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Translation: key concepts
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“A translator must recognise and decode the text as encoded by the writer before it encoded anew for the TL reader.”
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Translator/encoder/text
SL author/encoder text Translator/receiver Translator/encoder/text TL reader / receiver
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Jakobson’s categories
The concept of translation Jakobson in ‘On Linguistic aspects of translation’ Intralinguistic interlinguistic intersemiotic
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Word for word vs. ‘sense for sense’ or ‘literal’ vs. ‘free’
Cicero and. St. Jerome: Word for word vs. ‘sense for sense’ or ‘literal’ vs. ‘free’ Dryden (1697): Metaphrase Paraphrase Imitation Tytler’s ‘principles of translation’ (1797): Complete transcription of ideas; ‘Same’ style and ‘character as original’; Translation should have all the ease of original Schleiermacher’ ‘two paths’_ 1. the translator leaves the writer alone and moves the reader towards the writer; 2. The translator leaves the reader alone and moves the writer towards the writer. Alienating as opposed to naturalizing Traditional Translation concepts
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The concept of Equivalence and receptor- based theories
Jakobson: ‘Equivalence in difference’. The problem of meaning and equivalence focuses on the differences in structure and terminology rather than on inability to render a message written in another language. Nida: ‘Formal’ equivalence’ focuses attention on the message itself. It is ST- oriented. ‘Dynamic equivalence’: the principle of ‘equivalent effect’ - the relation between TT receptor and text should be the same as between SR and ST. ‘Naturalness.’ Newmark: ‘Communicative translation’: strives to recreate the effect the ST had on SRs. ‘Semantic translation’ resembles Nida’s formal equivalence and places the emphasis on content and maintenance of ST form. Baker: responsible for a taxonomy of equivalence: she recommends translators strive for equivalence at the level of word, phrase, grammar, text, and pragmatics. The concept of Equivalence and receptor- based theories
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A problem of equivalence
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