The Translator as Author and Style
This topic examines the translator's own voice and style, and the growing recognition of literary translators as authors in their own right.
Definition
The study of the translator's distinctive voice and stylistic choices, and of the sense in which the translator functions as a co-author of the translated work.
Scope
This topic covers stylistic approaches to translation and the question of the translator's presence in the translated text. It treats Jean Boase-Beier's cognitive-stylistic account of how translators read and recreate style, Theo Hermans's analysis of the translator's discursive voice in narrative, and Mona Baker's corpus-based methodology for detecting a translator's characteristic stylistic 'fingerprint'. It connects to wider questions of authorship, creativity, and the legal and cultural status of translators.
Core questions
- How does a translator's own style manifest in a translation?
- Whose voice does the reader of a translation hear?
- Can a translator's stylistic 'fingerprint' be detected empirically?
- In what sense and to what extent is a translator an author?
Key theories
- Stylistic approaches to translation
- Boase-Beier's argument that style is the site where meaning and effect reside, so that translators must read for stylistic choices and recreate them, an act that inevitably bears the translator's own stylistic imprint.
- The translator's voice and style
- Hermans's claim that a second, translatorial voice is always present in translated narrative, and Baker's corpus method for identifying a translator's recurring linguistic preferences across works.
History
Interest in the translator's style grew from the cultural turn's attention to the translator as agent and from the rise of corpus-based translation studies in the late 1990s. Hermans's 1996 paper on the translator's voice and Baker's 2000 corpus methodology were landmark contributions, complemented by Boase-Beier's stylistic synthesis.
Debates
- Authorship and visibility
- Debate continues over whether and how translators should be credited as authors, linking stylistic findings about the translator's presence to ethical and legal questions about recognition raised by Venuti's invisibility thesis.
Key figures
- Jean Boase-Beier
- Theo Hermans
- Mona Baker
Related topics
Seminal works
- boasebeier2006
- hermans1996
- baker2000
Frequently asked questions
- Does a translator have a recognizable style?
- Corpus-based studies suggest translators show consistent linguistic preferences across the works they translate, amounting to a detectable stylistic fingerprint distinct from the source authors.
- Are literary translators considered authors?
- Increasingly yes: campaigns to name translators on book covers and to recognize their creative contribution reflect a wider acceptance that translation is a form of authorship.