translation from 1920s (Vertov)
Richter, Laurence Raymond
richterl at INDIANA.EDU
Wed Jun 11 21:32:11 UTC 2008
I like "Get a Move On, Soviet!"
Laurence R. Richter
431 W. Jed Street
Bloomington, IN 47403-3569
Hm 812-334-2523 Cl 812-219-5710
________________________________________
From: SEELANGS: Slavic & East European Languages and Literatures list [SEELANGS at BAMA.UA.EDU] On Behalf Of Prof Steven P Hill [s-hill4 at UIUC.EDU]
Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2008 3:48 PM
To: SEELANGS at BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: [SEELANGS] translation from 1920s (Vertov)
Dear colleagues with a knack for Russ.-Engl. translation:
Dziga Vertov, the arty ("formalist") director of Soviet documentary films
(including "Man with the Movie Camera"), made one film in 1926-'27
entitled "Shagai, Soviet!"
Literal and quasi-literal translations somehow sound a bit awkward
in English. "Stride, Soviet"? "Pace, Soviet"? "Step, Soviet"? "March,
Soviet"? Etc.
Finally the following possibility occurs to me:
"STEP IT UP, SOVIET!"
Does that work any better in English than the more literal renditions?
Gratefully,
Steven P Hill,
University of Illinois.
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