Obscuring the speaker’s stance : when explicitating results in implicitation [Recurso electrónico]
Tipo de material: Recurso continuoIdioma: Francés Series Meta Volume 65, numéro 3, décembre 2020 ; v. 65, n. 3Detalles de publicación: : Université de Montréal Montréal , 2020Descripción: p. 745-765ISSN:- 0026-0452
- Meta Translators' Journal
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
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Artículos/Analíticas | Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre | Colección Digital | H 23 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible | META-65-3_745-765 |
The paradox that lies at the heart of the phenomenon of explicitation, taken as a broad category, is that explicitation on one level of analysis can correspond to implicitation on another. Some explicitations add or change linguistic elements to clarify the original text, others serve to reinforce the original speaker’s attitude; however, clarifying the text might in fact affect its global meaning, in particular when the text’s intention is precisely to remain obscure. In these cases, from a semantic or syntactic point of view, such translational shifts are explicitations, but on a deeper level of meaning, they can be considered implicitations, since they obscure the speaker’s stance, thus making the global meaning of the text more implicit. We thus advocate studying narratological explicitness from the angle of the more specific phenomenon of “reduction of complex narrative voices” (Chesterman 2010: 41).
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