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1.
Parliamentary interpreting in Malaysia : a case study por
  • Ibrahim, Noraini
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: INTERPRETACIÓN DE CONFERENCIAS; INTÉRPRETES; INVESTIGACIÓN EN INTERPRETACIÓN; FORMACIÓN PROFESIONAL; MALASIA; PARLAMENTO; STATUS DEL INTERPRETE; TRABAJO.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: This article seeks to describe the current scenario of parliamentary interpreting in Malaysia by studying the interpreters' work nature, aptitude and qualifications as well as remuneration and promotional opportunity. It also highlights the important aspects of the profession such as job mystification, training and continuing education, the connection between the training centres and the professional environment, the need to educate the public through the establishment of professional associations, and the implementation of an ethics code as well as the sense of professionalism among the interpreters. The author also proposes ways to improve the situation which would contribute to the professionalisation of interpreting in the Malaysian Parliament particularly and in Malaysia in general.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

2.
Interpreters and the writing of history in China por
  • Lung, Rachel
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: CHINA; HISTORIA DE LA INTERPRETACIÓN; HISTORIOGRAFIA; INTÉRPRETES; RELACIONES INTERNACIONALES; SIGLO VI; SIGLO VII; TRADUCCIÓN DEL/AL CHINO.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Idioma: Chino
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: This article argues that interpreters are crucial figures in the recording of history. Evidence taken from historical texts in ancient China is used to verify the claim that interpreters' notes might have been used as a reference in composing historical records. By documenting the Tang dynasty (AD 618-907) policy to have interpreters interview foreign envoys and submit the relevant accounts to the Bureau of Historiography, this article provides background for the link between interpreters' interview notes and history compilation in China. Evidence is further drawn from the history of the Sui dynasty (AD 581-618), whereby an interpreter's mediated account of the emperor's conversation with a Japanese envoy was directly adapted. Most interestingly, pictorial and written documents of foreign peoples made in the mid-6th century during the Liang dynasty (AD 502-557) were found to be very similar to the written accounts about these foreign peoples in Liangshu, the history of the Liang dynasty, completed in the early 7th century. Apparently, there is a solid link between the interview accounts and historical accounts about foreign peoples in China. Thus, there is a strong possibility that interpreters' notes, in the form of reports, provide important, if not primary, sources for history compilation in China.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

3.
The interpreter, the monitor and the language arbiter por
  • Takeda, Kayoko
Series Meta Volume 54, numéro 2, juin 2009 ; v. 54, n. 2Temas: CALIDAD DE LA INTERPRETACIÓN; FILIPINAS; INTERPRETACIÓN JUDICIAL; INTÉRPRETES; JUICIOS; MILITARISMO; PROCESO DE LA INTERPRETACIÓN; TRADUCCION DEL/AL INGLES; TRADUCCION DEL/AL JAPONES; TRIBUNALES INTERNACIONES.
Origen: Meta, volume 54, numéro 2
Tipo de material: Recurso continuo Recurso continuo
Detalles de publicación: Montréal : Université de Montréal, juin 2009
Resumen: The trustworthiness of translators and interpreters has long been an issue in the profession. In some cases, a set of procedures are established to ensure the trust of clients and end-users. In the International Military Tribunal for the Far East (1946-1948), such procedures took on remarkable form. During the trial, three ethnically and socially different groups of language personnel engaged in three different functions within the overall interpreting process: Japanese nationals as interpreters, Japanese Americans as monitors, and U.S. military officers as language arbiters who ruled on the disputed interpretations. Sociopolitical aspects such as trust, power and control are evident in this hierarchical structure. In such political settings, and in others seen today, the trustworthiness of the interpreter may override the quality of interpreting.
Acceso en línea:
Disponibilidad: Ítems disponibles para préstamo: Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre (1)Signatura topográfica: H 23.

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