The Voltaire Foundation has
just published L Andries, F Ogée, J Dunkley, and D
Sanfry (eds), Intellectual journeys: the translation of ideas in Enlightenment England, France and Ireland (2013).
The collection also includes my long-delayed '“If my labour
hath been of service”: translating Thomas Nugent (c1700?-1772)', a short piece
on an eighteenth-century enigma:
Translators were among the most important and influential cultural
intermediaries in Europe, negotiating between cultural and ideological systems.
Thomas Nugent was one of the most distinguished and prolific translators of
European Enlightenment thought for an Anglophone audience. This is especially
true of French texts, but he also translated from German, Spanish, and Tuscan.
He is best remembered for the first English translation (1752) of
Montesquieu‘s De L’Esprit de Lois (1748), but he also translated
the well-known ‘Port Royal’ grammars and the works of Burlamaqui,
Cellini, Condillac, de Isla, the Abbé Dubos, Grosley, Hénault, Macquer,
Rousseau, Totze, Velly, and Voltaire. Nugent also wrote original works,
including popular pocket language dictionaries and works of travel literature.
The most famous of the latter was the Grand tour, containing an exact
description of most of the cities, towns, and remarkable places of Europe (1749).
Little is known, however, of the details of Nugent‘s life. He was likely a
native of Ireland: he may have been catholic; he may have studied on the
continent or trained in the law; he seems to be linked to English antiquarian
and may have worked on a history of Ireland; and he may be linked to Dr
Christopher Nugent, Edmund Burke‘s father-in-law. This study investigates
Nugent‘s role in knowledge-transfer and intercultural exchange from the centre
to the periphery of Europe.
No comments:
Post a Comment