• Cambridge Scholars Publishing

    "This is a great introduction to living with Type 1 diabetes both for healthcare professionals and people living with the condition. It covers all aspects of day-to-day management, including how to get the best out of the latest technology available. [A Guide to Type 1 Diabetes Management, Technology, and Everything Else You Need to Know is an] invaluable book that is highly recommended."

    - Chris Askew OBE, Chief Executive of Diabetes UK

A Journey through Knowledge: Festschrift in Honour of Hortensia Pârlog

A Journey through Knowledge: Festschrift in Honour of Hortensia Pârlog is a collection of articles dedicated to one of the best known Romanian university teachers and linguists, both in her home country and well beyond its borders.

The heterogenous material (both in terms of the range of issues tackled and in terms of the approaches adopted by the authors) in the three sections of the volume finds itself a common denominator in the idea of “traveling” and “journey”, around which they are organized. In the first section, Traveling across Identities and Emotions, Pia Brînzeu touches upon some identity issues, in dealing with a form of subversion in Coz Shakespeare, by Marin Sorescu; Jaques Ramel argues against the opinion that Shakespeare’s A Midsummer’s Night Dream was written to be performed as an epithalamium during wedding ceremonies; Adolphe Haberer brings to the fore the non-hero features of the main character in Virginia Woolf’s Jacob’s Room; Liliane Louvel writes about the mirror in literary texts, insisting on its potential to send back graphic reflections onto these texts; and Maurizio Gotti discusses definitional criteria, i.e., the principles according to which a term should be defined.

In section two, Traveling in Time and Space, Slávka Tomaščíková speaks about the status, functions and characteristics of media narrative discourse during the last decade; Aleksandra Kedzierska follows and characterizes various types of journeys in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, highlighting their significance for celebration; Alberto Lázaro traces the changes that medieval stories, abundant in sexual references and instances of adultery, have suffered to meet the publication requirements during Franco’s regime in Spain; Stephen Tapscott focuses on the relationship between contemporary American poets’ lyric and previously written works (especially Modernist); while Fernando Galván examines a number of literary texts centering on cities that have been dreamed of or imagined by various writers, to illustrate decay, deconstruction and regeneration.

The third section, Traveling between Languages and Cultures, opens with Smiljana Komar’s account of the translation of some frequent English discourse markers into Slovene and continues with Loredana Pungă’s illustration of the issue of loss and gain in translation. Irma Taavitsainen and Päivi Pahta highlight the functions of the English politeness marker please, pliis in Finnish, and investigate whether and how its meanings have changed when it has been adopted into the host language. Lachlan Mackenzie’s contribution rounds off the volume with some suggestions on how recent changes in the English language should be taken into consideration when teachers of English evaluate the linguistic performance of their students.


Luminiţa Frenţiu is a Reader in the English Department at the University of the West, Timişoara, Romania. She specializes in translation studies, pragmatics, discourse analysis and English morphology. Luminiţa Frenţiu is the author of Strategii de comunicare în interacţiunea verbală (Timişoara: Editura Mirton, 2000) and Instances of Discourse Analysis (Timişoara: Editura Mirton, 2004), and has brought her contribution to: Dicţionar englez-român de colocaţii verbale (edited by Hortensia Pârlog and Maria Teleagă; Iaşi: Editura Polirom, 2000), The Art and Craft of Translation (edited by Loredana Frăţilă; Timişoara: Editura Universităţii de Vest, 2009) and to Instant English: English for the Baccalaureate and Entrance Examinations (Iaşi: Editura Polirom, 2004), which she also edited, together with Hortensia Pârlog and Pia Brînzeu. She has published articles in her fields of expertise, including: “Consonant Strategies in Spoken Discourse” (Semiotics around the World: Synthesis in Diversity, Berlin, 1998), “Pragmatic Instances of Linguistic Humor” (From Margin to Center, Iaşi, 2000), “Referential Processes in Translating Legal and Administrative Texts” (The Legacy of History, Vol. 2, Krakow, 2004), “Translating Idioms” (Cultural Matrix Reloaded, Bucureşti, 2005), “When Talk is War: A Metaphor Approach to Election Political Debates” (co-author, Codruţa Goşa; Romanian Journal of English Studies, Timişoara, 2006).

Loredana Pungă is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of the West, Timişoara, Romania. Her domains of expertise are English lexicology, English phonetics and phonology, discourse analysis, sociolinguistics, ESP and translation studies. She is the author of The English Verb Made Easy, (Timişoara: Art Press, 2003), On Language and Ecology (Timişoara: Editura Universităţii de Vest, 2006), English for Students of Kinetotherapy (co-author, Carmen Nedelea; Timişoara: Art Press, 2007), English for Sports and Games (co-author, Carmen Nedelea; Timişoara: Editura Universităţii de Vest, 2010), and Words about Words: An Introduction to English Lexicology (Timişoara: Editura Universităţii de Vest, 2011). Loredana Frăţilă is editor of The Art and Craft of Translation (Timişoara: Editura Universităţii de Vest, 2009), to which she has also contributed a chapter, and co-editor of Challenges in Translation (Timişoara: Editura Universităţii de Vest, 2010) and Language in Use: The Case of Youth Entertainment Magazines (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2010). She is also co-editor of Translationes, a yearly journal in translation studies, published by the University of the West Press. She has published articles in her area of research both in Romanian and abroad.

There are currently no reviews for this title. Please do revisit this page again to see if some have been added.

Buy This Book

ISBN: 1-4438-3969-8

ISBN13: 978-1-4438-3969-3

Release Date: 25th July 2012

Pages: 260

Price: £39.99

-
+