Linguistics
Translation and Linguistics -- Using one to Decode the Other
Every translation is an interpretation and requires a human actor as an intermediary. Despite all of our technological advancements, coming up with a "correct" or "proper" translation from one language to another is only possible when a human understanding of language and linguistics is applied to the task. In her article, "Linguistics and Translation," Gunilla Anderman follows the history of the intersection between linguistics and translation and provides insight into how the former has influenced the latter. Translation, after all, is not merely the rendition of a text from one language to another. It is also a "systematic comparison of two languages" (62). The relationship between linguistics and translation is inextricably intertwined, and Anderman follows their shared search for similarities between languages and that translators and linguists few similarities can be found.
Linguistics, in the latter half of the 18th century, when it was still known as philology, emerged as a discipline all its own. Translation as a separate discipline would take much longer to emerge, nearly 150 years. In early philology the focus of its practitioners was to define the distinctive and shared characteristics among languages and group them into families. This work greatly helped translators, who felt they could obtain a more literal translation between works that are written in two closely related languages (46). Many years after their work, it seems obvious to us that the romance languages, for example, would be easier to translate back and forth. But we are only able to have this conclusion, Anderman points out, because of their arduous work. We can only assume now because of what earlier scholars labored over in the past.
Anderman continues to trace the formations of linguistic theory through de Saussure, who stressed the importance of the study of language at a given point in time, the synchronic approach, and the important distinction between the underlying set...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now