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- Comparative Literature Studies
- Penn State University Press
- Article
- The Task(s) of the Translator(s): Multiplicity as Problem in Renaissance European Thought Volume 48, Number 2, 2011, pp. 139-164
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $26.00 USD.
This issue contains 13 articles in total
- Contributors
- Modernism and Theory: A Critical Debate (review)
- Dramas of Culture: Theory, History, Performance (review)
- Genres of Modernity: Contemporary Indian Novels in English (review)
- Strange Meetings: Anglo-German Literary Encounters from 1910 to 1960 (review)
- Nation and Region in Modern American and European Fiction (review)
- Romantic Europe and the Ghost of Italy (review)
- Hegel, Haiti, and Universal History (review)
- The Wandering Signifier: Rhetoric of Jewishness in the Latin American Imaginary (review)
- The Ethics of Identification: The Global Circulation of Traumatic Narrative in Silko's Ceremony and Roy's The God of Small Things
- Organic Hesitancies: Stuttering and Sexuality in Melville, Kesey, and Mishima
- Fiction as Evidence: On the Uses of Literature in Nineteenth-Century Sexological Discourse
- The Task(s) of the Translator(s): Multiplicity as Problem in Renaissance European Thought
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