Holger Heimann, Reading Between the Lines in Taiwan. Despite seemingly immense cultural barriers, there is an enormous interest in Western literature in Asia - namely, in Taiwan. And translations of German bestsellers are particularly en vouge. Deutsche Welle, June 8, 2015.
www.dw.de/reading-between-the-lines-in-taiwan/a-18502919
(“One quarter of the approximately 40,000 new publications produced every year [in Taiwan] are translations - so far, most of them from English, but books translated from German are on the rise”)
Note:
(a) The "en vouge" is misspelled.
(i) en vogue (French) = in vogue (English)
(ii) The English noun vogue came from the same word (meaning "rowing, faction") in Middle French, which ultimately was from Old Italian vogare to row.
(iii) vogue (n): "Perhaps the notion is of being 'borne along on the waves of fashion.' * * * Phrase in vogue 'having a prominent place in popular fashion' first recorded 1643. The fashion magazine [called Vogue] began publication in 1892 [in Manhattan]."
www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=vogue
(b) "The ratio between the number of inhabitants and the number of book stores is bigger in Taiwan than anywhere else in the world"
It should be "smaller."
(c) Translator “Tang Wei 唐薇 is one of the most significant mediators of German literature in Taiwan. Among the German authors whose works she has adapted into Chinese are Juli Zeh [1974- ], Cornelia Funke and Charlotte Roche. * * * In Germany, she tries to raise interest in Taiwanese literature * * * In March, she accompanied Taiwanese writers to the Literary Colloquium Berlin, and the Leipzig Book Fair.”
(i) Cornelia Funke
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornelia_Funke
(1958- ; author of children's fiction(s); currently lives in Beverly Hills, California)
(ii) Charlotte Roche
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte_Roche
(born 1978 in England); British; living in Germany; bilingual in English and German)
(iii) About us/ Fifty Years in the Midst of Literature. Literary Colloquium Berlin (LCB), undated
www.lcb.de/ueberuns/50-jahre-lcb/index_en.htm
(German: “Literarisches Colloquium Berlin” (LCB); founded in 1963)
* English dictionary
colloquium (n, from Latin [verb] colloquī to converse, from com- + loqui to speak): “a usually academic meeting at which specialists deliver addresses on a topic or on related topics and then answer questions relating to them”
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/colloquium
(iv) Leipzig Book Fair
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leipzig_Book_Fair
(second largest book fair in Germany after the Frankfurt Book Fair; takes place annually)
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