This book presents a collection of state-of-the-art work in corpus-based interpreting studies, highlighting international research on the properties of interpreted speech, based on naturalistic interpreting data. Interpreting research has long been hampered by the lack of naturalistic data that would allow researchers to make empirically valid generalizations about interpreting. The researchers who present their work here have played a pioneering role in the compilation of interpreting data and in the exploitation of that data. The collection focuses on both of these aspects, including a detailed overview of interpreting corpora, a collective paper on the way forward in corpus compilation and several studies on interpreted speech in diverse language pairs and interpreter-mediated settings, based on existing corpora.
Overview of Corpus-based Interpreting Studies: an Introduction.- 1 Corpus-based Interpreting Studies (CIS): Past, Present and Future Developments of a (wired)Cottage Industry.- 2 Towards a Common Methodological Framework for Corpus-based Studies.- 3 Over-uh-load. The Occurrence of uh(m) between Elements of Compounds during Interpreting.- 4 Acquiring the Language of Interpreters.- 5 Interpretese vs. Non-native Language Use.- 6 Exploring Language Specificity as a Variable in Chinese-English Interpreting. A Corpus-based Investigation.- 7 Lost in Interpreting or... maybe not Strings of Nouns as a Challenge for Simultaneous Interpreters Working from Polish into Italian.- 8 Studying Figurative Language in Simultaneous Interpreting: the IMITES (Interpretación de la Metáfora entre ITaliano y ESpañol) Corpus.- 9 Politics Interpreted on Screen. A Corpus-based Investigation on the Interpretation of Televised Political Discourse.- 10 "Interpreter-mediated Football Press Conferences: a Study on the Question/Answer Group".- 11 Speech Patterns and Gender: Trends Emerging from EPIC.
Mariachiara Russo is Full Professor of Spanish Language and Translation at the Department of Interpreting and Translation of the University of Bologna at Forlì (Italy) and free-lance conference interpreter (Italian, English, Spanish). She is the Director of the MA in Interpreting and teaches Interpreting Theory and simultaneous and consecutive interpreting. She coordinated the EPIC project and is currently among the coordinators of the EU-funded Project "SHIFT in Orality- Shaping the Interpreters of the Future and of Today" on remote interpreting. She has published extensively on the following research topics: corpus-based interpreting studies, aptitude testing for interpreting, conference interpreting, liaison interpreting, contrastive linguistics, simultaneous film interpreting.
Claudio Bendazzoli is Assistant Professor of English Language and Translation at the Department of Economic and Social Studies, Mathematics and Statistics of the University of Turin (Italy). Between 2004 and 2011, he worked at the Department of Interpreting and Translation of the University of Bologna at Forlì, where he completed his PhD in Interpreting Studies. He developed the Directionality in Simultaneous Interpreting Corpus (DIRSI-C) and was part of the research group that created the European Parliament Interpreting Corpus (EPIC). His main research interests are corpus-based interpreting studies, theatre and interpreter training, ethnography of speaking, English as a Lingua Franca, and English medium instruction. He also works as a freelance conference interpreter and translator (Italian, English, Spanish).
Bart Defrancq is Associate Professor of interpreting and legal translation at Ghent University (Belgium). In 2002, he was granted his PhD in linguistics at Ghent University and became involved with corpus-based translation and interpreting studies when appointed at the Department of Translation, Interpreting and Communication at the same university. He is head of interpreter training both at the masters' and at the postgraduate levels since 2010 and the initiator of a corpus compilation project based on interpreting data (EPICG). He has published widely on corpus linguistics, translation and interpreting and is an editorial board member of Languages in Contrast and The Interpreters' Newsletter.