This book offers data-based insights into the problems of translation education and their causes in the context of localization and globalization in the era of big data. By examining language services around the globe, illustrating applications of big-data technology and their future development, and describing crowdsourcing and online collaborative translations, speech-to-speech translation and cloud-based translation, it makes readers aware of the important changes taking place in the professional translation market and consequently recognize the insufficiency of translation education and the need for it to be restructured accordingly. Furthermore, the book includes data-based analyses of translation education problems, such as teaching philosophy, curriculum design and faculty development of both undergraduate and postgraduate education in China. More importantly, it proposes solutions that have already been successful in experiments in a number of universities in China for other institutions of higher education to imitate in restructuring translation education. The discussion is of interest for current and future translation policy makers, translation educators, translators and learners.
Auteur
Feng Yue has been teaching translation at Fujian Normal University since 1992, and has had a 30-year career as a translator for a TV station, various enterprises and publishers. As a teacher, practitioner and researcher of translation, he understands what the market expects of translators. He has been the leader of ten projects concerning the restructuring of translation education, has written more than 70 articles and 25 books, and has received over 40 awards in this field, one of which is the top academic prize conferred by Fujian Provincial Government in 2016. He has been invited by the academic journal Contemporary Foreign Languages Study to chair regular translational seminars participated in by scholars, governmental representatives and managers from enterprises, bridging the gap between universities and enterprises.
Youlan Tao is a Professor of Translation Studies, currently teaching at the Department of Translation and Interpreting, College of Foreign Languages and Literature, Fudan University. As well as working as a part-time translator and interpreter, she has focused her research on translation pedagogy, applied translation theories, corpus-based translation studies, English teaching strategies and theories, and has published three monographs, five co-authored textbooks, several translated works, and a number of papers in leading national and international academic journals. Funded by the Humboldt Foundation from 2009 to 2011, she was a Visiting Scholar at Heidelberg University and the University of Oxford. From 2018 to 2019, she will visit Kent State University as a Fulbright scholar under the supervision of Prof. Brian James Baer.
Huashu Wang is a leading scholar in translation and localization technology and project management. In recent years, he has published over 40 articles, and 8 textbooks and monographs in this field. He has been the Chairman of Translation Technology Education Society (affiliated to World Interpreting and Translation Teaching Associate) since 2017 and the Vice Secretary General of the Localization Service Committee of the Translators Association of China since 2015. He is also a lecturer in translation technology for the National Training Program for Specialized Translation Teachers and a Translation Technology Advisor for both the Association of Language Service Providers of China (ALSP) and SDL (a global innovator in language technology and services). He has been invited to give lectures on translation technology at more than 50 universities and provided training and consulting for over 30 enterprises and institutions in China.
Qiliang Cui obtained his Ph.D. in Mechanical Design and theory from Donghua University in 1999. He has been a teacher of translation and localization with the University of International Business and Economics (UIBE) since 2014. Before joining UIBE, he worked with world-leading localization vendors such as Welocalize, Bowne Global Solutions and Lionbridge in both production and training for twelve years. As well as working on engineering and testing for localization, he has also been the Deputy Director of the localization service committee of the Translators Association of China, where he co-designed and published four Chinese localization service specifications with colleagues. He has published numerous books and survey reports in the field of translation, localization, computer-aided translation and localization project management and is a leading expert on translation and localization.
Bin Xu is an Associate Professor and the Director of the MTI program at the School of Foreign Languages at Shandong Normal University. His research field is translation studies and computer-aided translation (CAT). He started researching and using CAT tools in 1998 and became an important researcher in this field in China. He has published 20 papers on computer-aided translation in various major journals in China in recent years. His translation works include At Home in the Universe, Science and Religion, LinkedThe New Science of Networks, Einstein's Cosmos, Drawing Act, The Artful Universe (Extended), and UniverseA Biography. He is also the author of the academic books The Research Paper: A Guide to Computer-Aided Research, and CATA New Horizon for Translating Research and Practice.
Contenu
Part I Challenges of Translational ProfessionChapter 1 The Evolution of the Global Language Service Market 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Continuous Growth in Language Service Demands 1.3 Continuous Expansion of Language Service Scope 1.4 Increasingly Diversified Content of Language Services 1.5 Rapid Development of Language Technologies 1.6 Diversified Roles of Language Services 1.7 Language Services Moving Towards Standardization 1.8 ConclusionChapter 2 The Development of Translation Technology in the Era of Big Data 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Basic Concepts of Translation Technology 2.3. The Main Functions of Translation Technology 2.3.1 Automatic Translation 2.3.2 Repeated Utilization of Language Assets 2.3.3 Improvement in Translation Quality 2.3.4 Simplified Translation Formats 2.3.5 Aided Translation Coordination 2.3.6 Aided Translation Management 2.4. The Development Trends in Translation Technology 2.4.1 Continuous Integrations of Translation Tools 2.4.2 Increasing Visualization in Translation 2.4.3 Boom in Open Source Translation Technology 2.4.4Prevalence of the CAT+MT+PE model 2.4.5 Rapid Development of Intelligent Translation Technology 2.4.6 Broad Application Prospects for Cloud-based Technology 2.5. Conclusion
Part II Status Quo And Concerns Chapter 3 Problems and Solutions: The Undergraduate Translator Education in Chinese Mainland 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Problems and challenges 3.2.1 teaching…