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  1. On Polish Translation of Sea and Spar Between

    Stephanie Strickland's and Nick Montfort's See and Spar Between is in many respects a translational challenge that in some languages might seem an impossible task. Polish, our target language, imposes some serious constraints: one- syllable words become disyllabic or multisyllabic; kennings have different morphological, lexical and grammatical arrangement, and most of the generative rhetoric of the original (like anaphors) must take into consideration the grammatical gender of Polish words. As a result, the javascript code, instructions that accompany the javascript file, and arrays of words that this poetry generator draws from, need to be expanded and rewritten. Moreover, in several crucial points of this rule-driven work, natural language forces us to modify the code. In translating Sea and Spar Between, the process of negotiation between the source language and the target language involves more factors than in the case of traditional translation. Strickland and Montfort read Dickinson and Melville and parse their readings into a computer program (in itself a translation, or port, from Python to javascript) which combines them in almost countless ways.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 04.11.2013 - 13:36

  2. La littérarité du code informatique TRANS.MISSION [A. DIALOGUE]

    Pour le numéro d’automne 2013 de la revue de littérature hypermédiatique en ligne bleuOrange, j’ai eu l’occasion de traduire l’œuvre TRANS.MISSION [A. Dialogue] de J. R. Carpenter. Créé en 2011, TRANS.MISSION [A. Dialogue] est un récit généré par un programme informatique, un fichier JavaScript écrit en HTML 5.

    J. R. Carpenter - 05.05.2014 - 11:05