ABSTRACT

First Published in 2010. Translators and interpreters are frequently found at the centre of attempts to wage war or negotiate peace between opposing factions. Translation and interpreting also serve a vital function in communicating a conflict locally and globally, as interested parties attempt to legitimize their actions, appeal for assistance, and enlist support for their cause and the condemnation of their stated enemy. The unavoidable independent exercises of judgement that interpreters and translators make through their participation in or re-narration of a conflict, and the decisions that go with them, provide clear and strong evidence for the lead role in the construction of meanings and identities that interpreters and translators assume in situations of conflict, irrespective of their historical or geopolitical setting. This special issue of The Translator explores the role of translators and interpreters in a number of conflicts from the 20th century to the present. Drawing on fictional and non-fictional texts, legal and peacekeeping settings and reports from war zones, contributors to this volume explore the overlapping themes of mediation, agency and ethics in relation to translators and interpreters as they negotiate the political, social, cultural, linguistic and ethical factors that converge, often dangerously, in situations of armed conflict

chapter |22 pages

“You Don't Make War Without Knowing Why”

The Decision to Interpret in Iraq

chapter |25 pages

Interpreters and Translators in the War Zone

Narrated and Narrators 1

chapter |20 pages

Minor Empires

Translation, Conflict, and Postcolonial Critique 1

chapter |20 pages

Crime and Judgement

Interpreters/Translators in British War Crimes Trials, 1945–1949

chapter |20 pages

Shoot The Transtraitor!

The Translator as Homo Sacer in Fiction and Reality

chapter |22 pages

Voicing the Perpetrator's Perspective

Translation and Mediation in Jean Hatzfeld's Une Saison de machettes

part |8 pages

Revisiting the Classies

chapter |8 pages

Dissolving Discourses of Terrorism

Representations of Political Violence in the Pre-9/11 World

part |28 pages

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