Loyalty and liberation : Skopos theory’s ethic in dialogue with contextual Bible study’s commitments

This paper explores how Christiane Nord’s ethic of translator loyalty could be invigorated in African Bible translation by engaging the social commitments of Contextual Bible Study, a practice of Bible reading and action developed in South Africa. After describing Nord’s concept of loyalty and its p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Esala, Nathan (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: SA ePublications 2016
In: Old Testament essays
Year: 2016, Volume: 29, Issue: 3, Pages: 434-454
Further subjects:B Sacred text translation
B Skopos theory
B Post-colonial
B Translation ethics
B Contextual Bible Study (CBS)
B Liberation hermeneutics
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
Description
Summary:This paper explores how Christiane Nord’s ethic of translator loyalty could be invigorated in African Bible translation by engaging the social commitments of Contextual Bible Study, a practice of Bible reading and action developed in South Africa. After describing Nord’s concept of loyalty and its prevalence in African Bible translation, the paper notes the challenge of practicing loyalty amidst complex power dynamics in the postcolonial context of Ghana. The paper then imagines how Christiane Nord’s four poles of translator loyalty could be reconfigured if they included the social commitments and interpretative practices of Contextual Bible Study. The goal is to situate translators so they can produce a translation that offers details from critical scholarship and from actual Contextual Bible Study experiences which marginalised groups in their audience may find liberating. An experimental English translation of Job 3 is included for reference.
ISSN:2312-3621
Contains:Enthalten in: Old Testament essays
Persistent identifiers:HDL: 10520/EJC-50a3cc628