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Introduction: Gender, language and translation at the crossroads of disciplines

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Introduction. The fact that ‘gender is an omni-relevant category in most social practices’ (Lazar 2005:3) lies at the very core of both feminist linguistics and feminist translation studies. Admittedly, most of the scholarly works produced within these two dynamic fields in the last three decades emphasize the role that language and translation play in the construction of the social world. In particular, much attention has been paid to investigating how gender roles are discursively constructed through language and translation – both understood as social practices per se – and how gender definitions are constantly interacting with other similarly constructed parameters such as race, geography, class or sexuality, therefore having consequences at the level of material practice.
Gender
and
Language
GL (PRINT) ISSN –
GL (ONLINE) ISSN –X
G&L VOL 7.1 2013 5–12
© 2013, EQUINOX PUBLISHING
www.equinoxpub.com
doi: 10.1558/genl.v7i1.5
Introduction: Gender, language and translation
at the crossroads of disciplines
Olga Castro
Gender is an omni-relevant category in most social practices.
(Lazar 2005:3)
After all, the globalization of culture means that we all live in ‘translated’
worlds.
(Simon 1996:135)
e fact that ‘gender is an omni-relevant category in most social practices’
(Lazar 2005:3) lies at the very core of both feminist linguistics and feminist
translation studies. Admittedly, most of the scholarly works produced
within these two dynamic fields in the last three decades emphasize the
role that language and translation play in the construction of the social
world. In particular, much attention has been paid to investigating how
gender roles are discursively constructed through language and translation
– both understood as social practices per se – and how gender definitions
are constantly interacting with other similarly constructed parameters
such as race, geography, class or sexuality, therefore having consequences
at the level of material practice.
Notions such as power and ideology are inextricably linked to the critical
study of language and translation. Language is a political act of mediation
and communication which either perpetuates or challenges existing power
structures within wider social and cultural contexts – and the same can
be said of translation. Far from traditional assumptions (which defined
translation as merely a linguistic shift from one text to another with the least
possible interference, in order to achieve the ‘only perfect translation’ and
to remain faithful to the author’s intention or to the source text), translation
Article
Affiliation
Aston University, Birmingham, UK
Email: o.castro@aston.ac.uk
6 OLGA CASTRO
is now considered a process of mediation. Within the framework of the
globalisation of culture and the internationalisation of discourses, societies
interact through translation, and thus it can be claimed that ‘we all live
in “translated” worlds’ (Simon 1996:135) – never before has there been as
much translation as there is today.
Language and translation inevitably are tools for legitimizing the
status quo or for subverting it; tools for gender oppression or liberation.
Yet, despite all these commonalities, in today’s globalized world it is still
relevant to ask whether a dialogue between academics working in the
field of gender and language and in that of gender and translation has yet
taken place; and if so, how fertile these interdisciplinary debates have been.
Indeed, not all scholarly work done in these two fields stems from a feminist
perspective (Mills and Mullany 2011:2). But in the many cases when it
does – stressing therefore the potential role of language and translation in
contributing to a more equal world – the relationship between linguistics
and translation within feminist studies should also be scrutinized: To what
extent has feminist linguistics reflected upon all the possibilities opened up
when gendered conceptualizations travel across languages and cultures?
Similarly, to what degree has it considered the particularities of gender
representation in translated texts (as opposed to or in relation to source
texts)? Is feminist linguistics aware of the constraints that translation
involves and how issues of fidelity or invisibility may hamper a particular
feminist intervention in the target text that could otherwise be expected in
the realm of the source text? Approached from a different angle, how much
impact has research on gender and language in specific languages had
on mainstream debates in the field of (feminist) translation studies? Are
translation scholars and practitioners aware of linguistic studies conducted
on both source and target languages, so that they can make informed
decisions when having to translate gendered expressions? Can feminist
linguistics help the translator to critically reflect on suitable strategies for
different con/texts? Have scholars in the field of gender and translation
made use of empirical linguistic studies to justify feminist translation
practices?
ese interrelated questions are central to a special issue on translation
published in a journal eloquently entitled Gender and Language. e
essays collected in this volume aim to investigate the gender politics of
translation across multiple languages, or, in other words, to reflect upon
the intersection between gender, language and translation and the multiple
crossroads that this conceptual triangle entails. By so doing, they aim
ultimately to create an interdisciplinary framework in which to enhance
the study of gender and translation using insights gained through analyses
carried out within critical linguistics; while, at the same time, enriching
INTRODUCTION 7
the understanding of the relationship between gender and language when
approached from a translation studies perspective.
On the one hand, this call for interdisciplinary research is very much in
line with Penelope Eckert and Bonnie McConnell-Ginet’s assertion that,
if language and gender research is to have any kind of social or political
responsibility, language and gender researchers must develop ‘an inter-
disciplinary community of scholarly practice’ (1992:88). Undoubtedly,
the influence of such calls for interdisciplinary research is undeniable,
with the publication of interdisciplinary collections of language and
gender covering areas such as anthropology, cultural studies, sociology,
psychology, journalism or organizational communication among others. It
is now time for translation to be also considered. On the other, this special
issue must be placed and understood within the dynamic and flourishing
context which is the contemporary field of gender and translation. is
field is built upon the ground-breaking theoretical debates and practical
translatological exercises of the 80s and 90s, including, to name just a few,
Lori Chamberlain’s critique of the metonymic code of double inferiority
for women and translation, in relation to men and to the source text (cf.
Chamberlain 1988); the birth of the Canadian school of feminist translation
in Quebec, leading to feminist linguistic practices into English of experi-
mental, avant-garde literary writings by francophone Quebec authors (cf.
von Flotow 1991); or feminist rewritings into English of highly sexist texts
– from the non-sexist translations of the Bible (cf. von Flotow 2000), to
practices such as the woman-minded rewritings of Susanne Jill Levine
(1983) or Carol Maier (1985) when translating the misogynistic work of
postmodern Latin American writers.
e publication of two influential monographs by Sherry Simon (1996)
and Luise von Flotow (1997) greatly contributed to opening up new
avenues of dialogue, at a time when new approaches to translation studies
proclaimed a ‘cultural turn’ (Bassnett and Lefevere 1990:10) shifting
the focus of the discussion from a mainly linguistic/textual analysis to a
broader cultural/ideological context. is cultural turn gave rise to studies
that situated the translated text in its social and historical circumstances
and considered its political role, paying attention to ideological values, to
cultural, economic and political inequalities, to individual choices and also,
most importantly, to the ethics of translation.
Over the last few years, the dyad gender and translation has been gaining
critical consistency and experiencing a remarkable growth, with numerous
conferences and many publications devoted to exploring the multifaceted
nature of translation theory and practice when approached from a gender
perspective. Besides edited volumes such as Translating Women (von
Flotow 2011) and Translating Gender (Federici 2011), in Europe there have
8 OLGA CASTRO
been several special issues of Translation Studies journals. One example is
the French Palimpsestes, which published two special issues on ‘Traduire le
genre grammatical: un enjeu linguistique et/ou politique’ (Raguet 2008) and
on ‘Traduire le genre: femmes en traduction’ (Sardin 2009). Two Spanish
journals followed suit, with the special issue ‘Woman and Translation:
Geographies, Voices and Identities’ in the journal MonTI, Monographs
on Translation and Interpreting (Santaemilia and von Flotow 2011) and
a dossier published in Quaderns, revista de traducció (Godayol 2012).
Such is the cross-pollination and exchange occurring between translation
studies and other disciplines that some other journals – primarily devoted
to fields such as linguistics, women’s studies or literature – have also
recently hosted special issues on the topic. As such, beyond the domain
of translation studies, and further to the present volume, the refereed
publication European Journal of Women’s Studies hosted a special issue
on ‘Living and Translation’ (Phoenix and Slavova 2011). And the future
looks promising, with a special issue on ‘e Gender and Sexual Politics
of Translation’ coming out in Comparative Literature Studies (Spurlin,
forthcoming). Within this diversity, what most current approaches to
gender and translation share is a common interest in scrutinizing how
an interdisciplinary understanding of gender conceptualizations can be
fostered in relation to translation. is is indeed the case with the current
collection of essays, which could be gathered into two groups according to
the type of linguistic approaches they adopt.
e first group is composed of the initial four articles presenting
thorough considerations about translation as an act of linguistic mediation
between texts and cultures, covering languages such as Turkish, Galician,
Italian, Romansh, French, German, Spanish and English. Having identified
a gap between feminist sociolinguistics and feminist translation literature,
Emek Ergün calls for more cooperation between the two disciplines with
a view to enhancing a sociopolitical change and to expanding translators’
(and translation students’) political awareness of gender representation in
language. Ergün exemplifies this dialogue by analysing different instances
of translations of feminist novels from English into Turkish, including
dilemmas confronted by herself as a feminist translator. e author aptly
considers the challenges these translations entail due to the asymmet-
rical position occupied by the two languages, the disparate status of
feminist novels in the source and target culture, as well as to the different
grammatical structures and resources available to communicate gender in
English and Turkish.
Still discussing ‘curious’ examples of literary translations from English
into minority languages, Olga Castro’s paper explores the particular-
ities of applying linguistic strategies for non-sexist language use to the
INTRODUCTION 9
writing of target texts. Considering the double (con)textual responsi-
bility that translators have towards the source and the target (con)texts,
Castro shows how a more frequent use of so-called ‘inclusive language’
is being increasingly adopted in texts originally written both in English
and in Galician, leading to the hypothesis that an inclusive language may
also be promoted through translated texts into these languages. Far from
this, however, her case study demonstrates that mainstream translations
tend to more conservative than the ‘original’ discourse – ‘original’ referred
here both to source texts and also to parallel texts in the target language –
which reveals a ‘missing link’ between feminist linguistics and translation
studies. Seeking to enable a better understanding of this missing link and
to ultimately contribute to an interdisciplinary dialogue between feminist
approaches to linguistics and to translation, Castro offers an overview of
the most frequent arguments adduced against the use of strategies for
inclusive language in (literary) translations.
Shifting the focus from literary to institutional texts, Daniel Elmiger
undertakes a comparative analysis of the use of (non-)sexist language in
a corpus of official quadrilingual documents sent by the Swiss Federal
Government to all citizens and written in the four official languages of the
country. Framing this study within the new legislation that calls for the
use of non-sexist forms and assuming that German is predominantly the
language of the source text, the author demonstrates how the tendency
towards avoiding the so-called ‘generic masculine’ in German is rendered
differently into Romansh, Italian and French, despite all three being
Romance languages with similar gender grammatical structures.
Also in the realm of multilingual institutional texts, José Santaemilia’s
article presents a thought-provoking discussion about the translation of
gender-related terminology in the EU, especially bearing in mind that all
texts published by the EU in all official languages are to be considered
originals. e author compiles a corpus of texts in English and Spanish to
analyse how the word ‘gender’ (defined in the article as a culture-specific
English term) has fared in Spanish institutional translations. Santaemilia’s
contribution has important social implications, as the term ‘género’ (lit.
‘gender’) has repeatedly met with strong opposition from influential bodies
such as the Real Academia Española, accusing it of being an unnecessary
Anglicism opaque in its meaning which should therefore be replaced
by ‘sexo’ (lit. ‘sex’), ‘the only one term available in Spanish to denote the
biological and cultural dimensions of the sexual self. However, both
feminist scholarship and some governmental institutions in Spain have
amply adopted not only the neologism ‘género’, but also expressions such
as ‘enfoque de género’ (‘gender approach’) or ‘violencia de género’ (‘gender
violence’). Despite this wide use in Spanish, Santaemilia’s study provides
10 OLGA CASTRO
useful data about the strategies used by translators to either contribute to
the normalization of the term in Spanish or, more frequently and more
recently, to avoid it.
e second grouping collects the two remaining articles, focused not so
much on linguistic analysis of translated texts, but on how women and men
are represented in discourses related to translation, both as an academic
discipline and as a professional practice. Pilar Godayol’s contribution
revolves around the topic of the sexualised metaphorics of translation.
Building on previous work that has exposed the sexist nature of language
used to represent women (and men) in the theoretical discourse about
translation throughout the centuries, Godayol offers a vivid account of
new empowering metaphors forged in recent times to go beyond these
stereotypes, which she categorizes as (a) borderland metaphors and (b)
myths in the feminine. Godayol concludes her article by proposing a new
liberating rhetoric drawing on the work of the Catalan poet and feminist
activist Maria-Mercè Marçal. Finally, Inger Askehave and Karen Korning
Zethsen investigate issues of discourse and identity in translation.
Focusing on Danish freelance translators’ own perceptions about their
professional practice as women or men translators, the authors aim to
conclude whether gender is (or is not) a relevant factor in the translators’
perceptions of their own occupation. Previous research has shown that
in some contexts the prestigious field of literary translation is predomi-
nantly taken by men, while women translators are frequently relegated to
other translational activities with lower status (cf. Castro 2011). Sticking
to the field of non-literary translation, Askehave and Korning Zethsen
offer a qualitative analysis of 18 narratives where nine male and nine
female freelance translators write about their perceptions of what being a
translator is like. Although the results are not necessarily extrapolated to
other contexts, they set a precedent for new empirical research to assess to
what extent gendered power relations are materialized in such a feminized
profession as translation, especially taking into account the traditional
consideration of translation as a feminine/reproductive activity (an ‘area
associated with female virtues’, in the authors’ terms), in opposition to the
masculine/productive activity of writing.
As the title of this introductory chapter anticipates, all the articles
collected in this special issue place the discussion on the interactions
between gender, language and translation at the crossroads of disciplines.
And by so doing, they offer fresh insights into how the intersection of
gender and translation from transcultural and transnational perspectives
may have broader implications for studies in linguistics, or, in Ergün’s
words (2010:307), into how scholars’ interdisciplinary understandings of
gender dynamics expand with regard to language and translation. For, if
INTRODUCTION 11
gender studies and translation studies are commonly defined as two inter-
disciplinary fields per se, we must not forget that language is essential to
both.
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... Global transformations and cross-cultural discourses as social and cultural structures make gender translation and portrayal in cross-language literature more important (Meng et al., 2019). Castro (2013) notes that gender affects how readers from numerous cultures interpret translations. Wallmach (1998) says gender affects translation terms, phrases, and sentences. ...
... Through word choice, sentence structure, and cultural considerations, translators shape gender representation in translated writings. Castro (2013) notes that gender affects how foreign readers interpret translated literature. Translators must understand gender differences in languages and cultures to accurately represent the author's meaning. ...
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This article delves into the intricacy of gender portrayal in the field of literary translation, uncovering the ways in which gender is conveyed and depicted in literary works that undergo the process of moving from one language and culture to another. This research used a desk-based approach to incorporate studies from multiple academic sources that examine the interaction of gender, language, and translation. The findings demonstrate that literary translation functions as both a conduit across languages and cultures and as a platform for the negotiation and questioning of gender constructs and norms. The research emphasizes the translator's function as an engaged intermediary in this process, indicating that being aware of gender-related matters in translation might impact readers' perspectives and foster cross-cultural discussions on gender parity. The study's conclusions support the need of considering gender while translating literary works in order to advance gender parity and improve our understanding of gender in a global context.
... At this point, it is worth noting that the categories man and women should not be considered exclusively, but in relation to other variables such as sexuality, race, class or ethnicity, to name but a few (Castro, 2013). Consequently, from the late 90s, nonbinary morphology emerged, replacing binary morphemes (-a and -o, in Spanish) by symbols such as x, e, or @, among others (Bonnin & Coronel, 2021). ...
... In response to the increasing awareness concerning the use of GIL as a mean for promoting social equality numerous organizations and agencies have developed guidelines and toolkits on its use (Castro, 2013;Guerrero Salazar, 2020;Orgeira-Crespo et al., 2020), such as those proposed by the European Parliament (European Parlament, 2009) (2021). This guide aims to promote the use of inclusive and non-discriminatory language in business. ...
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The use of (gender-)inclusive language is steadily gaining attention in all spheres of society, including corporate communication. The main aim of this paper is to present GILAF, an evaluation framework to analyze and describe Spanish (gender-)inclusive language in corporate websites. For this purpose, the elaboration process of the analysis framework is described, quantitatively validated, and applied to a sample of corporate websites from Spanish SMEs. The validation process proved that the GILAF framework is suitable for analyzing and describing (gender-)inclusive language strategies in corporate websites. In addition, the extracted results from the analysis of the sample showed that the application of (gender-)inclusive language is scarce in the analyzed websites, and its use is just present in two areas: graphic and visual language strategies and presence of sexist stereotypes. The GILAF analysis framework has a great potential to be used as a guide for companies willing to apply (gender-)inclusive language strategies to their corporate web content.
... Another type of everyday resistance, according to Scott (1985), is hidden transcripts of anger or disguised discourses of dignity against status domination this can be a form of concealed language. There is a political function to language in the sense that it is both a means of communication and a means of mediation that either perpetuates or challenges power structures in wider social and cultural contexts (Castro, 2013). This can be observed in the gay community in the Philippines that uses Swardspeak 7 to communicate with one another. ...
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Everyday resistance is a foundational theory in resistance studies due to Scott's ethnographic work entitled Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance. While working alongside the villagers throughout a two-year period in an analysis of peasant political activity. He observed that they were employing acts of resistance but different from how Marxists and capitalists typically describe revolutionary action. Scott defines everyday resistance as the disapproval of subordinate groups reflected in covert resistance (Scott, 1985). In his book Fear of a Queer Planet, Michael Warner illustrates how the LGBT movement resists notions of heterosexuality. It can be argued that queer resistance led to the conceptualization of heteronormativity that views society as binary in which heterosexual ideals and norms are considered natural, thereby making others invisible or ostracized (Warner, 1991). There is a strong correlation between everyday resistance and heteronormativity despite the fact that they originate from different schools of thought. Both theoretical concepts explain how power functions in society and how it relates to the individual.
... It is important to recognize language translation as something much more than its perhaps well-intentioned traditional intention of being 'merely a linguistic shift from one text to another with the least possible interference, and remain faithful to the source text' [17]. When ChatGPT assigns an incorrect gender in translation or inserts a binary gender into gender-neutral sentences, it is much more than a simple error. ...
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With Gender in Translation, Sherry Simon presents a study of the feminist issues surrounding translation studies. She argues that translation of feminist texts is a cultural intervention, seeking to create new cultural meanings and bring social change.
Article
This article explores the ways in which feminist sociolinguistic studies and feminist translation studies can inform and empower each other in terms of theory, practice, and research. While the discussion of the theoretical intersection between the two fields focuses on the feminist critiques of sexist language from the larger perspective of language philosophy, the second part on how the fields intersect with each other on a pragmatic level is more specific and focuses on the critique of the so-called “generic” masculine nouns and pronouns, illustrated through multiple examples. The third part argues that both fields would benefit from a research-based cooperation and discusses on what kinds of topics such a co-supportive relationship can be built. By presenting an overview of the theoretical, practical, and empirical interconnections between the two fields, the essay aims not only to expand related scholars' interdisciplinary understandings of gender dynamics with regard to language and translation, but also to provide them with a springboard to initiate cross-disciplinary dialogues.