What is it about?

As a social and political context for research on translation, the European Union offers pertinent commitments to multilingualism, inclusive territorial democracy, transparent governance and the welfare state, with enough public funding to pursue these aims seriously. All these features concern translation, not only to the extent that they create social demands for translations but more importantly in that they give our research an ethical and political dimension, in addition to the demands of various markets. However, when the consequences of these commitments are compared with actual European research and public policies concerning translation, several shortcomings become apparent. The comparison suggests that future tasks for Translation Studies in Europe should include: (1) serious attention to far more than the large territorial languages; (2) enhanced exchange with neighboring disciplines, especially with scholars working on language acquisition; (3) an acceptance that translated communication should concern involvement and interaction, in addition to public information; (4) a questioning of the Western translation form as the model best suited to interactive cross-lingual governance; and (5) experimentation with technologies that stimulate citizen involvement.

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Why is it important?

Everyone is looking for non-European translation studies, assuming that things European are somehow false universalisms. It makes sense to ask about what is specific to the European context.

Perspectives

I thought this was an interesting question. The paper was originally my talk at the symposium held in Vienna to mark the 20th anniversary of the European Society for Translation Studies.

Professor Anthony Pym
Universitat Rovira i Virgili

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This page is a summary of: Translation Studies in Europe—reasons for it, and problems to work on, Target International Journal of Translation Studies, June 2014, John Benjamins,
DOI: 10.1075/target.26.2.02pym.
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