A place for oral history within Translation Studies?
Published online: 8 June 2015
https://doi.org/10.1075/target.27.2.02mcd
https://doi.org/10.1075/target.27.2.02mcd
To explore how oral history methodologies could be incorporated into translation studies research, this paper begins by reviewing oral history’s approach to conducting, preserving and analyzing oral, retrospective interviews. It then examines how oral history methods could help enhance existing methodological and documentation standards in translation studies, expand the range of sources available for current and future historical studies of translators and interpreters, and enhance existing theoretical frameworks in translation studies. Particular emphasis is placed on memory and performance in oral narratives, two aspects of interviews that seem underrepresented in existing translation studies literature, and some attention is paid to how existing translation studies research could benefit oral history.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 1.1A brief history of oral history
- 1.2Defining oral history
- 1.3Oral history and translation studies
- 2.Oral history and translation studies: Mutual benefits?
- 2.1Enhanced methodological and documentation standards
- 2.2Expanded range of sources available for current and future historical studies
- 2.3Enhanced existing theoretical frameworks
- 3.Conclusions
- Notes
References
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2018. Oral history. In A History of Modern Translation Knowledge [Benjamins Translation Library, 142], ► pp. 267 ff.
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