02831nam 2200409 450 991068251830332120230513101229.0(CKB)5580000000527182(NjHacI)995580000000527182(EXLCZ)99558000000052718220230513d2019 uy 1engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEva a novel /Carry van Bruggen; translated and with a commentary by Jane FenoulhetLondon :UCL Press,2019.1 online resource (vii, 183 pages) illustrationsLiterature and translation1-78735-333-8 Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Commentary -- The Novel -- 1 The New Century -- 2 Homewards -- 3 Voices -- 4 Encounter -- 5 May Day -- 6 The Night -- 7 David -- 8 By the Sea.Eva (1927), a novel by Dutch writer Carry van Bruggen, is an experiment in depicting a woman's life from girlhood to marriage, and beyond, to sexual freedom and independence. At the same time, the narrative expresses Eva's dawning sense of self and expanding subjectivity through a stream of consciousness told by a shifting narrator. Burdened all of her life by feelings of shame, at the end of the novel Eva overcomes this legacy of her upbringing and declares that it is 'bodily desire that makes love acceptable'. Carry van Bruggen's rich and varied language conveys Eva's experience of the world. Powerful memories of an orthodox Jewish childhood pervade the novel with its fluid sense of time. As Eva puts it, 'I let these years slip through my fingers like a stream of dry, glinting sand.' Jane Fenoulhet makes this important, modernist novel accessible to English readers for the first time. While it can be described as a becoming-woman of both Eva and her creator, so can the translation be seen as the translator's own becoming, as Fenoulhet explains in the accompanying commentary, where she also describes the challenges of translating van Bruggen's dynamic, intense narrative. For Fenoulhet, translation is more a matter of personal engagement with the novel than a matter of word choice and style. In this way, the emotional and intellectual life of the main character is re-enacted through translation.Literature and translation.Young women20th centuryFictionYoung womenEnglandFictionYoung womenYoung women823.7van Bruggen Carry1357283Fenoulhet JaneNjHacINjHaclBOOK9910682518303321Eva3362990UNINA