Publications
Publication details [#8967]
Williams, Malcolm. 2004. Translation quality assessment: an argumentation-centred approach (Perspectives on Translation 2). Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press. 210 pp.
Publication type
Monograph
Publication language
English
Keywords
Main ISBN
0-7766-0584-4
Abstract
Outlining an original, discourse-based model for translation quality assessment that goes beyond conventional microtextual error analysis, Malcolm Williams explores the potential of transferring reasoning and argument as the prime criterion of translation quality. Assessment through error analysis is inevitably based on an error count - an unsatisfactory means of establishing, and justifying, differences in quality that forces the evaluator to focus on subsentence elements rather than the key messages of the source text. Williams counters that a judgement of translation quality should be based primarily on the success with which the translator has rendered the reasoning, or argument structure.
Source : Publisher information
Reviewed by
Al-Wahy, Ahmed Seddik. 2010. Review of Translation quality assessment: an argumentation-centred approach. Babel 56 (1) : 95–99.