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Mary Hobson
English translator

Mary Hobson

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
English translator
Gender
Female
Age
99 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mary Hobson (born 1926) is an English writer, poet and translator. She has written three novels and translated Alexander Griboedov's Woe from Wit and his letters. She also translated works by Alexander Pushkin. She has won the Griboedov Prize and Pushkin Medal.

Personal life

Hobson married a jazz musician named Neil, and together they had four children. At 25 years of age he developed a cerebral abscess which left him debilitated on the right side of his body and speechless. Her husband became very difficult to live with and Mary Hobson left him in her 60s. Her son, Matthew, stayed with his father to prevent his mother from returning to him.

Matthew died during a motorcycle accident about 1999, which was very difficult, but she based her philosophy of managing her grief on Marcus Aurelius quote: "What we cannot bear removes us from life." Rather than living less, she chose to do more, including writing poetry about him. She is an atheist who lives in South London, writes poetry and travels to Moscow each year.

Hobson studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London, England.

Career

While her husband underwent musical therapy, about the age of 40, Hobson wrote her first of three novels, all published by Heinemann Press. She studied Russian at 56 so that she could read the original version of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace, a book that had been a gift to her by her daughter to read while recovering from a surgery and one that she felt she would not truly understand until she read the original Russian version. Her first teacher was a Russian emigree, Tatiana Borisovna Behr, who inspired an interest in Aleksander Pushkin, starting with The Bronze Horseman.

At 62 she enrolled at London University in the School of Slavonic and East European Studies. During the politically turbulent year of 1991, she studied Russian language and literature in Moscow and lived in a hostel. She graduated while still in her 60s.

She translated Alexander Griboedov's Woe from Wit, which was published in 2005 and the subject of her doctoral thesis. Subsequently she translated Griboedov's letters, some of which she said were very scandalous. She received her PhD at 74 years of age.

Her translation of Evgenii Onegin by Alexander Pushkin was published as an audiobook, narrated by Neville Jason. She translated what was deemed a "mathematically impossible" poem to translate, including the declaration of Onegin, heir to his dying uncle's estate, when asked to visit him:

The plan may be worth imitating
the boredom is excruciating.
Sit by a bedside night and day
and never move a step away.
With what low cunning one tries madly
to amuse a man who's half alive
Adjust his pillows and contrive
To bring his medicine to him sadly
Then sigh when proffering the spoon
'Let's hope the devil takes you soon'

In Russia she is considered a Pushkin expert. She presented her translation of "Evgenii Onegin" 16 February 2012 at Moscow State Pedagogical University and has presented at educational conferences in Russia and Europe.

By 2003 she began to study ancient Greek. As of March 2014, Hobson, in her late 80s, continues to take on new projects.

She won the bi-centenary Griboedov prize for the best translation of Alexander Griboedov's Woe from Wit in London in 1995, the Pushkin medal, awarded by the Association of Creative Unions in Moscow and in 2010 "The Enthusiast Award" by the New Millennium Foundation. In 2011 she won the Podvizhnik Prize in Moscow.

Works

Novels
  • Mary Hobson. This Place Is a Madhouse. William Heinemann, 1980. ISBN 978-0-434-34021-7
  • Mary Hobson. Oh Lily. William Heinemann Ltd, 1981. ISBN 978-0-434-34020-0
  • Mary Hobson. Poor Tom. David & Charles Publishers, 1982. ISBN 978-0-434-34022-4
Translations of Russian literature
  • Mary Hobson; Aleksandr Sergeyevich Griboyedov. Aleksandr Griboedov's Woe from wit: a commentary and translation. Edwin Mellen Press; 2005. ISBN 978-0-7734-6146-8.
  • Mary Hobson; Alexander Puskhin. Evgenii Onegin: A New Translation by Mary Hobson.
  • Mary Hobson; Alexander Puskhin. "Friendship of Love." In Love Poems. Alma Classics Ltd, 2013. ISBN 978-1-84749-300-2

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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