The quest for argumentative equivalence : argumentative patterns in political interpreting contexts
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The quest for argumentative equivalence : argumentative patterns in political interpreting contexts
(Argumentation in context / editors Frans van Eemeren, Bart Garssen, v. 18)
John Benjamins Publishing Company, c2020
- : hbk
Available at 2 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [205]-216) and index
Contents of Works
- Strategic manoeuvring in political interpreting contexts
- Corpus and methodology
- Barack Obama
- David Cameron
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- François Hollande
- Conclusions
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What are the implications of strategic manoeuvring for the activity of the simultaneous interpreter? This is the main question addressed in The Quest for Argumentative Equivalence. Based on the analysis of a multilingual comparable corpus named ARGO, the book investigates political argumentation with an eye to its reformulation by interpreters. After reporting and discussing a series of case studies illustrating interpreters' problems in the political context, the study reconstructs the prototypical argumentative patterns used by Obama, Cameron, Sarkozy and Hollande not only in a hermeneutical perspective, but also considering interpreters' need to reproduce them into a foreign language. Situated at the intersection of Argumentation Theory and Interpreting Studies, the book provides a contribution to the descriptive study of political argumentation, highlighting the presence of interpreters as a key contextual variable in political communication and deepening the study of the interlinguistic and translational implications of the act of arguing.
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