ABSTRACT

This dynamic collection synthesizes and critically reflects on epistemological challenges and developments within Cognitive Translation and Interpreting Studies, problematizing a range of issues. These critical essays provide a means of encouraging further development by grounding new theories, stances, and best practices.

The volume is a clear marker of a maturing discipline, as decades of empirical study and methodological innovation provide the backdrop for critique and debate. The volume exemplifies tendencies toward convergence and difference, while at the same time pushing against disciplinary boundaries and structures. Constructs such as expertise and process are explored, and different theories of cognition are brought to the table. A number of chapters consider what it might mean for translation to be a form of situated, or 4EA cognition, while others query interdisciplinary relationships of foundational importance to the field. Issues of methodology are also addressed in terms of their underlying philosophical assumptions and implications.

This book will be of interest to scholars working at the intersection of translation and cognition, in such fields as translation studies, cognitive science, psycholinguistics, semiotics, and philosophy of science.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Scientific Maturity and Epistemological Reflection in Cognitive Translation and Interpreting Studies (CTIS)

part I|120 pages

Challenging Epistemologies

chapter 1|21 pages

Epistemologies of Translation Expertise

Notions in Research and Praxis

chapter 3|29 pages

Sociocognitive Constructs in Translation and Interpreting Studies (TIS)

Do We Really Need Concepts Like Norms and Risk When We Have a Comprehensive Usage-Based Theory of Language?

chapter 4|24 pages

“Tackling Stillness Through Movement”; Or Constraining the Extended Mind

Cognitive-Semiotic Insights into Translation

chapter 5|25 pages

Latent Variables in Translation and Interpreting Studies

Ontology, Epistemology, and Methodology

part II|61 pages

Converging Epistemologies

chapter 6|22 pages

Translation Product and Process Data

A Happy Marriage or Worlds Apart?

chapter 7|23 pages

Looking Back to Move Forward

Towards a Situated, Distributed, and Extended Account of Expertise