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Sociopragmatic Translation in Latin (Paperback)

Ancient History > Ancient Egypt & Egyptology

Imprint: Oxbow Books
Pages: 256
Illustrations: 10 B/W illustrations
ISBN: 9798888572481
Published: 18th December 2026
Script Academic & Professional

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Sociopragmatic Translation in Latin teaches how to use the principles of sociopragmatics on canonical classical Latin texts in order to (re-)embed them in their settings and discourse(s).

A common interview response to the question of why someone wants to learn an ancient language from scratch is that it is about connecting with the text and/or author more intimately. Usually, when prompting further, things get derailed. The biggest hurdle between us and the ancient author and/or text is often not so much the surface-level vocabulary, but how we approach the text as a whole, i.e. its genre, register, and style as well as its topic, focus, and relationship to the reader. This book addresses common misconceptions about the translation technique and result, and all of them come back to sociopragmatics and thus to an area of linguistics alien to many aspiring Classicists. This book revisits common grammatical and methodological troublemakers specifically from the perspective of sociopragmatics to help achieve the best translation (and commentary) result possible. It is a practical guide on how to implement theoretical concepts in order to achieve a more accurate translation and one that brings us closer to the ancient audience.

Every translation is an interpretation. In the age of DeepL and co., transposing a source text into a target language may seem easier than ever. However, purposefully translating a text to reflect its social, cultural, material embedding into its original context and discourse in a way that resonates with the intended audience of the translation has never been more complicated. The book is unique: first, in its drawing linguistic research into everyday translation practice. Secondly, it offers a full range of pedagogical features that makes this more than a monograph but rather an interactive resource. It offers case studies with reflection questions/tasks, in-text bite-size translation tricks, a glossary of terminology, and an answer key for each exercise. Thirdly, the book aims to bring about a paradigm shift in the approach to translation across classical subjects, i.e. the co-text, context, and the social and material settings are drawn upon to arrive at a translation that reflects the reality the source text emerged from and that does it justice.

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