21st Century Literature discussion
2016 Book Discussions
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The End of Days - Translation Issues (April 2016)
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And re the title: 'Aller Tage Abend' literally means 'the evenings of every day' but it is (almost) never used in the literal sense. It's an idiom meaning: all is lost.

That is interesting - sometimes the translator can affect the nuances subconsciously, and colloquial idiom is notoriously difficult to translate.

Interesting. For me, this book was rather "formal." I certainly did not feel as if the author was talking to me. It felt much more distanced than that. Although, on reflection, the part where she rewrites her life history and the intermission where the various communists officials react to it, seemed a different style from the other parts and more informal.
My perspective is limited - the English are notoriously poor linguists and although I learned some French and German at school, my German would not be good enough to read a book like this, and I have no reason to question the quality of Susan Bernofsky's work, which is very readable. However, I can see that the English title conveys different nuances than the German original (Aller Tage Abend). In particular, the word End seems much more final than Abend (literally evening).
I would be very interested to hear from anyone who has read this in German and would be able to comment on the translation, or any more general thoughts on the limitations or benefits of reading in translation.