Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLydia McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
1
Two Scientific Revolutions II. The Birth of Islamic Sciences The Translation Movement
2
The New World Pax Islamica
3
The Translation Movement Translations in the Administration Translations in Sciences and Arts The New Culture and the New Elite
4
Translation and Writing Chinese Paper The Movement to Writing a. Umar II b. Administrative Records c. Jabirian Corpus The Acquisition of Books and the “Birth” of the Library
5
Strategies of Translation The Translator and the Thinker “Here the translator considers a whole sentence, ascertains its full meaning and then express it in Arabic with a sentence identical in meaning, without concern for the correspondence of individual words.” “I had an additional reason for omitting it. After I had read it, I found no more in it than what Galen had already said elsewhere. Hence, I thought that I should not occupy myself with it any further, but rather proceed to more useful matters”
6
Greek and Persian Knowledge Christianity and Paganism The Nestorian Factor The Hellenistic Persian Culture The Umayyad Factor
7
Gundeshapur Nestorian Schism and the Church of the East Nestorians, Persians and Greek Nestorians in Islam Role in Translation
8
Results of the Translation Movement The Birth of the Translator The Arabic speaking elites Arabic as a language of education
9
Methodology How to Read a Primary Source? The Author Author-Audience Relation Audience Expectations Interpreting Silence Language Views and Conceptions
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.