Translator associations—from gatekeepers to communities
Published online: 22 September 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/target.26.3.06pym
https://doi.org/10.1075/target.26.3.06pym
Analysis of 217 associations for translators and/or interpreters shows that, after the heroic age of the generalist national and international groupings in the 1950s and 1960s, there has been a progressive specialization of associations. In rough chronological order, separate institutions have been created for literary translators, sworn/authorized translators and interpreters, conference interpreters, public-service interpreters and audiovisual translators. This process might be seen as a division of labor, a normal result of increasing memberships. Analysis of the communication strategies employed by the associations nevertheless suggests that there has been a profound shift in their very nature: from a model where the association ideally vouches for the professional trustworthiness of several thousands of members, thus implicitly speaking to clients and other professions, we find a tendency toward communication patterns where the association becomes a place for social, pedagogical and political action between its members. The greater density and plexity of the interactions means that the newer associations involve smaller groups of people, selected on the basis of either professional specialization or geographical proximity. Similar interactive models are found in online marketplaces for translations and in communities of volunteer translators, which prove to be innovative not only in promoting interactive communication but also in inventing new ways of signaling translators’ trustworthiness. A way forward for the traditional associations might be to adapt some of the communication strategies operative in the electronic marketplaces and among volunteers.
Article outline
- 1.The heroic age of grand gatekeeping
- 2.First specialization: literary translators
- 3.Law-bound specialization: sworn or authorized translators
- 4.Interpreters go it alone
- 5.And the audiovisual is born
- 6.The impact of terminology and translation technologies
- 7.Reasons for new associations
- 8.Services and communication within new and old associations
- 9.A challenge from web-based marketplaces?
- 10.A challenge from communities of volunteers?
- Conclusion: A necessary fragmentation?
- Notes
References
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