Fr. 124.00

The Identity of the Professional Interpreter - How Professional Identities are Constructed in the Classroom

English · Hardback

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Description

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This monograph examines how higher education(HE) institutions construct 'professional identities' in the classroom, specifically how dominant discourses in institutions frame the social role, requisite skills and character required to practice a profession, and how students navigate these along their academic trajectories. This book is based on a longitudinal case study of a prestigious HE institution specialising in training professional interpreters.
Adopting an innovative research approach, it investigates a community of aspiring professionals in a HE context by drawing on small story narrative analysis from an ethnographic perspective to provide emic insights into the student community and the development of their social identities. The findings (contextualised by examining the curricula of similar institutions worldwide) suggest that interpreter institutions might not be providing students with a clear and comprehensive picture of the interpreterprofession, and not responding to its increasingly complex role in today's society.

List of contents

Researching HE Institutions for Professional Training.- The History of Interpreting as a Profession.- Narrative Research and Ethnography.- Carrying out Research in the Field.- Principal Themes.- Data Analysis: Teacher Talk about Interpreting.- Data Analysis: Language Levels and Interpreting.- Data Analysis: Students and the Institution.- A Summary of the Principal Findings.- Improving and Extending Research in the Field.

About the author

Dr. Alan James Runcieman is currently an adjunct professor at the Department for Interpreters and Translators,University of Bologna, Italy. His principle research interests lie in the fields of narrative research, ethnography, interpreter training, intercultural communication, phonetics and phonology and World Englishes.

Summary

This monograph examines how higher education(HE) institutions construct ‘professional identities’ in the classroom, specifically how dominant discourses in institutions frame the social role, requisite skills and character required to practice a profession, and how students navigate these along their academic trajectories. This book is based on a longitudinal case study of a prestigious HE institution specialising in training professional interpreters.  

Adopting an innovative research approach, it investigates a community of aspiring professionals in a HE context by drawing on small story narrative analysis from an ethnographic perspective to provide emic insights into the student community and the development of their social identities. The findings (contextualised by examining the curricula of similar institutions worldwide) suggest that interpreter institutions might not be providing students with a clear and comprehensive picture of the interpreterprofession, and not responding to its increasingly complex role in today’s society.

Product details

Authors Alan James Runcieman
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2018
 
EAN 9789811078224
ISBN 978-981-10-7822-4
No. of pages 184
Dimensions 161 mm x 244 mm x 16 mm
Weight 456 g
Illustrations XVI, 184 p. 2 illus.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

B, Literature, Social Sciences, Translation & interpretation, Language: reference & general, Language Education, Language and languages—Study and teaching, Literature—Translations, Translation Studies, Gene Transcription, Translation and interpretation, Interpreting

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