This paper deals with the recurrent criticism in Translation studies in general and Anglophone Translation studies in particular that the discipline labors under a 'Eurocentric' bias. The author develops two arguments in relation to this. First, the charge of 'Eurocentrism' serves a number ends that have less to do with an actual desire to reach out to 'non-Western' discourses on translation (although the globalization of the discipline has definitely broadened the scope and concerns of translation scholars) than with a generation gap among translation scholars. Drawing on literature from the last two decades, the author argues that 'Eurocentrism' often functions as an asymmetrical counterconcept, in Reinhardt Koselleck's sense, which allow...
Luc van Doorslaer and Peter Flynn (Eds.). Eurocentrism in Translation Studies. Amsterdam/Philadelphi...
Recent calls for non-Western translation theories raise the more basic question of where Western tho...
Taking China as a case in point, this paper addresses the concern among some Western scholars that t...
This paper deals with the recurrent criticism in Translation studies in general and Anglophone Trans...
Over the last years, several conferences and publications in Translation Studies have dealt with ‘Eu...
slightly adapted version of the special issue of 'Translation and Interpreting Studies' 2011In the w...
The term ‘Eurocentric’ is sometimes experienced as being too antagonistic in its view, as it stems f...
To what extent is Eurocentrism to be perceived as an inevitable concept resulting from the developme...
In several disciplines, including translation studies, so-called „Euro-centrism‟ in reflection and i...
The act of translation between languages and cultures has been going on for centuries, but the act o...
This paper critiques the relativist and post-colonialist view that blames the under-representation f...
This brief chapter problematizes the hegemonic position of the English language in Cultural Studies,...
While globalization per se (and the related topic of global cultural homogeneity) does not in and of...
AbstractThis paper has emerged out of the conviction that linguistic theory has more to offer to tra...
While globalization per se (and the related topic of global cultural homoge-neity) does not in and o...
Luc van Doorslaer and Peter Flynn (Eds.). Eurocentrism in Translation Studies. Amsterdam/Philadelphi...
Recent calls for non-Western translation theories raise the more basic question of where Western tho...
Taking China as a case in point, this paper addresses the concern among some Western scholars that t...
This paper deals with the recurrent criticism in Translation studies in general and Anglophone Trans...
Over the last years, several conferences and publications in Translation Studies have dealt with ‘Eu...
slightly adapted version of the special issue of 'Translation and Interpreting Studies' 2011In the w...
The term ‘Eurocentric’ is sometimes experienced as being too antagonistic in its view, as it stems f...
To what extent is Eurocentrism to be perceived as an inevitable concept resulting from the developme...
In several disciplines, including translation studies, so-called „Euro-centrism‟ in reflection and i...
The act of translation between languages and cultures has been going on for centuries, but the act o...
This paper critiques the relativist and post-colonialist view that blames the under-representation f...
This brief chapter problematizes the hegemonic position of the English language in Cultural Studies,...
While globalization per se (and the related topic of global cultural homogeneity) does not in and of...
AbstractThis paper has emerged out of the conviction that linguistic theory has more to offer to tra...
While globalization per se (and the related topic of global cultural homoge-neity) does not in and o...
Luc van Doorslaer and Peter Flynn (Eds.). Eurocentrism in Translation Studies. Amsterdam/Philadelphi...
Recent calls for non-Western translation theories raise the more basic question of where Western tho...
Taking China as a case in point, this paper addresses the concern among some Western scholars that t...