Descriptive Translation Studies and Norms
Descriptive translation studies treats actual translations as facts of the receiving culture and seeks to explain them through the norms that govern translators' behaviour.
Definition
An empirical, non-prescriptive branch of translation studies that describes translations as target-culture facts and explains them by reconstructing the norms constraining the translator.
Scope
This topic covers the descriptive, target-oriented paradigm built on James Holmes's map of the discipline, Itamar Even-Zohar's polysystem theory, and Gideon Toury's theory of translation norms. Rather than prescribe how translation should be done, the approach observes regularities in real translations and infers the preliminary, initial, and operational norms shaping them, locating translated literature within the larger literary polysystem of the target culture. The treatment is methodological and historiographic.
Core questions
- How can translations be studied empirically rather than evaluated?
- What are translation norms and how can they be reconstructed?
- How does translated literature function within a target literary system?
- What is the place of descriptive study within the wider map of translation studies?
Key theories
- Translation norms
- Toury's framework in which translation is governed by socially shared norms—preliminary norms about what is translated, the initial norm of adequacy versus acceptability, and operational norms guiding textual decisions.
- Polysystem theory
- Even-Zohar's model of literature as a stratified, dynamic system of systems in which translated literature occupies a shifting central or peripheral position, conditioning how source texts are selected and rendered.
History
James Holmes's 1972 paper 'The Name and Nature of Translation Studies' charted the discipline and named its descriptive branch. The Tel Aviv school's polysystem theory and Toury's norm-based descriptive translation studies, developed from the late 1970s, gave the approach a research programme, taken up internationally by scholars such as Theo Hermans and the 'Manipulation School'.
Debates
- Can description ever be fully value-free?
- While the paradigm rejects prescriptivism, critics question whether reconstructing norms is itself neutral and whether the polysystem's systemic metaphors adequately capture human agency and ideology in translation.
Key figures
- Gideon Toury
- Itamar Even-Zohar
- James S. Holmes
- Theo Hermans
Related topics
Seminal works
- holmes1988
- evenzohar1990
- toury2012
Frequently asked questions
- What are translation norms?
- Translation norms are the shared, often implicit expectations of a community about how translation should be performed; reconstructing them lets researchers explain why translators in a given time and place make similar choices.
- What does 'target-oriented' mean?
- It means the analysis starts from the translation and the culture that receives it, asking what role the text plays there, rather than measuring it only against its source.