Translation in Systems: Descriptive and System-oriented Approaches ExplainedRoutledge, 08.04.2014 - 204 Seiten The notion of systems has helped revolutionize translation studies since the 1970s. As a key part of many descriptive approaches, it has broken with the prescriptive focus on what translation should be, encouraging researchers to ask what translation does in specific cultural settings. From his privileged position as a direct participant in these developments, Theo Hermans explains how contemporary descriptive approaches came about, what the basic ideas were, and how those ideas have evolved over time. His discussion addresses the fundamental problems of translation norms, equivalence, polysystems and social systems, covering not only the work of Levý, Holmes, Even-Zohar, Toury, Lefevere, Lambert, Van Leuven-Zwart, Dhulst and others, but also giving special attention to recent contributions derived from Pierre Bourdieu and Niklas Luhmann. An added focus on practical questions of how to investigate translation (problems of definition, description, assessment of readerships, etc.) makes this book essential reading for graduate students and indeed any researchers in the field. Hermans' account of descriptive translation studies is both informed and critical. At the same time, he demonstrates the strength of the basic concepts, which have shown considerable vitality in their evolution and adaptation to the debates of the present day. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 34
Seite 3
... called translations. Which only highlights the need for a fresh, reliable translation. Alas, the new translation of The Magic Mountain by John Woods published in 1995, though better than Lowe-Porter's, is still not good enough. The ...
... called translations. Which only highlights the need for a fresh, reliable translation. Alas, the new translation of The Magic Mountain by John Woods published in 1995, though better than Lowe-Porter's, is still not good enough. The ...
Seite 4
... called translations at all. Specific questions that could be asked about this case include the following: • What about the publisher Alfred Knopf's right to pick a translator of his own choosing, against the author's wishes if necessary ...
... called translations at all. Specific questions that could be asked about this case include the following: • What about the publisher Alfred Knopf's right to pick a translator of his own choosing, against the author's wishes if necessary ...
Seite 5
... called 'translations'? The list is obviously not exhaustive, but it gives an indication. In all these cases, the questions are geared not so much to gauging the quality of individual translations, upholding particular principles as to ...
... called 'translations'? The list is obviously not exhaustive, but it gives an indication. In all these cases, the questions are geared not so much to gauging the quality of individual translations, upholding particular principles as to ...
Seite 7
... called 'empirical'. And because it holds that the investigation of translation may as well start with the thing itself and its immediate environment, i.e. with translations and their contexts rather than with source texts, the term ...
... called 'empirical'. And because it holds that the investigation of translation may as well start with the thing itself and its immediate environment, i.e. with translations and their contexts rather than with source texts, the term ...
Seite 8
... called The Manipulation of Literature (Hermans 1985a). The word 'manipulation' in the book's title was suggested by André Lefevere. The term 'Manipulation group', coined by Armin Paul Frank (1987:xiii), gained currency through Mary ...
... called The Manipulation of Literature (Hermans 1985a). The word 'manipulation' in the book's title was suggested by André Lefevere. The term 'Manipulation group', coined by Armin Paul Frank (1987:xiii), gained currency through Mary ...
Inhalt
1 | |
7 | |
2 Lines of Approach | 17 |
3 Points of Orientation | 31 |
4 Undefining Translation | 46 |
5 Describing Translation | 55 |
6 Working with Norms | 72 |
7 Beyond Norms | 91 |
9 More Systems? | 120 |
10 Translation as System | 137 |
11 Criticisms | 151 |
12 Perspectives | 158 |
Glossary | 162 |
Bibliography | 165 |
Index | 192 |
8 Into Systems | 102 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Translation in Systems: Descriptive and System-oriented Approaches Explained Theo Hermans Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2014 |
Translation in Systems: Descriptive and System-Oriented Approaches Explained Theo Hermans Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
analysis aspects autopoiesis Bassnett behaviour Bourdieu called canonical centre Chapter Chesterman communication complex concepts of translation constitutes context conventions criticism cultural D’hulst descriptive paradigm descriptive translation studies descriptivism discourse English equivalence essay Even-Zohar example fiction Formalist French function genre German Gideon Toury Göttingen historical Holmes hyponymic idea ideological interpretation invisible college James Holmes Lambert language lation Lefevere Lefevere’s Leuven Leuven-Zwart Levý linguistic literary system literary translation literature look Lowe-Porter’s Luhmann mass media means metatexts non-canonical notion novel original particular periphery poetics polysystem theory Popoviè position practice problem production programme questions readers reference relation relevant rewriting Russian Formalist second-order observation semantic semiotics shifts social systems source text speech act structuralist structure study of translation studying translation stylistic suggests system theory target-oriented tertium comparationis textual theoretical things Thomas Mann tion Toury’s trans transeme translation norms translation theory translator’s words Yury Lotman