Rodopi, 2014. — 235 pages. — (Approaches to Translation Studies). — ISBN: 978-94-012-1086-7.
The publication deliberately concentrates on the reception and application of one concept highly influential in the sociology of translation and interpreting, namely habitus. By critically engaging with this Bourdieusian concept, it aspires to re-estimate not only interdisciplinary interfaces but also those with different approaches in the discipline itself. The authors of the contributions collected in this volume, by engaging with the habitus concept, lend expression to the conviction that it is indeed a concept which upsets, i.e. one with the potential to make a difference to research agendas. They are cutting across diverse traditions of Bourdieu reception within and beyond the discipline, each paper being based on unique research experiences. We do hope that this volume can help to find and maintain the delicate balance between consolidating an area of research by insisting on methodological rigour as well as on the sine-qua-non of a given body of thought on the one hand and being critically inventive on the other.
Introduction: (Translatorial) Habitus – A Concept that Upsets (in Translation Studies)?
General Theoretical AspectsIs Habitus as Conceived by Pierre Bourdieu Soluble in Translation Studies?
Translators’ Identity Work: Introducing Micro-Sociological Theory of Identity to the Discussion of Translators’ Habitus
Intra-Disciplinary Interrelations (Re)VisitedRemapping Habitus: Norms, Habitus and the Theorisation of Agency in Translation Practice and Translation Scholarship
Translatorial Hexis and Cultural Honour: Translating Captain Corelli’s Mandolin into Greek
Interpreters in the Making: Habitus as a Conceptual Enhancement of Boundary Theory?
The Interface between Bourdieu’s Habitus and Latour’s Agency: The Work Trajectories of Two Finnish Translators
The Relationship Between Theory and Empirical Studies – Methodological AspectsOral History as a Research Method to Study Interpreters’ Habitus
The (Re-)Construction of Habitus: A Survey-Based Account of Literary Translators’ Trajectories Put into Methodological Perspective
The Influence of the Habitus on Translatorial Style: Some Methodological Considerations Based on the Case of Yorgos
Himonas’ Rendering of Hamlet into Greek
Political and/or Critical Aspects of The Habitus Concept In Translation StudiesBourdieu’s Habitus and Dewey’s Habits: Complementary Views of the Social?
The Historian as Translator: Applying Pierre Bourdieu to the Translation of History