Translation and the Professional Selves of Mercer Cook

Translation and the Professional Selves of Mercer Cook

Author: 
Loingsigh, Aedín Ní
Place: 
Cambridge
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
Date published: 
2018
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Bulletin of the school of Oriental and African studies
Source: 
Bulletin of the school of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 81, N0. 3, 2018 pp. 459-474
Abstract: 

This article explores the ways in which African American Mercer Cook's translation practice reflects complex overlaps between his professional/personal selves and an ideological backdrop that encompasses black internationalism, US race struggles and mid-twentieth-century diplomatic relations with Africa. A first section explores how Cook, a university professor of French, uses what he terms the "close-to-home" value of translation in order to expose his African American students to what has been written about them in French. At the same time, translation is seen by him as essential to building a "shared elsewhere" where his students can reflect on their place within a black world that is neither nation-bound nor monolingual. A second section examines the way in which Cook's translation practice is inflected by his role as US ambassador in francophone West Africa during the 1960s. In this context, the convergence of US civil rights with official US Cold War policy on postcolonial African states is key to understanding Cook's stance as a translator and the way in which he seeks diplomatically to propel his translations of L.S Senghor's texts towards a racially riven US readership.

Language: 

CITATION: Loingsigh, Aedín Ní. Translation and the Professional Selves of Mercer Cook . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press , 2018. Bulletin of the school of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 81, N0. 3, 2018 pp. 459-474 - Available at: https://library.au.int/translation-and-professional-selves-mercer-cook