Is there a special kind of "reading" for translation? An empirical investigation of reading in the translation process

Gregory M. Shreve, Christina Schäffner, Joseph H. Danks, Jennifer Griffin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The role of reading in translation is rarely discussed in the literature. Translation has mainly been discussed within a product-oriented framework. The more process-oriented approaches of recent years have taken notice of reading as a component activity of the translation process. However, few empirical studies have been completed which address the role of reading in translation. The way a person reads, and the result of that reading (some sort of mental representation of the text or text segment), will depend on the reader's purposes and motivations. The present empirical study indicates that while the translator's reading of a text may be to some extent more thorough and deliberate than that of an ordinary reader, it is not likely to be markedly so. The study also indicates a significant variability in the way translators "read for translation". This suggests the existence of alternate strategies in this kind of reading.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)21-41
Number of pages21
JournalTarget
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1993

Keywords

  • reading
  • translation
  • translation process
  • reading in translation
  • purposes
  • motivations

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