Buch, Englisch, 490 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 251 mm, Gewicht: 590 g
Buch, Englisch, 490 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 251 mm, Gewicht: 590 g
ISBN: 978-1-032-40087-7
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
The Routledge Handbook of Arabic Translation seeks to explicate Arabic translation practice, pedagogy and scholarship, with the aim of producing a state-of-the-art reference book that maps out these areas and meets the pedagogical and research needs of advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students, as well as active researchers.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
INTRODUCTION The reality of Arabic translation and interpreting
PART I TRANSLATING THE SACRED CHAPTER ONE Debates around the translation of the Qur’an: between jurisprudence and translation studies CHAPTER TWO Translating the Divine: A relevance-theoretic account of lexical-pragmatic adjustment in translating some Qur’anic concepts CHAPTER THREE Translating sacred sounds: encoding tajwid rules in automatically generated IPA transcriptions of Quranic Arabic CHAPTER FOUR On the periphery: translations of the Qur¿an in Sweden, Denmark and Norway CHAPTER FIVE The Bible in Qur¿anic language: Manuscript Sinai Arabic 310 as a case study PART II TRANSLATION, MEDIATION AND IDEOLOGY CHAPTER SIX Reframing Conflict in Translation CHAPTER SEVEN Ideological and evaluative shifts in media translation/trans-editing CHAPTER EIGHT Translation, Twitter, and the 3 July 2013 military intervention in Egypt CHAPTER NINE The socio-dynamics of translating human rights news: a critical discourse analysis approach CHAPTER TEN Translating Tahrir: from praxis to theory with Tahrir Documents CHAPTER ELEVEN Translating images of the 2011 Syrian Revolution: a contratextual approach CHAPTER TWELVE Audiovisual translation studies in the Arab World: the road ahead PART III TRANSLATORS’ AGENCY CHAPTER THIRTEEN Egyptian interrogation records: considerations for translation CHAPTER FOURTEEN Translating Political Islam: Agency in the English translation of Hassan Al-Banna’s Towards the Light ¿¿¿ ¿¿¿¿¿ into English CHAPTER FIFTEEN Kalila and Dimna as a case study: the Ibn al-Muqaffa‘ and Nasrullah Munshi translations CHAPTER SIXTEEN Beyond assimilation and othering: theatre translation and the translator’s agency PART IV TRANSLATION HISTORY/HISTORIOGRAPHY CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Mapping an Arabic discourse on translation CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Theorizing about translation in the Abbasid era: an alternative account CHAPTER NINETEEN The archaeology of translating for Arab children (1950–1998) PART V INTERPRETING: THEORIZING PRACTICE CHAPTER TWENTY Modern Standard Arabic as a target language in simultaneous interpreting: cognitive strains and pedagogical implications CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE Specificities of Training and Professional Practice of Arabic Simultaneous Interpreting: the Arabic-Spanish Language Combination CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO An investigation of cognitive efforts in simultaneous interpreting into Arabic: A case study of Egyptian undergraduate students PART VI TECHNICAL TRANSLATION: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE Translating Arabic Named Entities into English and Spanish: translation consistency at the United Nations CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR A survey of the uptake of CAT tools in Oman: facts and implications PART VII LANGUAGE, GENRE AND TRANSLATION CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE Translating tropes between Arabic and English CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX Translation of Self-Help Literature into Arabic: A Preliminary Inquiry CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN Hòana¯n al-Shaykh’s Innaha Lundun Ya ‘Azizi: when voice-granting canonicity subverts the writer’s voice