Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Constance Clara Garnett (née Black; 19 December 1861 – 17 December 1946) was an English translator of nineteenth-century Russian literature. She was the first English translator to render numerous volumes of Anton Chekhov's work into English and the first to translate almost all of Fyodor Dostoevsky's fiction into English.

  2. Constance Garnett (born December 19, 1861, Brighton, East Sussex, England—died December 17, 1946, Edenbridge, Kent) was an English translator who made the great works of Russian literature available to English and American readers in the first half of the 20th century.

  3. 28 de jun. de 2023 · The radical politics of Russian literature’s most famous English translator, Constance Garnett.

  4. Constance Garnett. When I was allowed to leave the childrens library and join the grown-ups library next door, it was like being let loose in a giant sweetshop, and, for reasons I still don’t quite understand, I felt drawn to a hexagonal bookshelf at the far end of the library.

  5. 30 de out. de 2005 · Constance Garnetts versions of the great Russians inspired Hemingway but outraged exiled writers. Illustration by Edward Sorel

  6. 12 de nov. de 2019 · The one I hold dear to my own dusha, as a woman, and as a translator, is Constance Garnett. Born in Brighton in 1861, Garnett translated 70 volumes from Russian, including all Dostoyevsky’s baggy monsters.

  7. Prolific English translator of 19th-century Russian literature. Born Constance Clara Black in Brighton, England, on December 19, 1862; died on December 17, 1946, in Edenbridge, England; daughter of David Black (a coroner) and Clara (Patten) Black; educated by home tutoring; attended Brighton High School, Newnham College Association for Advanced ...