“Hell” is the default translation, and definitely the correct one here, in my opinion (just as it is, for example, in Dante).
“Inferno” in English should just be a fancy Italianate way of saying “hell”, but seems to have acquired a connotation of literal heat and flames. (That is, it’s as if people have forgotten that “the blazing inferno of a burning building” is a metaphor.) In any case, neither cultured fanciness nor literal flames are intended by Calvino in that passage, as far as I can tell.
I’m not sure prudishness is necessarily to blame; it may just be a case of that all-too-common translator syndrome of reaching for a word that looks like the original word, rather than the word that the author would have used if he or she were actually a native speaker of the language you’re translating into.
Here’s the passage in the original, for those interested (source):
L’inferno dei viventi non è qualcosa che sarà; se ce n’è uno, è quello che è già qui, l’inferno che abitiamo tutti i giorni, che formiamo stando insieme. Due modi ci sono per non soffrirne. Il primo riesce facile a molti: accettare l’inferno e diventarne parte fino al punto di non vederlo più. Il secondo è rischioso ed esige attenzione e apprendimento continui: cercare e saper riconoscere chi e cosa, in mezzo all’inferno, non è inferno, e farlo durare, e dargli spazio.
“Hell” is the default translation, and definitely the correct one here, in my opinion (just as it is, for example, in Dante).
“Inferno” in English should just be a fancy Italianate way of saying “hell”, but seems to have acquired a connotation of literal heat and flames. (That is, it’s as if people have forgotten that “the blazing inferno of a burning building” is a metaphor.) In any case, neither cultured fanciness nor literal flames are intended by Calvino in that passage, as far as I can tell.
I’m not sure prudishness is necessarily to blame; it may just be a case of that all-too-common translator syndrome of reaching for a word that looks like the original word, rather than the word that the author would have used if he or she were actually a native speaker of the language you’re translating into.
Here’s the passage in the original, for those interested (source):