It Takes Three to Tango: How a Cuban Ballerina Interpreted for Castro and Khrushchev

Naimushin, Boris (2023) It Takes Three to Tango: How a Cuban Ballerina Interpreted for Castro and Khrushchev. English Studies at NBU, 9 (2): 1. pp. 147-168. ISSN 2367-5705

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Abstract

This text launches a series of articles under the image-based project ‘With the Aid of an Unidentified Interpreter: Putting Names to Faces on Historical Photos’ dedicated to the history of high-level interpreting. Here, the quest is to identify the interpreter at the two encounters between Nikita Khrushchev and Fidel Castro at Harlem’s Hotel Theresa and at the Soviet Mission in New York on 20 and 23 September 1960 based on a photo from the personal archive of Khrushchev’s assistant Vladimir Lebedev. This interpreter turned out to be Menia Martínez, a historic figure in Cuban ballet. Educated at the Vaganova School in St. Petersburg (Leningrad), she was proficient in Russian. The text looks at other professional and unprofessional interpreters who worked with the two leaders before, on, and after this trip to New York and whose work contributed to the development of Cuban-Soviet and East-West relations. The discussion draws on available visuals, memoirs, newspaper sources, and unclassified documents placing the discussion in the wider context of international relations at the time. The author is grateful to Menia Martínez, who, in a telephone conversation, has helped in clarifying some of the aspects of the matter under investigation.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Language. Linguistics. Literature > Applied linguistics
Translation studies
ID Code:4889
Deposited By: Boris Anatolievich Naimushin
Deposited On:19 Jan 2024 08:30
Last Modified:19 Jan 2024 08:30

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