refutations. For one hundred days, we're publishing a daily poem from one of the countries recently denigrated by the president of the United States. Lina M. Ferreira C.-V., who conceived and compiled the series and translated many of its poems, has been working tirelessly on this enormous project, with the help of several collaborators, since the president’s comments in January. We're accompanying the daily poems with a weekly essay by Lina, and the second one is featured here.
– InTranslation editors
100 Refutations | Essay | Poetry
April, 2018InTranslation is proud to present 100 Refutations, the brainchild of author and translator Lina M. Ferreira C.-V. Over the next hundred days, we'll be publishing a daily poem from one of the countries recently denigrated by the president of the United States. Lina M. Ferreira C.-V. has been working tirelessly on this enormous project, with the help of several collaborators, since the president's comments in January. Her essay describing how she was spurred to action is featured here, with poems to follow in separate posts.
- InTranslation editors
Brazil | Brazilian Portuguese | Poetry (excerpts)
March, 2018Losango Caqui (1926) is one of Mário de Andrade’s poetry collections published within the period of Brazilian Modernism. This slender volume is situated in an important phase of rupture, written and published in between his two most influential poetry books—Paulicéia Desvairada (
Paulicéia Desvairada, published in English as Hallucinated City (trans. Jack E. Tomlins, 1968), is often critically placed within the Anthropophagy theory, inspired by the native indigenous Brazilians, who were known to have practiced cannibalism on their war captives as a means of absorbing the strength of their enemies. Subverting the idea of the indigenous as being colonized, modernist narrative portrays the indigenous as the powerful ones, therefore able to devour and synthesize diverging sources, digesting what’s European not out of subjugation but in order to create something better.
Losango Caqui ("Khaki Diamond") is, in many ways, a continuation of some of the same themes and avant-garde formal ideas from Hallucinated City. Andrade’s use of free meter introduced revolutionary European ideas into Brazilian poetry, which was previously strictly formal. At the same time, his focus was slowly shifting to a more nationalistic agenda. In this book, one can foretell the author’s subsequent turn to primitivism, as his exploration of national identity would consolidate itself in his following poetry volume, Clã do Jabuti(1927).
My intent while translating these poems was to further explore the ambiguity of Andrade’s poetic discourse, as well as the harlequin’s conflicting views on urbanization, multiculturalism, immigration, and colonialism, amongst other things.
- Ana Paula
Brazil | Brazilian Portuguese | Short Fiction
September, 2017When I first met Marcílio França Castro at a coffee shop during Brazil’s 2016 winter, he showed up toting a bag full of presents for me. When he dumped the bag onto the table, out came books, like he was some sort of mix between Jorge Luis Borges and Santa Claus. What most impressed me was his eagerness to promote Brazilian literature in general; his own books were joined by several from his peers. And perhaps Borges is a good comparison for Marcílio; indeed, his writing calls to mind Borges, Calvino, and Cortázar. Yet he does not simply imagine other worlds; he brilliantly perceives unsuspected oddities in places of absolutely no interest. In his short stories, which range from traditional length to flash fiction, and with a prose that is at once economical and yet never lacking in precision, Marcílio França Castro transforms his culture’s most unsuspecting spaces into fantastic reading. The author and I have worked together in producing translations for many of his stories, overcoming differences in idioms, metaphors, sentence structures, and other obstacles found in the passage from Portuguese to English. Most importantly, this project kept me sane during the subsequent North Dakotan winter of 2017.
- Heath Wing
The Brooklyn Rail welcomes you to our web-exclusive section InTranslation, where we feature unpublished translations of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and dramatic writing. Published since April 2007, InTranslation is a venue for outstanding work in translation and a resource for translators, authors, editors, and publishers seeking to collaborate.
We seek exceptional unpublished English translations from all languages.
Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry: Manuscripts of no longer than 20 pages (double-spaced).
Plays: Manuscripts of no longer than 30 pages (in left-justified format).