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Monday, 18 April 2011 18:57

Useful Contacts

General information on the conference

Conference Chair:  Prof. Charlyn Dyers, University of the Western Cape

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Facsimile (att. Lameez Lalkhen) +27 +21 959-1282

 

Conference programme and presenters

Prof. Alet Kruger, University of South Africa

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Dr Kim Wallmach, University of South Africa

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Dr Dorothy Kenny, Dublin City University

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Publishers’ exhibition

Prof. Ilse Feienhauer, University of Stellenbosch

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Accommodation, the conference dinner and tours

 

FAIRFIELD CORPORATE VENTURES

Tel:  +27 (21) 936 4600

Fax:  +27 (21) 936 4654

Website:  www.fairfieldtours.com

Melanie Koegelenberg

Conference Co-ordinator

E-mail:  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Candice America

Conference Co-ordinator

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Monday, 18 April 2011 18:57

Practical Information

 

Travel to South Africa

Flights to South Africa land either at Johannesburg International Airport and then fly to Cape Town International Airport or flights may also be booked directly to Cape Town International Airport. Delegates wishing to visit a game reserve such as the Kruger National Park before the conference should book flights to Johannesburg International Airport, take a domestic flight to the park and then depart from Cape Town International Airport after the conference.

 

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Car Rental

 

Europcar, Hertz, Avis, Budget and Imperial car hire are all represented in South Africa.

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Passports and visas

 

Nationals from most Australasian, European and South American countries, the UK, USA and Canada do not require a visa for South Africa. However, it is advisable for all visitors to check with their nearest South African Diplomatic Mission or travel agent. It is essential that the formalities of visa applications be dealt with at least eight weeks prior to the conference. VISAS CANNOT BE ISSUED ON ARRIVAL. Conference participants travelling to South Africa on passports that require visas and who plan to visit neighbouring states should ensure that they obtain multi-entry visas for South Africa, as well as visas required for the particular neighbouring state(s).

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Health requirements

 

Conference participants planning to visit the Kruger National Park and surrounding areas are advised to take a course of anti-malarial treatment in advance of their visit. Cape Town, Stellenbosch, Pretoria, Johannesburg and environs are all malaria-free. No other vaccinations are needed for visitors to South Africa.

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Credit cards, currency and exchange rate

 

Most major credit cards as well as travellers’ cheques in major currencies are accepted in shops and restaurants in South Africa. Autobanks are located at airports and in shopping centres country-wide. The local currency is South African Rand. Click here for an online currency converter.

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Climate and dress

 

South Africa ranks high in the world as far as sunny days are concerned – 300 days out of 365 on average.  Despite regional differences, South Africa’s climate is generally mild throughout the year. Overall, the Western Cape climate is typically Mediterranean, with warm, dry summers and mild, moist winters. Click here for an up-to-date weather forecast.

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Electricity

 

The standard power source in South Africa is 200/230 volts. For most foreign appliances it is best to purchase an adaptor or transformer to link with local electrical power.

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Time

 

South Africa is two hours ahead of Universal Time.

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Liability

 

The organisers, the tour operator and their subsidiaries or associated companies give notice that they do not accept responsibility or liability in respect of either person or property, for injury, damage, loss, accident, delay or irregularity which may be occasioned as a result of attendance of the conference and participation in the tours.

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Monday, 18 April 2011 18:56

Conference Venue

The conference will be held at the University of the Western Cape (UWC) in Bellville. The University, which celebrated its 40th anniversary in the year 2000, is one of the youngest and most dynamic places of higher learning in South Africa.

 

The University of the Western Capewas established in 1959 by an Act of Parliament as an ethnic college for "coloured" students. Since then, it has transformed itself from a small apartheid educational institution to an internationally recognised university with a reputation for excellence in teaching, learning and research. UWC has a rich history of opposition to apartheid. For nearly three decades - from the 1970s through to the early 1990s -students and staff consistently protested against segregation and inequality in society and, particularly, in higher education.

Bellville is situated in the northern suburbs of Cape Town. It is 20 minutes’ drive from Cape Town international airport, half an hour’s drive from Cape Town city centre, and approximately half an hour from Stellenbosch, the heart of the Cape winelands region.

 

Cape Town is famous for its stunning views, and visitors can also enjoy the delights of its scenic harbour from the popular Victoria & Alfred Waterfront complex.

For a map of the area click here.

Monday, 18 April 2011 18:56

IATIS 2006 Sponsors

Flemish Inter-university Council (VLIR) of Belgium

The Conference Organizing Committee of the 2nd International IATIS Conference at the University of the Western Cape gratefully acknowledges the generous sponsorship received from the Flemish Inter-university Council (VLIR) of Belgium. This funding was received as part of the funding for the Culture, Language and Identity Research Project in the Faculty of Arts at the University of the  Western Cape.

 

Monday, 18 April 2011 18:55

Social Programme

Social Programme

 

 

This page contains information on:

Tours, transfers and Conference Dinner tickets have to be booked using the relevant form (click here to download it). For further information you may contact:

 

FAIRFIELD CORPORATE VENTURES

Tel:  +27 (21) 936 4600

Fax:  +27 (21) 936 4654

Website:  www.fairfieldtours.com

Melanie Koegelenberg

Conference Co-ordinator

E-mail:  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Candice America

Conference Co-ordinator

E-mail:  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

DAY TOURS

Prices Include:

  • English speaking driver/guide on Microbuses, but driver only on Sprinters.
  • Entrance fees & wine tastings, but exclude lunch, beverages, gratuities, all optional events, cable car/ funicular fare up Table Mountain.

THE PENINSULA – Full Day Tour

Tuesday 11 July 8:30- approx 16:30

Sunday 16 July 8:30- approx 18:00

 

Rate Per Person: R 520.00

(Based on Minimum 2 Persons)

 

Travel along the beautiful coastline of the Cape Peninsula, through historic and picturesque villages to the mythical meeting place of the two great oceans.

  • Travel through Sea Point, Clifton and Camps Bay

  • Hout Bay Harbour (optional Seal Island boat trip, not included in cost)

  • Noordhoek and Ostrich viewing (time permitting)

  • On to Cape Point and Nature Reserve. Unforgettable plant, bird and animal life

  • Lunch at Cape Point

  • Penguin Colony (optional)

  • Historic Simonstown

  • Groot Constantia wine estate or

  • Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens

THE PENINSULA – Half Day Tour

Saturday 15 July 8:30-12:30

Rate Per Person:  R 416.00

(Based on Minimum 2 Persons)

  • Travel through Sea Point, Clifton and Camps Bay

  • Hout Bay Harbour

  • Noordhoek - Ostrich viewing (time permitting)

  • Cape Point and Nature Reserve

  • Historic Simonstown - Penguin colony

THE CAPE WINELANDS – Full Day Tour

Saturday 15 July 8:30-18:00

Rate Per Person:  R 520.00

(Based on Minimum 2 Persons)

Take a trip into the heart of the winelands, through breathtaking mountain ranges and fertile valleys. Observe the wine making process and enjoy "the nectar of the Gods" amidst fascinating history.

  • Historic Stellenbosch

  • Wine Estate, cellar tour and wine tasting

  • Wine tasting

  • Paarl

  • On the way to Franschhoek, pass Victor Verster prison where Nelson Mandela was held.

  • Franschhoek - Huguenot Memorial

  • Spier Wine Estate via Stellenbosch route. View cheetahs (time permitting)

  • Purchase wine

CAPE TOWN – MOTHER CITY – Half Day Tour

Saturday 15 July 13:30-approx 17:30

Rate per person: R 335.00

(Based on Minimum 2 Persons)

A historical, cultural and scenic orientation tour, showing you the city from its rich origin to the bustling present modern day splendour.

  • Table Mountain - World Heritage Site (weather permitting)

  • City Centre and historic Castle of Good Hope

  • Company Gardens and SA Museum

  • Bo-Kaap and District Six Museum

  • Green Market Square flea market or

  • Victoria & Alfred Waterfront

THE TOWNSHIP CULTURAL EXPERIENCE – Half Day Tour

Tuesday 11 July 12:30-approx 16:30

Saturday 15 July 13:30-approx 17:30

Rate Per Person:  R 385.00

(Based on Minimum 2 Persons)

Enjoy the multicultural life of the Cape by meeting and speaking to the local communities. Interact with locals in their own living environments and experience the multi-diversity of our sought-after city.

  • Bo-Kaap and exciting Malay Quarter

  • District Six Museum

  • Cape Flats

  • Visit a traditional shop (sphaza) or tavern (shebeen) in a township

AQUILA GAME RESERVE – Full Day Tour

Sunday 16 July 8:30-approx 18:00

Rate Per Person: R 1 630.00

(Based on Minimum 2 Persons)

Travel through Huguenot Tunnel past beautiful de Doorns in the Hex River valley to Aquila.

Welcoming refreshments, game drive, bushman paintings and lunch in an outdoor lapa. Stroll through curio and wine shop, or enjoy a port or sherry in the lounge before returning to Cape Town.


ROBBEN ISLAND – Half Day Tour (Weather permitting)

Sunday 16 July

A ferry trip and bus tour around Robben Island (where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 27 years and now a World Heritage site) is available every day from 9 to 16h00. Some ex-political prisoners act as tour guides.

Tours start every hour on the hour. The tour takes approx. 3 and a half hours.

Please book directly with the operators at the Clock Tower at the V& A Waterfront or book via www.robben-island.org.za. Please be aware that the tours are subject to favourable weather conditions.

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AIRPORT TRANSFERS

One Way Airport Transfers to any of the following hotels:

  • V&A Hotel

  • Radisson

  • Breakwater Lodge

  • City Lodge Waterfront

  • Victoria Junction

  • Cape Grace

  • Feathers Lodge

  • Bell Rosen Guest House

  • Evertsdal Guest House

  • D'Aria Guest Cottages

Rate Based on Minimum 2 Persons:  R 310.00 per person one way

Rate Based on Maximum 7 Persons: R 420 per minibus one way

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CONFERENCE DINNER

CONFERENCE DINNER AT MOYO

Friday 14 July

Traditional African cuisine

Rate:  R320.00 incl transport

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Monday, 18 April 2011 18:55

Accomodation Details

Accommodation has to be booked using the relevant form (click here to download it). For further information you may contact:

 

FAIRFIELD CORPORATE VENTURES

Tel:  +27 (21) 936 4600

Fax:  +27 (21) 936 4654

Website:  www.fairfieldtours.com

Melanie Koegelenberg

Conference Co-ordinator

E-mail:  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Candice America

Conference Co-ordinator

E-mail:  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

 

ACCOMMODATION BOOKING AND RATES

  • Rates are subject to change without prior notification.

  • Please note that all the above prices cannot be guaranteed, due to annual inflationary and producer price increases.  An annual increase of 10-15% can be assumed.

  • Rates exclude any other transport and extras (such as gratuity, meals, beverages, activities, etc) not mentioned in the proposal.

VICTORIA & ALFRED HOTEL - Waterfront

Luxury Hotel

Provisional Booking: 30 x Single Rooms

(15 x Mountain Facing & 15 x Piazza Facing)

10 x Piazza Facing:  R 905.00 per room per night (B&B)

5 x Piazza Facing:  R 1,123.00 per room per night (B&B)

10 x Mountain Facing:  R 1,220.00 per room per night (B&B)

5 x Mountain Facing:  R 1,500.00 per room per night (B&B)

RADISSON HOTEL - Waterfront

Luxury Hotel

Provisional Booking:  53 x Single Rooms

Single:  R 1,125.00 per room per night (B&B)

Sharing:  R 1,350.00 per room per night (B&B)

CITY LODGE WATERFRONT - Waterfront

Comfortable accommodation 5 minutes’ walk from the Waterfront and Cape Town City Centre

Provisional Booking:  60 x Single Rooms

Single:  R 684.00 per room per night (B&B)

BREAKWATER LODGE - Waterfront

Very basic accommodation 2 minutes’  walk from the Waterfront and 5 minutes’ walk from Cape Town city centre.

Provisional Booking:  40 x Single Rooms

Single:  R 635.00 per room per night (B&B)

PROTEA HOTEL VICTORIA JUNCTION - Waterfront

Good accommodation 10 minutes’ walk from the Waterfront, 5 minutes’ walk from Cape Town city centre

Provisional Booking:  50 x Single Rooms

Single:  R 1,164.00 per room per night (Room Only)

Breakfast:  R 95.00 per person

FEATHERS LODGE - Bellville / Durbanville

Guest House close to the University of the Western Cape, 20 minutes’ drive from the Waterfront

Single Room:   R 550.00 per room per night

(Standard Room, room only)

Double Room:   R 750.00 per room per night

(Standard Room, room only)

Breakfast:  R 60.00 per person

EVERTSDAL GUEST HOUSE - Bellville / Eversdal

Guest House close to the University of the Western Cape, 20 minutes’ drive from the Waterfront

Single Room:  R 520.00 per room per night (B&B)

Double Room:  R 770.00 per room per night (B&B)

BELL ROSEN GUEST HOUSE - Bellville / Welgemoed

Guest House close to the University of the Western Cape, 20 minutes’ drive from the Waterfront

Single Room:   R 545.00 per room per night (B&B)

Double Room:   R 655.00 per room per night (B&B)

view overlooking vineyard

D’ARIA GUEST COTTAGES - Durbanville

Guest House relatively close to the University of the Western Cape, 20 minutes’ drive from the Waterfront.

Single Room (Cottage): R 420.00 per room per

night (room only)

Sharing Cottage:  R 540.00 per cottage per

night (room only, maximum 2 persons per cottage)

Breakfast:  R 47.00 per person

Monday, 18 April 2011 18:55

Registration Details

To register for the IATIS 2006 Conference, you will need to need to fill in and send the two downloadable registration forms listed below.

Specific contact details, instructions and fees are available within each of the registration forms.

Form A. Conference Registration Form

Word Version

Pdf version

Form B. Accommodation and Tour Reservations

Word Version

Pdf version

 
 

IATIS Members

Non-members

 

Full Rate

Student Rate

Full Rate

Student Rate

Rand

Euro

Rand

Euro

Rand

Euro

Rand

Euro

Early Registration

(before 30th April 2006)

1,525

 

208 ca.

1,130

 

155 ca.

1,990

 

273

ca.

1,560

 

214 ca.

Late Registration

(from 1st May 2006)

1,720

 

236

ca.

1,360

 

186 ca.

2,185

 

288 ca.

1,680

 

230 ca.

 

 

Registration Fee includes: bus transfers to UWC on conference days; lunches and coffee on conference days; registration; book of abstracts.

IATIS Membership fees depend on where you live, whether or not you are a student, etc. For info on membership fees and joining IATIS, click here (link opens in a new window).

 

 

Rand

Euro

Conference Dinner (including transport)

320

40 approx.

 

Conversions to Euro assume an exchange rate of 1 Euro = 7.80880 South African Rand; 1 South African Rand (ZAR) = 0.12806 Euro (EUR); Please note that the payment should be made in Rand. See currency converter for the latest exchange rate.

Monday, 18 April 2011 18:54

Workshops

Workshop 1. Subtitling, Training for Trainers

Jorge Días-Cintas (University of Roehampton, U.K.) & Aline Remael (University College Antwerp, Belgium)

Tuesday 11 July 2006, Time:  10:30-14:00, (Venue: GH2)

Workshop 2. NEW VOICES Surgery: Writing successful academic papers

Gabriela Saldanha (Imperial College, London) & Marion Winters (Dublin City University, Ireland)

Tuesday 11 July 2006, Time:  14:15-17:15, (Venue: GH3)

 

Workshop 1. Subtitling, Training for Trainers

Jorge Días-Cintas (University of Roehampton, U.K.) & Aline Remael (University College Antwerp, Belgium)*

Tuesday 11 July 2006, Time:  10:30-14:00, (Venue: GH2)

*Co-authors of Audiovisual translation. Subtitling (forthcoming, St Jerome, Manchester)

Software used: WinCaps

Subtitling is one of the best-known forms of audiovisual translation (AVT) worldwide. It has basically been around since movies started talking and it appears to have a bright future. Not only is it well established in a number of European “subtitling countries” as they are traditionally called, but it is also making inroads in other, traditional “dubbing countries”, and worldwide in countries where new forms of AVT are being developed and explored. Besides television and cinema, DVD and the Internet are also providing new outlets. Subtitling is attractive because it is relatively inexpensive, it allows viewers access to the original film, and can be used to promote language learning and multilingualism.

An increasing number of universities and colleges of higher education are now offering translation programmes with subtitling as an “option” or fully-fledged MA programmes in AVT, including subtitling. The drawback of teaching AVT is that (expensive) specialized software is required. However, many commercial producers of subtitling software offer special packages for education and some simple but quite good programmes can be downloaded from the Internet.

This workshop will take the form of a seminar. It will be taught in a computerlab with WinCaps software and will consist of three parts.

1. Curriculum Development (J. Díaz-Cintas)

First we will look at the requirements for curricula in AVT, especially programmes that include subtitling. What kind of courses need to be taught? How many hours? To what size groups?

2. Teaching Subtitling: Theory & Practice (J. Díaz-Cintas & A. Remael)

In this subsection we will look at the different stages in subtitler training and how they can be tackled in a teaching environment. The material used will be drawn from our book Audiovisual Translation: Subtitling. The following issues will be covered:

2.1 Introduction to subtitling: translation or adaptation?

2.2 The semiotics of subtitling: interaction with the filmic text

2.3 Technical considerations (spatial and temporal dimensions)

2.4 Punctuation and other conventions

2.5 The Linguistics of Subtitling (segmentation, condensation, reformulation)

2.6 Challenging translation issues (cultural references, humour, songs)

2.7 The professional environment

2.8 Useful websites and other sources of information, different software

The participants will be given sample exercises for topics 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5 and 2.6 that can easily be multiplied, or reworked with new filmic material for other classes.

3. Evaluating Subtitling (A. Remael)

Evaluation is seen a part of teaching. The evaluation of subtitles and subtitlers involves parameters that are somewhat different from those commonly applied to more “traditional” forms of translation. We will discuss subtitling evaluation as part of the learning process or “formative” evaluation and evaluation as assessment of the final product or “summative” evaluation.

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Workshop 2. NEW VOICES Surgery: Writing successful academic papers

Presenters: Jeremy Munday, Gaby Saldanha & Marion Winters

Panellists: Mona Baker, Carol Maier, Juliane House, Jeremy Munday & Jorge Días-Cintas

Tuesday 11 July 2006, Time:  14:15-17:15, (Venue: GH3)

New researchers often hear that publications are very important for their careers and are therefore keen to start publishing early. However, is any paper better than none? Academic papers are, in a way, the introduction cards of new researchers. The aim of this workshop will be to offer guidelines that will help new researchers plan and write successful academic papers. It will cover several key issues, such as:

  • how to judge when a certain piece of research is ready to be disseminated to a wider audience;

  • how to decide what to include, in terms of background theory as well as data;

  • publishing outlets;

  • strategies for packaging a piece of work in ways that maximize its chances of getting accepted by refereed journals;

  • how to write good abstracts; and

  • tips on English academic writing and publishing conventions.

The workshop will include two introductory talks followed by a hands-on workshop and a panel discussion of key questions arising from the audience.

 

Programme


First talk (approx 30 min):

Speaker: Jeremy Munday

Topic: Writing a successful academic paper


Second talk (approx 30 min):

Speakers: Marion Winters & Gaby Saldanha

Topic: The reviewing and editing process, New Voices as an example

 

Hands-on session (approx. 75 min):

Putting the theory of writing an academic paper into practice


Panel discussion (approx. 45 min): Key questions arising during the workshop

Panellists: Mona Baker, Carol Maier, Juliane House & Jeremy Munday

Chair: Jorge Días-Cintas

 

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Monday, 18 April 2011 18:54

Plenary Sessions

Translation and/as (Re)Contextualization

Jef Verschueren

IPrA Research Center, University of Antwerp, Belgium

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While translation is sometimes thought of (though usually not by professional translators) as an exceptional activity (the province of professionals or those who have similarly acquired the necessary skills), this paper emphasizes its omnipresence. The following quote is the starting point:

“Unlike my parents, I translate not so much to survive in the world around me as to create and illuminate a non-existent one. Fiction is the foreign land of my choosing, the place where I strive to convey and preserve the meaningful. And whether I write as an American or an Indian, about things American or Indian or otherwise, one thing remains constant: I translate, therefore I am.” (Jhumpa Lahiri, “Intimate alienation: Immigrant fiction and translation”, in Rukmini Bhaya Nair (ed.), 2002, Translation, Text and Theory: The Paradigm of India, New Delhi: Sage, p. 120)

Adding to this as a point of theoretical reference the pragmatic notion of variability (i.e. the changeable range of options from which linguistic choices are made when language is used), the paper reviews phenomena such as

  • changes in wording as a message passes through different contexts
  • changes in meaning as the same wording passes through different contexts
  • code-choices in monolingual contexts
  • language-choices in bi-/multilingual contexts

as a continuum of types of and obstacles to ‘translation’. It will be shown that what defines the continuum is a set of (re)contextulaiztaion processes.

The paper concludes with observations on what this perspective implies for typical ‘translation contexts’, focusing in particular on two particularly important or consequential ones: (i) an example of a social-institutional context; (ii) the example of the intertextual flow of information in the international media.

Biographical Sketch

Jef Verschueren received a Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of California at Berkeley. After a long career as a researcher for the Flemish Fund for Scientific Research, he is now Professor of Linguistics at the University of Antwerp, Belgium, where he is currently also Dean of the Faculty of Arts. He is the founder and Secretary General of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA), and he directs the IPrA Research Center. His main interests are theory formation in linguistic pragmatics (conceived broadly as a cognitive, social, and cultural perspective on language and language use), intercultural and international communication, and language and ideology. In all these areas he has published extensively. Some recent publications include the annually updated Handbook of Pragmatics (Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins; first published in 1995, now also available online), Debating Diversity: Analysing the Discourse of Tolerance (London: Routledge, 1998; co-authored with Jan Blommaert), and Understanding Pragmatics (London: Edward Arnold/New York: Oxford University Press, 1999).

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Towards more efficient interpreting in South African courts

Rosemary Moeketsi

University of South Africa

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The severe need to upgrade the interpreting practice in South African urban courts in particular stands at the heart of delivering justice in a country with a history of racial discrimination, inequality and human rights abuse.  The huge post-apartheid migration to ‘attractive’ city life and the influx into Gauteng by citizens and non-citizens alike, exacerbates the problem.

Various inquiries strongly suggest that since the majority of the present court interpreters are Africans, their job has historically acquired a generally low status.  This paper explores, first, the reasons why court interpreting as an art suffers and why the training and support systems are not expeditious, robust and consistently deployed.

The next focus of this paper is on the employment of interpreters as “odd-job persons” - acting as, for example, ersatz lawyers, community helpers, fine collectors and clerks and how this compromises the need for professionalism and neutrality in actual interpreting.

The paper concludes by suggesting certain remedies that could be introduced to render more efficient interpreting. Emphasis is laid on the legal recognition of the interpreting profession, clearer job definitions, efficient management, and training in the utility of African languages for court interactions.

Biographical Sketch

Rosemary M. H. Moeketsi has been employed by the University of South Africa since April 1985. She is the Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, chairs the Faculty Tuition Committee and is also Director of the School of Languages and Literature. The School consists of six departments with 176 personnel and offers tuition from undergraduate to doctorate level in twenty-one languages. Before moving to this management position, Rosemary was Associate Professor in the Department of African Languages where she taught aspects of Linguistics (Sociolinguistics, Discourse Analysis) and Literature.

As part of her Doctoral studies between 1993 and 1997 she investigated the use of (especially African) languages and the role of the court interpreter in the multilingual and multicultural courts of South Africa. From this research came, inter alia a BA in Court Interpreting, an academic programme which has received positive reviews as it serves to address the proper teaching of court interpreters in the country (cf. Diana Eades, 2003: "Participation of second language and second dialect speakers in the legal system" in Annual Review of Applied Linguistics (2003) 23, 113-133). A book, a number of articles and chapters in books, as well as a short story have been published in the fields of Forensic Linguistics and Court Interpreting. She has also participated in conference presentations at home and abroad.

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The person to whom it happened: Current perspectives on the translator as an intervenient being

Carol Maier

Kent State University, USA

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“So they say: ‘This is what happened’; but they do not say what the person was like to whom it happened.” (Martha Ronk, “Vertigo”)

Those lines refer to W. G. Sebald’s Vertigo, but they could easily refer to the translator, a figure that, until recently, has not received from translation scholars the attention that it has been given consistently by creative writers. Although there has been extensive study of the translator’s preparation and practice and ongoing discussion about the nature and necessity of translation, there has not been sustained interest in the translator as an individual nor in the complex effect of translation and continual intervention. Therefore, it is encouraging to see signs of increased interest in the translator and recognition of the influential, often conflictive, even dangerous nature of the profession.

That increased interest is manifested in work by translation scholars on the fictional representation of translators and also in reportage in the Western media and accounts by translators about their experiences working in situations of conflict. Translation scholars have also begun to explore various aspects of translation theory and practice that have direct bearing on the translator as an individual: for example, discussions about the translator’s unconscious, the translating habitus, and narrative theory; the renewed emphasis on ethics, especially in the context of globalization; the implications that changes in translation practice have for pedagogy; the corporeal aspects of translation suggested by the work of neuroscientists and of the writers and translators who have charted translation’s effects on their minds and bodies. In short, translator studies, as I will discuss in my presentation, could be seen as a sub-field of translation studies, if not as a field of study in is own right.

Biographical Sketch

Carol Maier is professor of Spanish at Kent State University, where  she is affiliated with the Institute for Applied Linguistics and serves as graduate coordinator for the Department of Modern and Classical Language Studies. Her research interests include translation theory, practice, and pedagogy, and her publications include Between Languages and Cultures: Translation and Cross-Cultural Texts (1995), which she co-edited with Anuradha Dingwaney and a special issue about evaluation that she guest-edited for The Translator (2000). She has published translations of work by Octavio Armand, Rosa Chacel, Severo Sarduy, and María Zambrano, among others. Her current translation projects include work by Margo Glantz and further work with Armand, Chacel, and Sarduy. She is also editing a homage volume to the late Helen R. Lane.

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It may be in the text but is it also in the discourse?

Basil Hatim

University of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

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In this paper, a distinction is established between ‘text’ (with a focus on mapping a set of mutually relevant communicative intentions in the service of a particular rhetorical purpose) and ‘discourse’ (where attitudinal, value-laden meanings are negotiated). The distinction is intended to shed light on a situation all too common in translation, namely that of the tendency to create unintended effects (or gloss over intended effects) through preserving textual values simply because they are present in texts (or not heading crucial discourse values just because they are not encoded in the actual text). With examples from English and Arabic political speeches and historical writing, it will be shown that this anomaly has been the source of a great deal of stereotyping and cross-cultural miscommunication. What is or is not in the discourse will also have serious implications for translation strategies such as domestication or foreignization, particularly in working from languages which tend to be more ‘explicative’ and which do not as yet possess a differentiated register or genre repertoire.

Biographical Sketch

Basil Hatim is a translation theorist and a prolific translator both into and out of Arabic. He has lectured widely on issues of discourse and translation at international conferences and universities around the world. He has also published widely on Translation and Text Linguistics. Among the books he has authored are Discourse and the translator (Longman 1990), The Translator as Communicator (Routledge 1997) (both with Ian Mason), Communication Across Cultures (Exeter University Press 1997), Teaching & Researching Translation (Longman 2002) and, with Jeremy Munday, Translation: An Advanced Resource Book (Routlege 2004). At present, he is Professor of English and Translation at the American University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (on leave from his original post as Professor of Translation & Linguistics at Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh).

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Translating subalterneity: Yet another role for English in India

Rita Kothari

St Xavier’s College, Ahmedabad, India

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My paper attempts to explore the experience of translation as an activist intervention. This intervention happens to come from a language usually castigated for being hegemonic. English (the language in question) belonged to the white master in the past and is now wielded powerfully by India’s urban elite. It would see on this count an entirely unsuitable language and alien vehicle with which to carry the Dalit (untouchables/scheduled castes/marginalized sections of India) experience of pain. However, the past two decades have witnessed an increasing output of Dalit literature in English translation.

My paper explores the reasons for this phenomenon: what makes Dalit writers want to go into the English language, what relationship does English bear with caste and subalterneity; how does it help/obstruct the desire of India’s oppressed to live a life of dignity and empowerment and what role does English translation play there? What makes multi-national and commercial publisher invest in the publication of Dalit works in English translation? Also, what happens to the English language and its registers when it carries the experience of the working class? Finally, what role do English translations of Dalit works play in bringing home to the readers an India that is not-so-shining (a la BJP slogan “India is shining”), but one in which the very achievement of human dignity is a struggle?

Biographical Sketch

Rita Kothari teaches at St.Xavier's College, Ahmedabad (India), where she also runs a translation research centre. She is an accomplished translator from Gujarati, having published six books in English translation. Her translation of the ground-breaking Dalit novel Angaliyat (The Stepchild, Oxford University Press, 2003), met with much critical acclaim, and was nominated for the Crossword Translation Prize in 2005. Her anthology of modern Gujarati poetry in translation (Modern Gujarati Poetry, Sahitya Akademi, 1998) put the State’s poetry on the national map in India, and her translated collection of Gujarati short stories by women writers is soon to be published by India’s first feminist press, Kali for Women. Kothari also writes extensively on translation studies, social history and communalism in Gujarat. She is the author of one major study of English translation in India (Translating India, St. Jerome, 2003), and her recent work (under consideration with Sage) is a study of the Sindhi community in Gujarat and how their post-partition adjustment has led to their shedding of a pluralistic and sufi identity.

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Southward Ho, Or How to Become a Translator Engagé

in Our Time

LIU Yameng

Fujian Normal University, China

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Considering the key role translation plays in enabling and structuring all cross-cultural interactions, it may not be too much of an exaggeration to say that the world has been translated into what it is now, with an ever worsening asymmetry of relations between the North and the South. This perspective jars us into a frustrating realization that while “decentering” has been a popular slogan for decades, what is being generally practised remains a kind of “centripetal translation.” Paradoxically, however, the same realization also gives concerned translators confidence that they could help reverse the trend with a “centrifugal” kind of translation, by turning their professional attention to the global peripheries and by taking the South as the new point of reference for their practices.

To reorient oneself thus is to stop dabbling in trendy academic or theoretical avant-gardism that never disturbs the powers that be. It is to cease professing a love for difference that sounds hollow to the truly different. And it is to put an end to the practice of a kind of “foreignizing translation” that insidiously re-inscribes the domestic interests of the North. The acid test for a translator engagé in our time is to see if the intercultural representations she offers professionally are informed with a “Southern outlook”.

This criterion demands that the translator devote herself to promoting representational justice for peoples in the South. It requires that she carefully distinguish between a genuine solidarity with and a false empathy for the suffering and the victimized. It asks that she reject homogenizing tendencies in any disguise, devoting herself instead to helping the marginalized languages, cultures and civilizations to protect their endangered identities.

Biographical Sketch

Yameng Liu, formerly an associate professor of rhetoric and English at Carnegie Mellon University in the U.S., is Professor of English at Fujian Normal University in China. He has published articles addressing issues in rhetorical theory and cross-cultural communication, in journals such as Philosophy and Rhetoric, Philosophy East and West, and Argumentation. Among his more recent publications are In Pursuit of Symbolic Power, a major study in Chinese of Western rhetoric, and “Academic Culture of the West and Scholarly Translation in China.” A long-time translator himself, he has been serving as a guest English editor for the Chinese Translators Journal.

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Monday, 18 April 2011 18:53

Conference Programme

 

Programme outline

 

:: Tuesday, 11 July: Pre-conference Workshops

08h30-16h30

Full day tour: The Peninsula (optional)

12h30-16h30

Half day tour: Township Cultural experience (optional)

10h30-14h00

Workshop 1: Training for trainers in subtitling
Presenters: Jorge Díaz-Cintas and Aline Remael
Venue: GH2/video lab

14h00-14h15

Coffee break in student cafeteria (own account)

14h15-17h15

Workshop 2: New Voices: Writing successful academic papers
Presenters: Jeremy Munday, Gaby Saldanha and Marion Winters
Panellists: Mona Baker, Carol Maier, Juliane House, Jeremy Munday and Jorge Díaz Cintas
Venue: GH3

16h00-18h00

Registration: Foyer, GH Lecture Theatres, University of the Western Cape

18h00-20h00

Informal Welcoming Reception: Foyer, GH Lecture Theatres, University of the Western Cape.

Address by the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Brian O’Connell
Venue: GH1

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:: Wednesday, 12 July

Transportation to Conference Venue
Pick-up point from Cape Town Hotels:
Parking area of City Lodge Hotel. Time of departure: 7h30.
Pick-up point From Durbanville guesthouses: Individual minibuses will pick up delegates at 8h00.

08h30-09h00

Registration: Foyer, GH Lecture Theatres, University of the Western Cape

09h00-09h15

Welcome and Announcements:
IATIS President Annie Brisset & Conference Chair, Charlyn Dyers
Venue: GH1

09h15-10h15

Plenary One: Jeff Verschueren (Chair: Aileen Pearson-Evans)
Translation and/as recontextualization
Venue: GH1

10h15-10h45

Coffee Break and opening of Publishers’ Exhibition
Venue: Foyer, GH Lecture Theatres

10h45-13h00

Parallel Sessions and Panels [Wed-1]

>>> Click here for details of parallel sessions and panels

13h00-14h00

Lunch
Venue: Great Hall

14h00-15h00

Plenary Two: Rosemary Moeketsi (Chair: Kim Wallmach)
Towards more effective interpreting in South African courts
Venue: GH1

15h00-17h50

Parallel Sessions and Panels [Wed-2]

>>> Click here for details of parallel sessions and panels

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:: Thursday, 13 July

Transportation to Conference Venue
Pick-up point from Cape Town Hotels:
Parking area of City Lodge Hotel. Time of departure: 7h30.
Pick-up point From Durbanville guesthouses: Individual minibuses will pick up delegates at 8h00.

08h30-09h00

Registration: Foyer, GH Lecture Theatres, University of the Western Cape

09h00-10h00

Plenary Three: Carol Maier (Chair: Stanley Ridge)
The person to whom it happened: Current Perspectives on the translator as an intervenient being
Venue: GH1

10h00-10h30

Coffee Break
Venue: GH Foyer

10h30-12h45

Parallel Sessions and Panels [Thur-1]
>>> Click here for details of parallel sessions and panels

12h45-13h45

Lunch
Venue: Great Hall

13h45-14h45

Plenary Four: Basil Hatim (Chair: Alet Kruger)
It may be in the text but is it also in the discourse?
Venue: GH1

14h50-17h05

Parallel Sessions and Panels [Thur-2]
>>> Click here for details of parallel sessions and panels

17h05-18h15

IATIS General Meeting
Venue: GH1 (Coffee available in foyer)

18h15-19h30

Blaauwklippen Wine Tasting and Multilingual Poetry Performance
Venue: Foyer, Great Hall

(no extra cost)

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:: Friday, 14 July

Transportation to Conference Venue
Pick-up point from Cape Town Hotels:
Parking area of City Lodge Hotel. Time of departure: 7h30.
Pick-up point From Durbanville guesthouses: Individual minibuses will pick up delegates at 8h00.

8h30-9h00

Registration: Foyer, GH Lecture Theatres, University of the Western Cape

9h00-10h00

Plenary Five: Rita Khothari (Chair: Theo Hermans)
Translating subalterneity: Yet another role for English in India
Venue: GH1

10h00-10h30

Coffee Break
Venue: GH Foyer

10h30-12h45

Parallel Sessions and Panels [Fri-1]
>>> Click here for details of parallel sessions and panels

12h45-13h45

Lunch
Venue: Great Hall

13h45-14h45

Plenary Six: Yameng Liu (Chair: Ilse Feinauer)
Southward Ho, or how to become a translator engagé in our time
Venue: GH1

14h45-16h25

Parallel Sessions and Panels [Fri-2]
>>> Click here for details of parallel sessions and panels

16h30-16h45

CONFERENCE CLOSURE
IATIS President Annie Brisset
Venue: GH1

17h00

Bus leaves conference venue for Stellenbosch and conference dinner venue

18h30-22h00

Conference Dinner. Moyo African Restaurant, Spier Wine Farm, Stellenbosch

22h00

Bus leaves conference dinner venue for hotels

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:: Saturday, 15 July

8h30-18h00

Full day tour: The Cape Winelands (optional)

8h30-12h30

Half day tour: The Peninsula (optional)

13h30-17h30

Half day tour: Cape Town Mother City (optional)

Half day tour: Township Cultural Experience (optional)

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:: Sunday, 16 July

8h30-18h00

Full day tour: The Peninsula (optional)

Full day tour: Aquila Game Reserve (optional)

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