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New Voices in Children’s Literature in Translation. Culture, Power and Transnational Approaches

New Voices in Children’s Literature in Translation. Culture, Power and Transnational Approaches

Publié le par Université de Lausanne (Source : Valérie Alfvén)

International conference in Children’s Literature and Translation Studies (CLTS)

New Voices in Children’s Literature in Translation: Culture, Power and Transnational Approaches

Date: 22-23 August 2024, Stockholm (Sweden) 

Deadline for abstract: 30 November 2023

Call for Papers

This conference is organized by a collaboration between Stockholm University, Uppsala  University (Sweden), Heriot-Watt University (UK) and the Children In Translation Network at the University of Galway (Ireland) to promote the intersection between Children’s Literature and Translation Studies. We understand this intersection as a space that includes the translation of all forms of multimodal fiction and non-fiction for children and young adults or what Borodo (2007) refers to as “Child-centered Translation Studies” in desire to broaden the field of study to different media.

The field of children’s literature has proved a fertile ground for research in translation in recent decades, but the time has come to take stock of past developments and innovations to forge new theoretical and practical paths for the future development of the discipline. Drawing from the first interdisciplinary conference organized in Belgium by KU Leuven and the University of Antwerp in 2017, our goal is to solidify what has been achieved so far and to provide a space for discussion on the future of children's literature in translation. This workspace will serve as a forum for practitioner and academic voices to work together to share new ideas and to further shape the arena for the discipline.

We invite individual and panel proposals on a broad range of topics integrating Translation Studies and Children’s Literature Studies with a focus on new approaches, creative technologies and the future of translation for children and young adults. We are especially keen on contributions in the following themes:

1.    How translation redefines texts and media for children and young adults

2.    Transnational approaches (i.e. investigating translation flows, the role of  institutions, agents, translators, publishers, critics and other mediators)

3.    The pragmatics of translating 

4.    Translingualism, Intermedial and multimodal translation 

5.    Ethics, ideology and power in translation 

6.    Reception studies

7.    Representation, diversity and inclusivity in translation

Presentations are expected to be no longer than 20 minutes. Proposals for posters will be considered. Post-graduate and early career researcher proposals are encouraged.

Please send your proposal (max. 300 words) including 5 keywords and a short biography (max. 70 words) by 30th November 2023 to https://forms.gle/YwiwHSdQmvTrKRh58

Panel proposals will be accepted. They will be submitted as individual abstracts with the name of the panel on the top of the page above the title of the proposal. Notice of acceptance will be given in February/March 2024. Link: https://cltsconference.wordpress.com/ or https://tolk.su.se/CLTS 

Keynote speakers

Vanessa Leonardi is an associate professor of English Language and Translation Studies, Sapienza University in Rome, Italy. She recently wrote the volume Ideological Manipulation of Children’s Literature Through Translation and Rewriting. Travelling Across Times and Places (2020) published at Palgrave Macmillan editions. 

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Vanessa-Leonardi 

Michal Borodo is Assistant Professor in the Department of English Linguistics at the Kazimierz Wielki University in Poland where he is also the Head of Postgraduate Studies in Translation and Interpreting. His main research interests include the translation of children’s literature, the translation of comics, non-professional/volunteer translation, translation and globalization, and translator training. His recent book publications include Translation, Globalization and Younger Audiences. The Situation in Poland (2017) published by Peter Lang and English Translations of Korczak’s Children’s Fiction: A linguistic Perspective (2020) published at Palgrave Macmillan. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Michal-Borodo 

Invited honorary speakers

Prof. Dr. Emer O’Sullivan is Professor of English Literature at the Institute of English Studies at Leuphana University Lüneburg. Her fields of interest are comparative literature, translation studies, image studies, children's literature and literature in the classroom (intercultural as­pects and children's literature in foreign language learning and teaching). She is the author, together with Dietmar Rösler, of eight genuinely bilingual children's books. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Emer-Osullivan 

Prof. Dr. Gillian Lathey is Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the University of Roehampton, and is a co-founder and judge of the Marsh Award for Children’s Literature in Translation. Publications include The Translation of Children’s Literature: A Reader (Multilingual Matters, 2006) and The Role of Translators in Children’s Literature: Invisible Storytellers (Routledge, 2010).  https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Gillian-Lathey 

Organizing committee (also in the scientific committee)

Pilar Alderete Diez (University of Galway, Ireland)

Valérie Alfvén (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Owen Harrington Fernández (Heriot-Watt university, United Kingdom)

Charlotte Lindgren (Uppsala University, Sweden) 

Sara Van Meerbergen (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Scientific Committee

Cecilia Alvstad (Østfold university college, Norway)

Marcus Axelsson (Østfold university college, Norway)

Elke Brems (KU Leuven, Belgium)

Ines Costa (University of Aveiro, Portugal)

Audrey Coussy (McGill university, Canada)

Reglindis De Ridder (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Vanessa Joosen (Antwerp University)

Yvonne Lindqvist (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Jack McMartin (KU Leuven, Belgium)

Elin Svahn (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Julia Lin Thompson (University of Sydney, Australia).

Conference partly financed by the RiksbankensJubileumsFond:  https://www.rj.se/en/

and Vitterhetsakademien: https://www.vitterhetsakademien.se/