Shanghai Daily

Renowned translator Xu dies in Beijing at age 100

-

CHINA’S centenaria­n translator Xu Yuanchong passed away yesterday morning, Peking University announced.

Born in 1921, Xu began his literary translatio­n career in 1938, when he enrolled in a foreign language program at the former National Southwest Associated University in Kunming, southwest China’s Yunnan Province.

Xu began teaching at Peking University in 1983 and taught there until his retirement.

Throughout his life, the revered translator pursued the beauty of language and was committed to forging literary ties between Chinese, English and French speakers.

In 2014, the Internatio­nal Federation of Translator­s granted Xu the Aurora Borealis Prize for Outstandin­g Translatio­n of Fiction Literature, the highest award in the profession. Xu was also the first Asian translator to receive the honor since the establishm­ent of the FIT in 1999.

Through his pursuit of excellence, the master had enabled English and Frenchspea­king audiences to better understand the beauty of Chinese literature and the wisdom beneath.

“I am the only translator capable of rendering Chinese poems in English and French,” read Xu’s business card. He contribute­d a mind-boggling amount of translatio­ns, including over 180 novels, anthologie­s and plays that have reached millions of readers around the world.

Xu’s work was more than just translatin­g words from one language to another. He adapted the original wording when necessary to make it readable and relatable to its target readers.

A translatio­n should be as beautiful as or even more than the original, said Xu. Regarding translatio­n as an art, he encouraged innovation and creation, in stark contrast to academics who advocate translatio­n as a science and produce a strict equivalent of the original.

Many of Xu’s translatio­ns are aesthetica­lly pleasing. Examples can be found in his extensive achievemen­ts ranging from the “Book of Poetry,” the oldest collection of Chinese poetry, to the Confucian masterpiec­e “Thus Spoke the Master.”

 ??  ?? Xu Yuanchong
Xu Yuanchong

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China