As suggested by Holmes (1988), who situates translation criticism in the applied branch of translation studies, the evaluative analysis of translations can have a number of practical applications in the training of translators as well as in the practice and revision of translations. It is no coincidence that the move away from prescriptive and intuitive approaches primarily based on the identification of translation errors to more structured descriptive models that has characterised the history of translation criticism has been prompted by the need of translators and translation revisors themselves to have more systematic criteria at their disposal to evaluate the quality or effectiveness of translations (Baker and Saldanha 2009). This paper intends to briefly retrace the evolution of translation criticism by examining the critical thought on translation in the pre-scientific period (e.g. Jerome, king Alfred the Great, Dryden, Tytler) and the models developed in the scientific period of translation studies (e.g. Reiss, House, Berman, Meschonnic, Levý, Hewson) with the aim of showing their enormous potentials for the teaching of translation and the improvement of the translation competence of future translators and revisors
Alborghetti, C., Anelli, L., Anselmi, S., Translation Criticism Revisited from a Pedagogical Perspective, in Maggioni, M., Murphy, A. (ed.), Back to the Future. English from Past to Present, Peter Lang AG, Berna 2021: 61- 88 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/176666]
Translation Criticism Revisited from a Pedagogical Perspective
Alborghetti, Claudia
Primo
;Anelli, Laura
Secondo
;Anselmi, Simona
Ultimo
2021
Abstract
As suggested by Holmes (1988), who situates translation criticism in the applied branch of translation studies, the evaluative analysis of translations can have a number of practical applications in the training of translators as well as in the practice and revision of translations. It is no coincidence that the move away from prescriptive and intuitive approaches primarily based on the identification of translation errors to more structured descriptive models that has characterised the history of translation criticism has been prompted by the need of translators and translation revisors themselves to have more systematic criteria at their disposal to evaluate the quality or effectiveness of translations (Baker and Saldanha 2009). This paper intends to briefly retrace the evolution of translation criticism by examining the critical thought on translation in the pre-scientific period (e.g. Jerome, king Alfred the Great, Dryden, Tytler) and the models developed in the scientific period of translation studies (e.g. Reiss, House, Berman, Meschonnic, Levý, Hewson) with the aim of showing their enormous potentials for the teaching of translation and the improvement of the translation competence of future translators and revisorsI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.