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Summary Translation Studies and Research Methodology

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A summary of the most important principles of translation studies discussed in the lectures.

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Chapter 1: Mais Issues of Translation Studies

1. What are the different definitions of “translation” according to Roman Jakobson?
Can you provide some examples of each definition?
- Jakobson’s definitions draw on “semiotics”
- semiotics: science of communication through signs and sign systems, of which language
is but one (Cobley 2001)
- interlingual translation, or ‘translation proper’: translation from one language to another
à e.g. ENG – NL
à Original: The cat is on the roof
Translation: De kat zit op het dak


- intralingual translation, or ‘rewording’: translation within the same language (rephrasing
or explaining something in different words in the same language
à e.g. adaptation of an encyclopaedia for children
à Original: She passed away
Translation: She died


- intersemiotic translation, or ‘transmutation’: translation from one sign system to another
(such as from verbal language to visual art, music, or symbols)
à e.g. a poem is turned into a painting
à e.g. film adaptation of a book


2. What is the scope of the discipline of Translation Studies?
= discipline concerned with “the complex of problems clustered round the phenomenon of
translating and translations” (Holmes 1998b/2004, 181)
- began in the 2nd half of the 20th century = “young” discipline
- visibility of discipline:
à training: specialized translating and interpreting programmes
à publications: conferences, books, and journals
à analytical instruments: anthologies, databases, encyclopaedias, handbooks
à international organizations: European Society for Translation Studies (EST),
à international Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies (IATIS)

,3. What do you know about the history of the discipline of Translation Studies?
- pre-20th century: before TS as a discipline
à translation was primarily seen as a craft or art, not a scientific field of study
à thinkers like Cicero, St. Jerome, and later Martin Luther reflected on translation,
often debating literal vs. free translation
à renaissance and Enlightenment translators focused on faithfulness to the source and
stylistic elegance
- no systematic academic study yet (mostly practical or philosophical reflections)
- 1950s – 1970s: founding phase of TS
- translation began to be studied more systematically, especially after World War II, with
the rise of machine translation and structural linguistics
- focus on equivalence: attempts to define how closely a translation matches its original
à e.g., Nida’s formal vs. dynamic equivalence
- emergence of the term “Translation Studies” (first used by James S. Holmes in 1972)
à H proposed a “map” of TS, dividing it into pure (theoretical, descriptive) and
applied branches
- 1980s – 1990s: Cultural Turn
à scholars like Susan Bassnett, André Lefevere, and Itamar Even-Zohar shifted focus
from language to culture
à translation seen as rewriting shaped by ideology, politics, and power
à rise of Descriptive Translation Studies (DTS) (e.g., Toury) and Polysystem Theory
à emphasis on norms, target culture, and the role of translation in shaping literature
and ideology
- 2000s – present: interdisciplinary expansion
à TS becomes more interdisciplinary, interacting with:
1) Sociology (Bourdieu-influenced studies of translators' agency and institutions)
2) Gender Studies, Postcolonial Studies, Digital Humanities, and Cognitive Science
à new areas emerge:
1) Audiovisual translation (AVT)
2) localization and machine translation
3) corpus-based studies
4) translation ethics and activism
5) increasing attention to non-Western traditions, multilingualism, and decolonizing
translation

, 4. What do you know about Holmes’ map? What are the differences between Holmes’
map and the van Doorslaer map?
Holmes’ map van Doorslaer map




- comes from ‘Name and nature of translation - development since Holmes
studies’, paper by James S. Holmes (1972/1988) - distinction between “translation” and
à crucial to development of the field “translation” studies”
- = visual representation of Holmes’s map by Toury à translation: focused on act of translating
(1995: 10) à TS: analysis of translations
approaches, theories, research methods, applied translation studies
- ‘pure’, ‘theoretical’ and ‘applied’ branches
- “pure” areas: focused on: - translation:
1) the description of the phenomena of translation à lingual (interlingual, intralingual)
à product-oriented: examines existing à media (printed, audiovisual, electronic)
translations (comparative analysis) à mode (retranslation, self-translation,
à function-oriented: which texts were translated pseudo-translation, sight translation)
where and when (nowadays = sociology and à field (political, journalistic, technical,
historiography of translation) literary, religious, scientific, commercial)
à process-oriented: psychology of translation, i.e. - translation studies:
what happens in translator’s mind (e.g. eye- à approaches (cultural approach, linguistic
tracking research) approach)
2) the establishment of general principles to à theories (general translation theory,
explain and predict such phenomena polisystem theory)

, à research methods (descriptive, empirical)
à applied translation studies (criticism,
didactics, institutional environment)
- “applied” areas: applications to the practice of - also contains a basic transfer map of
translation, such as: terminology:
à translator training: teaching methods, testing à strategies (overall orientation of a
techniques, curriculum design translated text; e.g. literal translation)
à translation aids: dictionaries, grammars... à procedures (specific techniques applied at
à translation criticism: evaluation of translations a given point in text)
(marking of students, reviews of published à errors
translations) à rules/norms/conventions/laws/universals
à translation tools


5. What are the differences between “pure” an “applied” areas in Translation
Studies?
pure applied
- goal: describe, analyse, and theorize translation - goal: apply translation theory and research
phenomena in real-world contexts
- focus: academic and theoretical - focus: practical and professional
- subdivisions: - subdivisions:
à Theoretical Translation Studies: Develops à translator training: how translators are
general or partial theories of translation (e.g. taught
equivalence, Skopos, norms) à translation aids: use of tools like CAT
à Descriptive Translation Studies (DTS): tools, dictionaries, NMT
describes real-world translations and how they à translation criticism: evaluating
function across cultures and times translations
includes: product-oriented (texts), process-oriented (cognitive processes), function- à translation policy: language and
oriented (social/cultural impact)
translation planning in institutions
e.g. study analyzing how metaphors are translated in
political speeches across cultures e.g. developing a curriculum for training legal
translators using findings from cognitive
translation research

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