 | Constance Garnett: Encyclopedia - Constance Garnett
Constance Garnett
Constance Clara Garnett (née Black) (December 19, 1861 - December 17, 1946) was an English translator whose translations of nineteenth-century Russian classics first introduced them on a wide basis to the English public. Garnett is the first English translator of Dostoevsky and Chekhov.
Born in Brighton, Garnett studied Latin and Greek at Newnham College, Cambridge, where she also learned Russian, and worked shortly as a school teacher. In 1893, shortly after a visit to Moscow and Petersburg during which she met Leo Tolstoy, she started translating Russian literature, which became her life passion and resulted in English-language versions of dozens of volumes by Tolstoy, Gogol, Goncharov, Dostoevsky, Pushkin, Turgenev, Ostrovsky and Chekhov.
Her husband, Edward Garnett, was a distinguished reader for the publisher Jonathan Cape. Her son, David Garnett, trained as a biologist and later wrote novels.
Constance Garnett's translations of Russian classics were highly acclaimed in her time and are still being reprinted today, despite occasional complaints of them being outdated. While she kept close to the syntax and vocabulary of the original, she occasionally excised certain portions liberally, as in her translations of Dostoevsky. It is sometimes claimed that she "retold Russian literature in Victorian English"; this is not strictly true, as the English she used is Edwardian rather than Victorian.
Constance Garnett - External link
- Works by Constance Garnett at Project Gutenberg
Categories: 1861 births | 1946 deaths | Russian-English translators
Other related archives1861, 1861 births, 1893, 1946, 1946 deaths, Brighton, Chekhov, David Garnett, December 17, December 19, Dostoevsky, Edward Garnett, Edwardian, Gogol, Goncharov, Greek, Jonathan Cape, Latin, Leo Tolstoy, Moscow, Newnham College, Cambridge, Ostrovsky, Petersburg, Project Gutenberg, Pushkin, Russian, Russian literature, Russian-English translators, Turgenev, nineteenth-century
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Constance Garnett", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |