Translation Studies and Ideology in terms of Translation Cover Image

Çeviribilim ve Çeviri Olgusu Açısından İdeoloji
Translation Studies and Ideology in terms of Translation

Author(s): Nurdan Maral, Faruk Yücel
Subject(s): Studies of Literature, Sociology of Culture, Translation Studies, Theory of Literature
Published by: Uluslararası Kıbrıs Üniversitesi
Keywords: translation studies; ideology; translator’s decisions; translation process;

Summary/Abstract: The act and phenomenon of translation cannot be reduced to mere linguistic / textual or communicative transfer, an argument agreed by all researchers in the field and others interested in the function of translation in society. The phenomenon of translation should be seen not as transfer on a single level, but as a tool, whose power is related to developments in a particular time and space. Thus, the effects of translations may have been underestimated, since translation is important in the formation or production of religious, political, philosophical and scientific texts that have played an important role in the development and change in thought throughout history. Societies have inevitably influenced each other, both positively or negatively, in shaping the ideas and cultures throughout history. Translation is undoubtedly one of the means by which this influence occurs. Translations can also be used as a tool for perception management in a society or culture. The products called as translation may attempt to change or direct society through certain planned and deliberate effects via a power focus at a certain time and space, thus creating an ideological structuring. This study provides a discussion of the concept of ideology in translation studies, and the effect of ideology on the decisions taken in the translation process. In this context, this study examines the meaning of the concept of ideology, and also its relationship with the concept of translation.

  • Issue Year: 27/2021
  • Issue No: 108
  • Page Range: 1093-1108
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: Turkish