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Anthony Pym Models in translation history
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ANTHONY PYM MODELS IN TRANSLATION HISTORY. © Intercultural Studies Group Economic capital Social capital (who you know) Symbolic capital (prestige) Cultural.

Jan 13, 2016

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Page 1: ANTHONY PYM MODELS IN TRANSLATION HISTORY. © Intercultural Studies Group Economic capital Social capital (who you know) Symbolic capital (prestige) Cultural.

Anthony Pym

Models in translation history

Page 2: ANTHONY PYM MODELS IN TRANSLATION HISTORY. © Intercultural Studies Group Economic capital Social capital (who you know) Symbolic capital (prestige) Cultural.

© Intercultural Studies Group

• Economic capital• Social capital (who you know) • Symbolic capital (prestige) • Cultural capital (knowledge) • Happiness

a model of exchange (bourdieu)

Page 3: ANTHONY PYM MODELS IN TRANSLATION HISTORY. © Intercultural Studies Group Economic capital Social capital (who you know) Symbolic capital (prestige) Cultural.

© Intercultural Studies Group

Task: Draw a model of translation.

ST TTST TT

(Naoki Sakai)

a model of translation

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• How is the translation done? • Why is the translation done? (Skopos)• Why did the text move to be translated?

Possible focus questions

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• Who translates?• Where are the translators?

Possible focus questions

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border:

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• Task: What is translation? (Your definition)• What is translated?

older questions

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• Quine: “radical translation, i.e. translation of the language of a hitherto untouched people” • What is the relation between the jungle linguist

and the native?

WHERE IS RADICAL TRANSLATION?

Page 9: ANTHONY PYM MODELS IN TRANSLATION HISTORY. © Intercultural Studies Group Economic capital Social capital (who you know) Symbolic capital (prestige) Cultural.

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• Quine: “a chain of interpreters of a sort can be recruited of marginal persons across the darkest achipelago”. • There is always a degree of secondary encoding,

giving relative certitude (Chesterman v. Arrojo)• George William Grace: “Today, this ‘Western’

culture has expanded to embrace almost the entire world”

THE RADICAL IS NO MORE

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hasta ponerlos en necesidad de burlar con los niños, y hacerse niños con ellos [...] se hagan indios con los indios’We needed to laugh with the children, and be children with them, becoming Indians with the Indians.

… so children were the masters of the evangelists, and children were also the preachers, and ministers of the destruction of idolatry porque niños fueron los maestros de los evangelizadores. Los niños fueron también predicadores, y los niños ministros de la destrucción de la idolatría.

(Mendieta 1973:1.135)

INCULTURATION 1524-25

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INCULTURATION 1570-1602

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INCULTURATION 1570-1602

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[The mother blackens her breast.Fear and Trembling]

[kierkegard]

Page 14: ANTHONY PYM MODELS IN TRANSLATION HISTORY. © Intercultural Studies Group Economic capital Social capital (who you know) Symbolic capital (prestige) Cultural.

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“the incarnation of the Gospel in autonomous cultures and at the same time the introduction of these cultures into the life of the Church” (John Paul II, Slavorum Apostoli 1985)

“Through inculturation the Church makes the Gospel incarnate in different cultures and at the same time introduces peoples, together with their cultures, into her own community.” (John Paul II, Redemptoris Missio 1990)

Inculturation 1985-1990

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The people of Israel throughout its history preserved the certain knowledge that it was the chosen people of God, the witness of his action and love in the midst of the nations. It took from neighboring peoples certain forms of worship, but its faith in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob subjected these borrowings to profound modifications [...].The encounter between the Jewish world and Greek wisdom gave rise to a new form of inculturation: the translation of the Bible into Greek introduced the word of God into a world that had been closed to it and caused, under divine inspiration, an enrichment of the Scriptures. (Varietates Legitimae 1994)

Inculturation 1994

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“The work of inculturation, of which the translation into vernacular languages is a part, is not therefore to be considered an avenue for the creation of new varieties or families of rites; on the contrary, it should be recognized that any adaptations introduced out of cultural or pastoral necessity thereby become part of the Roman Rite, and are to be inserted into it in a harmonious way.”

(Liturgiam authenticam 2001: 5)

Inculturation 2001

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- Literature as institution?-Capitalist economies? -IT? (Microsoft?)-Political modernity? -Universities?-Liberal humanism?

More inculturation?

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- Multiple communication spaces- Personal contact

Conditions for aspiration?

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• Mexican culture• Science fiction (Gouanvic)• The gay novel (Harvey) • Translation Studies?

Out-culturation?

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• MTV culture• You Tube culture• Translation Studies (Leipzig, from Prague and

Bratislava, from Petersburg and Moscow, from Paris and Berlin… these are not wholly foreign languages)

Sub-culturation?

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• The European Court• European bureaucratic prose• (Agent-principle reversal) • Translation Studies?

Meta-culturation?

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• “Inspiration by the Holy Spirit [...] is the great ideal of all mainstream (ideosomatically controlled) Western translation theory” (Robinson 1991: 55)• “Western” traditions as having “limited

acceptance” of foreignizing (107), as setting up the idea of “Eastern irrationality” (Venuti 1995: 107, 159),• Western translation theory is based on no more

than transfer (Tymoczko 2007)

[the blackened breast]

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• Does your model of translation assume symmetry or asymmetry? • In your project, can you see the cultures moving? • If so, what kind of general model best describes

the relations between the cultures?

Activity on theoretical modeling

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• You think the future is in the past?

Expansive translation studies