Publications
Publication details [#22300]
Gentzler, Edwin. 2011. Macro- and micro-turns in translation studies. In Doorslaer, Luc van and Peter Flynn, eds. Eurocentrism in Translation Studies. Special issue of Translation and Interpreting Studies (TIS). The Journal of the American Translation and Interpreting Studies Association 6 (2) : 113–237: 121–141.
Publication type
Article in Special issue
Publication language
English
Keywords
Journal DOI
10.1075/tis
Abstract
Definitions of translation studies are changing. While historically focused on the process or product of translation at a national European level, new definitions by scholars such as Mukherjee, Trivedi, Cheung, and Tymoczko are expanding parameters of translation to see how the field is defined in international non-European contexts — in India, China, the Arab world, for example. Other scholars, such as Cronin, Simon, Apter, and Brodzki are looking at subnational locations, including within cities, diasporic communities within cities, and even between generations within individual families in those communities. This paper looks at how translation is defined and studied in such macro- and micro-contexts in the Americas, suggesting that translation is less something that happens between national cultures and more something, especially among immigrants and linguistic minorities, that comprises the very basis upon which those cultures are constructed.
Source : Abstract in journal