Authors | Saeed Ameri |
---|---|
Journal | پژوهش های زبان شناسی-دانشکده ادبیات و علوم انسانی اصفهان |
Page number | 27-40 |
Serial number | 15 |
Volume number | 2 |
Paper Type | Full Paper |
Published At | 2023 |
Journal Grade | Scientific - research |
Journal Type | Electronic |
Journal Country | Iran, Islamic Republic Of |
Journal Index | isc |
Abstract
Notwithstanding the growing number of research on many aspects of audiovisual translation, cross-cultural pragmatics has remained under-investigated in audiovisual translation. The purpose of this paper is to examine the translation of general extenders—such as and stuff (like that) and or something in Persian dubbing and nonprofessional subtitling. Positioned at the crossroads of the pragmatics of fiction and audiovisual translation, the analysis presented in this article draws upon past research on English and Persian general extenders, as well as the models for translating general extenders. In doing so, this study follows a corpus-based approach, using both qualitative and quantitative approaches to identify translation patterns of general extenders by dubbing translators and fansubbers in Iran. A corpus of twelve English films from different genres, along with their Persian dubbing and non-professional subtitling, was compiled for the investigation. Overall findings suggest that non-professional subtitlers followed a literal and sourced-oriented approach to translation, resulting in a more direct translation of general extenders. In contrast, the dubbing team (i.e., translator and dubbing director) tended to edit out these pragmatic issues in their translations; therefore, many general extenders were deleted in the translation. This was partly because the translation for dubbing has to be synchronized, resulting in some omissions and partly because the dubbing team paid less attention to these elements. Additionally, other strategies, such as substitution or explicitation were infrequently used in both dubbing and non-professional subtitling. The paper concludes by discussing limitations and offering opportunities for future research.
tags: General Extenders, Dubbing, Non-professional Subtitling, Audiovisual Translation, Translation Strategies