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"In a way the core genre of modernist literature has always been translation, yet somehow this book is bristling with new discoveries. It bobs and weaves around the predictable points of reference and gives us a compelling new matrix of modernist translators: the D.H. Lawrence who drilled through German to get to Egyptian lyric laborers, the Katherine Mansfield who remakes rather than raids the cabinet of Dr. Chekhov, the Jean Rhys who learned the language of the streets not just by living it but by translating it. These are not mere elaborations stitched to the edge of the old canon, but bold bright diagonals cutting through it.
The experimental verve of the modernist translators (mainly women) is not just the subject of this book, it is the book's delightful m.o. Indeed, it is the most fitting live-action testimony to her subject, that Wittman herself writes with a learned zest, a witty brio that harmonizes with the unforgettable stylists we encounter in this dashing book. It takes an adroit and practiced scholar to recover not just the under-studied and outcast, but to uncover the systematic patterns behind individual cases of neglect and misdirection. Wittman can do that; she knows where the co-creators of modernist art have been buried; she has found for us a rich trove of beautiful infidels, wanton rovers across language and genre. Her argument 'against fidelity' is a compelling and complete case for a new method and theory of translation studies." - Jed Esty, University of Pennsylvania, and author of The Future of Decline