The collection of essays in Translation Theory and Practice in the
Middle Ages arose from a translation symposium at the twenty-eighth
International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo, Michigan. The
authors treat a wide range of topics: translation between Latin and
romance languages, the rise of vernacular canonicity, the interplay of
Latin and French in the court of France, the theory of translation
evident in Alfred the Great's ambitious program of translation of
religious works from Latin into Old English, questions of the impact of
classical admonitions on medieval translation, interpretive
translation used to render traditionally masculine heroes as feminine,
the interplay of word and image relating to gender issues, and
bilingualism, concluding with translation of medieval texts in the
modern era. The scholarship on offer here presents a spectacular
collection of modern questions of medieval translation, certainly an
essential text for all scholars of related issues.