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MELA40260: Extended Translation Project

It is possible that changes to modules or programmes might need to be made during the academic year, in response to the impact of Covid-19 and/or any further changes in public health advice.

Type Tied
Level 4
Credits 60
Availability Available in 2024/2025
Module Cap
Location Durham
Department Modern Languages and Cultures

Prerequisites

  • None.

Corequisites

  • None.

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • MELA40160; MELA41430; MELA41530

Aims

  • The final translation project is a translation, either from the Foreign Language into English, or vice versa, aimed at developing the translation skills acquired during the course into the management of an extended translation project.
  • To demonstrate the ability of dealing with a complex and extended piece of translation.

Content

  • The 10,000-word source text for the final translation project will be decided in consultation between the student and their supervisor according to the student's interests and the supervisor's expertise.
  • A commentary of 5,000 words accompanies the text. In the commentary, the students show that they are capable of explaining and describing both linguistic and non-linguistic (e.g. cultural, research, terminological, etc) problems encountered during the translation process, as well as explaining and making a case for the choices made in the translation project.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • an advanced understanding and knowledge of project management for an extended translation;
  • an advanced understanding of the textual features of an extended piece and the translation strategies and skills to adopt in order to achieve a consistent text;
  • an advanced understanding of the cultural differences and the role of cultural factors in translation and more generally in international communication;
  • an advanced grounding in the conceptual tools for interpreting cultures.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • the ability to deal with a large translation project;
  • the ability to locate translation problems and difficulties and effectively use secondary sources in order to solve them;
  • the ability to identify and resolve translation issues;
  • the ability to produce high-level idiomatic and functionally adequate target texts, composed in a target language that is grammatically correct, fluent, adhering to the appropriate register, and in compliance with the features of the appropriate genre and text-type.

Key Skills:

  • effective time management;
  • effective decision making in complex and unpredictable situations;
  • the ability to plan a major piece of work over a long period of time;
  • the ability to engage in self-directed learning and self-assessment;
  • the ability to write into a sophisticated academic-level style.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • Summative assessment for the module is by a translation either into the Foreign Language or into English and by commentary.
  • The module will run from the first week of Easter term.
  • Every student is assigned a supervisor, who will provide individualized feedback on the progress of the translation on the basis of work submitted by the student.
  • The supervisory meetings will involve detailed discussions between the supervisor and the student on the application of norms and in the solutions to translation issues during which the supervisor will guide the student regarding resources and methodologies that may be employed. Supervisions are expected to cover applied matters of translation methodology.
  • The final translation project is to be submitted by the FIRST Friday in September.
  • During the course of the term, each student is entitled up to 5 hours of individual consultation/supervision with the supervisor. The purpose of this is to focus on problems of comprehension and interpretation of the original text and to discuss matters of translation strategy and tactics.
  • The translation is to be accompanied by a 5,000-word commentary which includes an introduction to the text. The introduction engages with background information on the text, such as information on the author if known, text-type, its functions, its genre, and its register and will explain the needs of the translation brief if a brief is provided. The commentary will explain the decisions of detail outlining major problems encountered in translation, the solutions adopted in problematic cases, and the rationale behind selecting these solutions rather than other possible alternatives.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Tutorials5As agreed1 hour5Yes
Student Preparation and Background Reading595 
Total600 

Summative Assessment

Component: Translation projectComponent Weighting: 100%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Translation10,000 60Yes
Commentary 5,00040Yes

Formative Assessment

Tutorial feedback during the supervisory meetings.

More information

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