ABSTRACT

Following the rapid expansion of translation studies as an emergent (inter-)discipline over recent decades, demand for doctoral research opportunities is now growing fast in many countries. At the same time, doctoral training packages of a generic nature have been elaborated and refined at many universities, drawing on long traditions of doctoral research in established disciplines. A degree of consensus no doubt exists on such matters as the need for rigor, method and the generation of new knowledge. Beyond that, however, there are a host of issues specific to translation and interpreting studies that remain under-researched and under-discussed. Contributors to this special issue encourage reflection on a range of issues in ways that foster further debate and collaboration on the development of doctoral studies within the field. A number of concrete proposals are offered that could be adapted to local situations in different countries and academic settings. While some of the contributions adopt a mainly empirical stance, others adopt a broad perspective on training, citing examples of widely differing projects. Two contributors offer insights from personal experience of doctoral study while another describes the organization of doctoral work within the conceptual framework of a research group. All consider training from the angle of student needs and offer concrete suggestions for ensuring that doctoral candidates are equipped with the guidance, concepts, methods and tools required for success.

chapter |23 pages

Training Translation Researchers

An Approach Based on Models and Best Practice 1

chapter |28 pages

Elements of Doctoral Training

The Logic of the Research Process, Research Design, and the Evaluation of Research Quality

chapter |22 pages

Doctoral Work in Translation Studies as an Interdisciplinary Mutual Learning Process

How a Translator, Teacher Educator and Linguistic Typologist Worked Together

chapter |14 pages

Training For the Viva Examination

A Translation Studies Student Perspective

chapter |4 pages

Book Reviews

chapter |2 pages

Thesis Abstract