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By way of example let us discuss the problems involved in the translation of a play upon words. Consider the following sentences:

"He ... said he had come for me, and informed me that he was a page." "Go "long," I said, "you ain't more than a paragraph." (M. Twain)

It is clear that the second sentence would be meaningless but for the play upon the words "page" and "paragraph". The same is true about its translation which will be unintelligible unless the play on words is duly reproduced in TL. This is the dominant goal which should be achieved at all costs even though it might involve some inaccuracies in the translation of other elements.

This is not an easy task but it is not impossible, either. Here is how it was done by N. Chukovsky:

Он сказал, что послан за мною и что он глава пажей, — Какая ты глава, ты одна строчка! — сказал я ему.

It is worthwhile to observe the method that is used to overcome the difficulty. The Russian equivalent for a page boy has no other meaning (or homonym) which is associated with any part of a book or other printed matter. So the translator introduces another word «глава» and on its basis recreates the original play upon words. It does not matter that in doing it he makes the boy the head of the pages which he was probably not. The accurate information about the boy's official standing has obviously received a lower rating in the translator's assessment than the preservation of the stylistic effect. This inaccuracy seems to be a lesser evil, since the dominant aspect of the original contents is duly rendered in translation.

Assessing the relative communicative value of various elements in the original, it should be borne in mind that translations are made at different levels of equivalence reproducing different parts of the original contents. The identification of the situation and especially the purport of communication are indispensable and are preserved in practically all translations. Naturally, it is these components that usually make up the dominant sense to be reproduced, if necessary, at the expense of the rest of the contents.

The purport of communication and the identification of the situation are not, as a rule, expressed by some particular words or structures but by the whole unit of speech. Therefore it is often the case that the general sense of the unit as a whole is of greater communicative value than the meaning of its individual elements. The translator is thus prepared to sacrifice the part to the whole, the meaning of an element to the meaning of the whole.

This predominance of the whole makes an imprint upon some of the techniques used by translators both for understanding the original text and for establishing a kind of semantic bridge to the translation. It can be observed that the translator first tries to get the most general idea of what is said in the original, to find out, so to speak, "who does what and to whom", to understand the general semantic pattern or framework of the sentence and then fill in the particular details.

The translator may first resort to the word-for-word translation imitating the syntactic structure of the original and using the most common substitutes of all words. The same method can be used to facilitate understanding if the general meaning of the original text eludes the translator.

Thus the translating may begin with an imitation of the original structure in TL to see whether a word-for-word translation is possible or should be replaced by a different structure. In this way the translator decides upon the syntactic framework of his future translation. This technique is not infrequently used as the choice of lexical units may depend, to a large extent, on the syntactic pattern they fit into.

Let us give an illustration. Suppose the original sentence runs as follows: 'The computer and the man-made satellite were, by all rules of heredity, conceived in the small Northern towns of England, the seat of the Industrial Revolution of the 18th century."

The general idea is dear. The sentence implies that the Industrial Revolution initiated the technological progress which is today characterized by such outstanding achievements as computers and artificial satellites. The first step will be for the translator to try a parallel structure in Russian: «Компьютеры и тд. были созданы (зародились, появились, возникли и пр.) по всем законам наследственности...». It appears that no matter what lexical units are used within the structure, the Russian sentence will somehow imply that modern computers actually were built, invented, or at any rate thought of, in Britain as early as in the 18th century. Now the translator's technique will be to draw up a list of Russian structures used to convey the idea that something which exists today can have its origin traced to much earlier time. He may think of such structures as «X уходит своими корнями в ...», «Y положил начало X», «Здесь находится начало пути, который привел к X», «Здесь были посеяны семена, всходы которых привели к X», etc. Trying to fit the Russian variant into a meaningful whole with the phrase "by all rules of heredity", the translator will probably choose the expression «X ведет свою родословную от Y».


The choice of the structure in translation often calls for a good deal of ingenuity and imagination on the part of the translator. He should be able to make an accurate assessment of the semantic possibilities of the given syntactic structure in order to see whether the latter can be used to convey the original meaning.

Suppose the English sentence is structured with the help of the verb "to add", e.g.: "A new excitement was added to the races at Epsom Downs last year." The problem is to decide whether in Russian it is possible to express this idea in a similar way, that is by saying that a feeling is added to a competition. If the translator finds it unacceptable as being alien to the semantic structure of the Russian language which seems to have less freedom in joining heterogeneous ideas within a syntactic structure, his second problem will be to think of the acceptable Russian way to say "the same thing". Russian would reject "excitement added to the race", but it permits such structures as "the race evoked a new excitement", or "the race was more exciting", or "the race was watched with greater excitement", etc. Thus the translator can make his syntactic choice and then look for appropriate substitutes for "excitement", "race" and other lexical units in the original.

A word of caution may be in order here. In the practical course of translation great pains are usually taken to teach the future translator to replace the original syntactical structures by using appropriate transformations which produce acceptable TL structures without any great loss of information. As a result, some translators get into the habit of turning every original structure inside out syntactically, irrespective of whether it serves any useful purpose.

It should be borne in mind that parallel TL structures are as good as any and they should by no means be avoided or considered inferior. On the contrary, the practical rule that the translator will do well to follow is that he should use the parallel structure whenever possible, and resort to syntactic or semantic transformations only if it is unavoidable.

Thus in all cases the translator makes a choice between a parallel structure and a transformed one in TL. Selecting the transformation to be used in a particular case he draws upon his knowledge of syntactic equivalents and the theory of equivalence.

The choice of the syntactical structure of the translated sentence often depends on the TL co-occurrence rules. The problem of co-occurrence is one with which the translator has not infrequently to come to grips in translating different word combinations, as the rules of combinability in SL and TL do not dovetail. This lack of correspondence limits the freedom of the translator's choice and compels him to employ special techniques to overcome this barrier.

Translations from English into Russian give ample proof of the significance of this difference in co-occurrence. Just try to render into Russian such combinations as "a hopeful voice", "a successful leader", "a cooperative assistance", etc. and you will see that they are easy to understand but cannot be translated "as they are" since the corresponding Russian words do not come together.

Dealing with such problems translators use one of the following methods: they either replace one or both members of the original combination to make possible the same type of structure in translation, or they transfer the dependent member to another structure, or they introduce some additional elements (words) through which the members of the combination can be joined syntactically.

Let us give examples.

Some of these countries have established new constitutions.

In Russian constitutions cannot be established but they can be adopted. Therefore:

Некоторые из этих стран приняли новые конституции, (or: В некоторых из этих стран были приняты новые конституции.)

The AFL leaders have a corrupt alliance with the employers.

Since in Russian the usual correspondence to "corrupt" (продажный) can be applied only to human beings, we can have either «преступный союз» or «преступный сговор» or something like that. But we can also preserve the meaning of "corrupt" by referring its Russian equivalent to another word in the sentence:

Продажные лидеры АФТ вступили в преступный союз с предпринимателями .

The country had sincere and successful leaders. В стране честные руководители, добившиеся значительных успехов.

After all, successful leaders are those who have achieved good successes and the original meaning is fully preserved in the translation, though in a rather long-winded manner.

An additional way to deal with the problem of co-occurrence is through a choice of different parts of speech. "A cooperative assistance" is difficult to translate into Russian where «сотрудничающая помощь» is an unacceptable combination. But if both words were translated as nouns the problem would be solved:


We owe this success to the cooperative assistance of the Soviet Union. Мы обязаны этим успехом сотрудничеству и помощи со стороны Советского Союза.

The change in the parts of speech is a common procedure in translation. It often enables the translator to modify his variant to improve its stylistic or emotional effect. So, for 'The wind was becoming stronger" the translator has the choice of «Ветер дул все сильнее» and «Ветер крепчал», for "I didn't mean to be rude" he may choose between «Я не хотел быть грубым» and «Я не собирался вам грубить».

Sometimes, the use of a different part of speech is unavoidable: "He was furious" — «Он был в бешенстве»

The elements of the translator's techniques described above give only a general idea of his professional strategy. Translation is a creative process of search and discovery and it takes much ingenuity and effort to apply the general principles of the translation theory to the practical problems.

Strategies of translation involve the basic tasks of choosing the foreign text to be translated and developing a method to translate it. Both of these tasks are determined by various factors: cultural, economic, political. Yet the many different strategies that have emerged since antiquity can perhaps be divided into two large categories. A translation project may conform to values currently dominating the target-language culture, taking a conservative and openly assimilationist approach to the foreign text, appropriating it to support domestic canons, publishing trends, and political alignments. Alternatively, a translation project may resist and aim to revise the dominant by drawing on the marginal, restoring foreign texts excluded by domestic canons, recovering residual values such as archaic texts and translation methods, and cultivating emergent ones (for example, new cultural forms). Strategies in producing translations inevitably emerge in response to domestic cultural situations. But some are deliberately domesticating in their handling of the foreign text, while others can be described as foreignizing, motivated by an impulse to preserve linguistic and cultural differences by deviating from prevailing domestic values.

Domesticating Strategies

Domesticating strategies have been implemented at least since ancient Rome, when, as Nietzsche remarked, ‘translation was a form of conquest’ and Latin poets like Horace and Propertues translated Greek texts ‘into the Roman present’: they had no time for all those very personal things and names and whatever might be considered the costume and mask of a city, a coast, or a century’. As a result, Latin translators not only deleted culturally specific markers but also added allusions to Roman culture and replaced the name of the Greek poet with their own, passing the translation off as a text originally written in Latin.

Such strategies find their strongest and most influential advocates in the French and English translation traditions, particularly during the early modern period. Here it is evident that domestication involves an adherence to domestic literary canons both in choosing a foreign text and in developing a translation method. Nicolas Perrot D’Ablancourt, a prolific French translator of Greek and Latin, argued that the elliptical brevity of Tacitus’ prose must be rendered freely, with the insertion of explanatory phrases and the deletion of digressions, so as ‘to avoid offending the delicacy of our language and the correctness of reason’. The domestic values that such a strategy inscribed in the foreign text were affiliated with an aristocratic literary culture but they were also distinctly nationalist. Under D’Ablancourt’s influence, the English translator Sir John Denham rendered book 2 of the Aeneid in heroic couplets, asserting that ‘if Virgil must needs speak English, it were fit he should speak not only as a man of this age’. In domesticating foreign texts D’Ablancourt and Denham did not simply modernize them; both translators were in fact maintaining the literary standards of the social elite while constructing cultural identities for their nations on the basis of archaic foreign cultures.

Economic considerations sometimes underlie a domesticating strategy in translation, but they are always qualified by current cultural and political developments. The enormous success that greeted the English version of Italian writer Umberto Eco’s novel The Name of the Rose (1983) drove American publishers to pursue the translation rights for similar foreign texts at the international book fairs. Yet what most contributed to the success of the translation was the cheer familiarity of Eco’s narrative to American readers fond of such popular genres as historical romances and murder mysteries. By the same token, the Italian novelist Giovanni Guareschi was a best-seller in English translation during the 1950s and 1960s largely because his social satires of Italian village life championed Christian Democratic values and therefore appealed to American readers absorbing the Anti-Soviet propaganda of the Cold War era. The eponymous hero of Guareschi’s first book in English, The Little World of Don Camillo (1950), is a priest that engages in amusing ideological skirmishes with a Communist mayor and always comes out the victor.


Domesticating translation has frequently been enlisted in the service of specific domestic agendas, imperialist, evangelical, professional. Sir William Jones, president of the Asiatic Society and an administrator of the East India Company, translated the Institute of Hindu Law (1799) into English to increase the effectiveness of British colonization, constructing a racist image of the Hindus as unreliable interpreters of their native culture. For Eugene Nida, domestication assists the Christian missionary: as translation consultant to organizations dedicated to the dissemination of the Bible, he has supervised numerous translations that relate the receptor to modes of behavior relevant within the context of his own culture. The multivolume English version of Freud’s texts known as the Standard Edition assimilated his ideas to the positivism dominating the human sciences in Anglo-American culture and thus facilitated the acceptance of psychoanalysis in the medical profession and in academic psychology.

Foreignizing strategies

A foreignizing strategy in translation was first formulated in German culture during the classical and Romantic periods, perhaps most decisively by the philosopher and theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher. In an 1813 lecture “On the Different Methods of Translating”, Schleiermacher argued that there are only two. Either the translator leaves the author in peace, as much as possible, and moves the reader toward him. Or he leaves the reader in peace, as much as possible, and moves the author toward him. Schleiermacher acknowledged that most translation was domesticating, an ethnocentric reduction of foreign text to target language cultural values, bringing the author back home. But he much preferred a foreignizing strategy, an ethnodeviant pressure on those values to register the linguistic and cultural difference of the foreign text, sending the reader abroad.

The French theorist Antoine Berman viewed Schleiermacher’s argument as an ethics of translation, concerned with making the translated text a site where a cultural other is not erased but manifested – even if this otherness can never be manifested in its own terms, only in those of the target language. For while foreignizing translation seeks to evoke a sense of the foreign, it necessarily answers to a domestic situation, where it may be designed to serve a cultural and political agenda. Schleiermacher himself saw this translation strategy as an important practice in the Prussian nationalist movement during the Napoleonic Wars: he felt that it could enrich the German language by developing an elite literature free of the French influence that was then dominating German culture, which would thus be able to realize its historical destiny of global domination.

Yet in so far as Schleiermacher theorized translation as the locus of cultural difference, not the homogeneity that his imperialist nationalism might imply, he was effectively recommending a trabslation practice that would undermine any language-based concept of a national culture, or indeed any domestic agenda. A foreignizing strategy can signify the difference of the foreign text only by assuming an oppositional stance toward the domestic literary canons, professional standards, and ethical norms in the target language. Hence, when foreignizing translation is revived by twentieth-century German theorist like Rudolf Pannwitz and walter Benjamin, it is seen as an instrument of cultural innovation. For Pannwitz, the translator makes a fundamental error when he maintains the state in which his own language happens to be instead of allowing his language his language to be strongly affected by the foreign language.

From its origin in the German tradition, foreignizing translation has meant a close adherence to the foreign text, a literalism that resulted in the importation of foreign cultural forms and the development of heterogeneous dialects and discourses. Johan Heinrich Voss’s hexameter versions of the Odyssey (1781) and the Iliad (1793) introduced this prosodic form into German poetry, eliciting Goethe’s praise for putting rhetorical, rhythmical, metrical advantages at the disposal of the talented and acknowledgeable youngster. Friedrich Holderlin’s translations of Sophocles’ Antigone and Oedipus Rex (1804) draw on archaic and nonstandard dialects (Old High German and Swabian) while incorporating diverse religious discourses, both dominant (Lutheran) and marginal (Pietistic). Holderlin exemplifies the risk of incomprehension that is involved in any foreignizing strategy: in the effort to stage an alien reading experience, his translations s deviated from native literary canons as to seem obscure and even unreadable to his contemporaries.

Foreignizing entails choosing a foreign text and developing a translation method along lines which are excluded by dominant cultural values in the target language. During the eighteenth century, Dr John Nott reformed the canon of foreign literatures in English by devising translation projects that focused on the love lyric instead of the epic or satire, the most widely translating genres in the period. He published versions of Johannes Secundus Nicolaius (1775), Petrarch (1777), Hafiz (1787), Bonefonius (1797), and the first book-length collections of Propertius (1782) and Catullus (1795). Nott rejected the fastidious regard to delicacy that might have required him to delete the explicit sexual references in Catullus’ poems, because he felt that history should not be falsified. His translation provoked a moral panic among reviewers, who renewed the attack decades later when expressing their preferences for George Lamb’s bowdlerized Catullus (1821).


Domesticating vs. foreignizing strategies

Determining whether a translation project is domesticating or foreignizing clearly depends on a detailed reconstruction of the cultural formation in which the translation is produced and consumed; what is domestic or foreign can be defined only with reference to the changing hierarchy of values in the target language culture. For example, a foreignizing translation may constitute a historical interpretation of the foreign text that is opposed to prevailing critical opinion. In the Victorian controversy that pitted Francis Newman’s Iliad (1895) against Matthew Arnold’s Oxford lectures O n Translating Homer (1860), what was foreignizing about Newman’s translation was not only that it used archaism to indicate the historical difference of the Greek text, but that it presented Homer as a popular rather than elite poet. Newman cast his translation in ballad metre and constructed an archaic lexicon from widely read genres like the historical novel; he thought that Sir Walter Scott would have been the ideal translator of Homer. Arnold argued, however, that Homer should be rendered in hexameters and modern English so as to bring the translation in line with the current academic reception of the Greek text. Whereas wanted to address an audience that was non-specialist and non-academic, composed of different social groups, Arnold aimed to please classical scholars, who, he felt, were the only readers qualified to judge translations from classical languages. Newman’s translation strategy was foreignizing because populist; the translation that Arnold preferred was domesticating because elitist, assimilating Homer to literary values housed in authoritative cultural institutions like the university.

Foreignizing strategies have usually been implemented in literary as opposed to technical translation. Technical translation is fundamentally domesticating: intended to support scientific research, geopolitical negotiation, and economic exchange, it is constrained by the exigencies of communication and therefore renders foreign text in standard dialects and terminologies to ensure immediate intelligibility. Literary translation, in contrast, focuses on linguistic effects that exceed simple communication (tone, connotation, polysemy, intertextuality) and are measured against domestic literary values, both canonical and marginal. A literary translator can thus experiment in the choice of foreign texts and in the development of translation methods, constrained primarily by the current situation in the target language culture.


Lecture 4

Equivalence in Translation after Vanessa Leonardi


The comparison of texts in different languages inevitably involves a theory of equivalence. Equivalence can be said to be the central issue in translation although its definition, relevance, and applicability within the field of translation theory have caused heated controversy, and many different theories of the concept of equivalence have been elaborated within this field in the past fifty years.

Whenever there is deficiency, terminology may be qualified and amplified by loanwords or loan translations, neologisms or semantic shifts, and finally, by circumlocutions

The aim of this paper is to review the theory of equivalence as interpreted by some of the most innovative theorists in this field—Vinay and Darbelnet, Jakobson, Nida and Taber, Catford, House, and finally Baker. These theorists have studied equivalence in relation to the translation process, using different approaches, and have provided fruitful ideas for further study on this topic. Their theories will be analyzed in chronological order so that it will be easier to follow the evolution of this concept. These theories can be substantially divided into three main groups. In the first there are those translation scholars who are in favour of a linguistic approach to translation and who seem to forget that translation in itself is not merely a matter of linguistics. In fact, when a message is transferred from the SL to TL, the translator is also dealing with two different cultures at the same time. This particular aspect seems to have been taken into consideration by the second group of theorists who regard translation equivalence as being essentially a transfer of the message from the SC to the TC and a pragmatic/semantic or functionally oriented approach to translation. Finally, there are other translation scholars who seem to stand in the middle, such as Baker for instance, who claims that equivalence is used 'for the sake of convenience—because most translators are used to it rather than because it has any theoretical status'.

Vinay and Darbelnet and their definition of equivalence in translation

Vinay and Darbelnet view equivalence-oriented translation as a procedure which 'replicates the same situation as in the original, whilst using completely different wording'. They also suggest that, if this procedure is applied during the translation process, it can maintain the stylistic impact of the SL text in the TL text. According to them, equivalence is therefore the ideal method when the translator has to deal with proverbs, idioms, clichés, nominal or adjectival phrases and the onomatopoeia of animal sounds.


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