Ocaña recenserade Babel: La necesidad de la violencia. av R.F. Kuang
Maravilloso - Marvelous
5 stjärnor
Bufff, tremendo libro acabo de terminar. Haceros un favor y leeros Babel.
Lo mejor que he leído este año. Necesito procesarlo.
Inbunden, 560 sidor
På English
Publicerades 23 augusti 2022 av HarperCollins.
Traduttore, traditore: An act of translation is always an act of betrayal.
1828. Robin Swift, orphaned by cholera in Canton, is brought to London by the mysterious Professor Lovell. There, he trains for years in Latin, Ancient Greek, and Chinese, all in preparation for the day he’ll enroll in Oxford University’s prestigious Royal Institute of Translation—also known as Babel.
Babel is the world's center for translation and, more importantly, magic. Silver working—the art of manifesting the meaning lost in translation using enchanted silver bars—has made the British unparalleled in power, as its knowledge serves the Empire’s quest for colonization.
For Robin, Oxford is a utopia dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge. But knowledge obeys power, and as a Chinese boy raised in Britain, Robin realizes serving Babel means betraying his motherland. As his studies progress, Robin finds himself caught between Babel and the shadowy Hermes Society, an …
Traduttore, traditore: An act of translation is always an act of betrayal.
1828. Robin Swift, orphaned by cholera in Canton, is brought to London by the mysterious Professor Lovell. There, he trains for years in Latin, Ancient Greek, and Chinese, all in preparation for the day he’ll enroll in Oxford University’s prestigious Royal Institute of Translation—also known as Babel.
Babel is the world's center for translation and, more importantly, magic. Silver working—the art of manifesting the meaning lost in translation using enchanted silver bars—has made the British unparalleled in power, as its knowledge serves the Empire’s quest for colonization.
For Robin, Oxford is a utopia dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge. But knowledge obeys power, and as a Chinese boy raised in Britain, Robin realizes serving Babel means betraying his motherland. As his studies progress, Robin finds himself caught between Babel and the shadowy Hermes Society, an organization dedicated to stopping imperial expansion. When Britain pursues an unjust war with China over silver and opium, Robin must decide…
Can powerful institutions be changed from within, or does revolution always require violence?
Bufff, tremendo libro acabo de terminar. Haceros un favor y leeros Babel.
Lo mejor que he leído este año. Necesito procesarlo.
Not my usual but I’m glad I checked it out. The alternate history was interesting and the protagonist’s viewpoint was enlightening. Overall a good read.
Me ha gustado mucho. Creo que es una historia juvenil que te sumerge de manera muy adecuada en los tentáculos del colonialismo, de cómo la ceguera en lo evidente maneja nuestro día a día y las justificaciones más burdas acaban saliendo a la luz por le miedo al enfrentamiento. No obstante, he de decir que me ha faltado que los personajes estén mejor construidos, que lleguemos a conocerlos mejor. Parece que lo único que guía su existencia, más allá del protagonista, es su relación con este. Por eso no le pongo las cinco estrellas.
Me ha gustado mucho. Creo que es una historia juvenil que te sumerge de manera muy adecuada en los tentáculos del colonialismo, de cómo la ceguera en lo evidente maneja nuestro día a día y las justificaciones más burdas acaban saliendo a la luz por le miedo al enfrentamiento. No obstante, he de decir que me ha faltado que los personajes estén mejor construidos, que lleguemos a conocerlos mejor. Parece que lo único que guía su existencia, más allá del protagonista, es su relación con este. Por eso no le pongo las cinco estrellas.
XIX. mendearen hasieran txinatar gazte bat umezurtz geratzen da eta babesle misteriotsu batek Ingalaterrara eramaten du, inperioaren bihotzera. Inperio hori gure mundukoaren antzekoa da, baina fantasia puntu batekin.
Zehaztuko ez dizkizuedan arrazoiengatik hizkuntzalaritzak garrantzi handia du liburuan eta agertzen den magia sistema oso erakargarria iruditu zait.
Inperialismo britainiarraren kritika zorrotza egiten du Rebecca F. Kuang-ek liburukote honetan. Ia 550 orri dituen arren ondo eusten dio istorioaren tentsioari. Idazlearen beste lan batzuek ere itxura bikaina dute, esaterako "Opioaren gerra" trilogiak. eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebecca_F._Kuang
XIX. mendearen hasieran txinatar gazte bat umezurtz geratzen da eta babesle misteriotsu batek Ingalaterrara eramaten du, inperioaren bihotzera. Inperio hori gure mundukoaren antzekoa da, baina fantasia puntu batekin.
Zehaztuko ez dizkizuedan arrazoiengatik hizkuntzalaritzak garrantzi handia du liburuan eta agertzen den magia sistema oso erakargarria iruditu zait.
Inperialismo britainiarraren kritika zorrotza egiten du Rebecca F. Kuang-ek liburukote honetan. Ia 550 orri dituen arren ondo eusten dio istorioaren tentsioari. Idazlearen beste lan batzuek ere itxura bikaina dute, esaterako "Opioaren gerra" trilogiak. eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebecca_F._Kuang
A truly amazing book. The voice is powerful, the vibe immaculate. I hate to compare a wonderful work of fantasy to Harry Potter, but it scratches an itch to have a British magical school story that is so well written. Also of note is the way she writes the main characters friendships, it is the most wholesome display of platonic devotion I've ever read. Between that and her descriptions of life on campus I feel like I lived the life of an academic, and experienced things second hand that I've never gotten the chance to before.
A truly amazing book. The voice is powerful, the vibe immaculate. I hate to compare a wonderful work of fantasy to Harry Potter, but it scratches an itch to have a British magical school story that is so well written. Also of note is the way she writes the main characters friendships, it is the most wholesome display of platonic devotion I've ever read. Between that and her descriptions of life on campus I feel like I lived the life of an academic, and experienced things second hand that I've never gotten the chance to before.
Fantastic from beginning to end. While it is a work of fiction, the parallels to fact and history are powerful.
The book's synopsis did not pique my interest, but I was quickly lost in the story. Just an amazing read.
Fantastic from beginning to end. While it is a work of fiction, the parallels to fact and history are powerful.
The book's synopsis did not pique my interest, but I was quickly lost in the story. Just an amazing read.
3.5, or thereabouts. There's a lot I really love about this; the setup, the main theme, the idea of language magic, the way it sets up the dreaming spires and magic school only to cheerfully tear it apart, the clip it starts moving at once it gets going...
But damn, Kuang doesn't half run her theme into the ground, does she? Of 545 pages I'm pretty sure fully half are characters discussing colonialism, and I love that they do, and I love that it's the central conflict, but there is such a thing as overegging. Especially since it starts sounding a little too much like a 21st century textbook rather than an 1830s period piece.
Also, for a story with so little changed - or maybe exactly because it's a story with so little changed - I kind of wish she'd explored that one change more. Give me more …
3.5, or thereabouts. There's a lot I really love about this; the setup, the main theme, the idea of language magic, the way it sets up the dreaming spires and magic school only to cheerfully tear it apart, the clip it starts moving at once it gets going...
But damn, Kuang doesn't half run her theme into the ground, does she? Of 545 pages I'm pretty sure fully half are characters discussing colonialism, and I love that they do, and I love that it's the central conflict, but there is such a thing as overegging. Especially since it starts sounding a little too much like a 21st century textbook rather than an 1830s period piece.
Also, for a story with so little changed - or maybe exactly because it's a story with so little changed - I kind of wish she'd explored that one change more. Give me more etymolagic, use it for more than just spells; if you want to do The Secret History, then do The Secret History.
Still, yeah. It manages that trick where it makes me want to overlook its flaws, and that goes a long way. It's memorable, just not only for the best reasons.
Kuang's story surprises. This coming-of-age (and coming-of-revolution) story introduces us to a world where the the 19th-century Industrial Revolution is made possible not by steam and worker oppression but by the magical powers of translation and colonial exploitation. The experiences of the protagonist, a Cantonese boy that adopts the English name Robin Swift, lead us to an imagined Oxford that is as intriguing as Hogwarts but that has sins that Kuang not only does not whitewash, but makes the centerpiece of her novel. The historical notes and especially the etymological explanations are fascinating, if occasionally pedantic. Once you get your head around this world and how it works, you'll want to hang on to the end to see how a postcolonial critique during the height of the British Empire can possibly turn out.
Kuang's story surprises. This coming-of-age (and coming-of-revolution) story introduces us to a world where the the 19th-century Industrial Revolution is made possible not by steam and worker oppression but by the magical powers of translation and colonial exploitation. The experiences of the protagonist, a Cantonese boy that adopts the English name Robin Swift, lead us to an imagined Oxford that is as intriguing as Hogwarts but that has sins that Kuang not only does not whitewash, but makes the centerpiece of her novel. The historical notes and especially the etymological explanations are fascinating, if occasionally pedantic. Once you get your head around this world and how it works, you'll want to hang on to the end to see how a postcolonial critique during the height of the British Empire can possibly turn out.