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Interpreting as Interaction: Language in Social Life

Autor Cecilia Wadensjo
en Limba Engleză Paperback – oct 1998
Provides an account of interpreter-mediated communication, exploring the responsibilities of the interpreter and the expectations of both the interpreter and of other participants involved in the interaction.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780582289109
ISBN-10: 0582289106
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 138 x 215 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Longman Publishing Group
Seria Language in Social Life

Locul publicării:Harlow, United Kingdom

Cuprins

General Editor's Preface
Acknowledgements

I. Just an ordinary hearing
1. The themes of this book
2. How this book is organised

II. Talk as text and talk as activity
1. Opposing and interdependent views
2. Translation studies - an inter-discipline
3. In searh for a theory of sense making
4. Monologism, dialogism and studies on interpreting

III. Community interpreting: Going professional
1. Defining community interpreting
2. Education and certification

IV. Interpreters and other intermediaries
1. It takes three to make an intermediary
2. Interpreters in face-to-face interaction

V. Discourse studies - on method and analytical framework
1. Social role - normative, typical and personal standards
2. Collecting data - recording and transcribing

VI. Ideal interpreting in actual performance
1. Textual structures in interpreter-mediated talk
2. "And can you show where?"
3. "She coughs in this way (.) and it is a dry cough"
4. "Just a second"
5. Translating and coordinating - two activities in one

VII. In a communicative pas de trois
1. Exploring interpreter-mediated interaction order
2. "I have to retrain myself"
3. "Say what he says now"
4. "It'll all be hunky-dory"
5. "About four years ago?"
6. Conclusion - challenges and counter measures

VIII. Communication and Miscommunication
1. Problematising 'understanding'
2. "We misunderstood each other..."
3. "Have been divorced"
4. "Me or us?"
5. "You mentioned parasites"
6. "How is this looked upon?"
7. Resource for communication and source of miscommunication

IX. When I say what you mean
1. Problematising 'neutrality'
2. "She says: no, I'm referring to cars"
3. "And they say that..."
4. "Can you ask him to comment"
5. "She goes: yes"
6. "What is this? They say: it's okay"
7. "Would you allow me to add"
8. The analysing aspect of reported speech

X. Bridging gaps and sustaining differences
1. Translating in interpreting - in a dialogical frame
2. Interpreters and professionalism

Bibliography
Index


Descriere

Interpreting in Interaction provides an account of interpreter-mediated communication, exploring the responsibilities of the interpreter and the expectations of both the interpreter and of other participants involved in the interaction. The book examines ways of understanding the distribution of responsibility of content and the progression of talk in interpreter-mediated institutional face-to-face encounters in the community interpreting context.

Bringing attention to discursive and social practices prominent in modern society but largely unexplored in the existing literature, the book describes and explains real-life interpreter-mediated conversations as documented in various public institutions, such as hospitals and police stations. The data show that the interpreter's prescribed role as a non-participating, non-person does not -and cannot - always hold true.

The book convincingly argues that this in one sense exceptional form of communication can be used as a magnifying glass in the grounded study of face-to-face institutional interaction more generally.

Cecilia Wadensjö explains and applies a Bakhtinian dialogic theory of language and mind, and offers an alternative understanding of the interpreter's task, as one consisting of translating and co-ordinating, and of the interpreter as an engaged actor solving problems of translatability and problems of mutual understanding in situated social interactions.

Teachers and students of translation and interpretation studies, including sign language interpreting, applied linguistics and sociolinguistics will welcome this text. Students and professionals within law, medicine and education will also find the study useful to help them understand the role of the interpreter within these frameworks.