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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Revisiting the Interpreter’s Role

A study of conference, court, and medical interpreters in Canada, Mexico, and the United States

Claudia V. Angelelli
San Diego State University

2004. xvi, 127 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 1671 7 / EUR 90.00
978 1 58811 565 2 / USD 135.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9522 4 / EUR 90.00 / USD 135.00
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Through the development of a valid and reliable instrument, this book sets out to study the role that interpreters play in the various settings where they work, i.e. the courts, the hospitals, business meetings, international conferences, and schools. It presents interpreters’ perceptions and beliefs about their work as well as statements of their behaviors about their practice. For the first time, the administration and results of a survey administered across languages in Canada, Mexico and the United States offer the reader a glimpse of the interpreters' views in their own words. It also discusses the tension between professional ideology and the reality of interpreters at work. This book has implications for the theory and practice of interpreting across settings.


Table of contents

Acknowledgments
xi
List of tables
xiii
List of figures
xiv
List of abbreviations
xv
Prologue
1
1. Overview of the field
7
2. Opening up the circle
27
3. The construction of the Interpreter Interpersonal Role Inventory (IPRI)
47
4. Interpreter Interpersonal Role Inventory: Administration and results
63
5. Expanding perspectives
83
Appendix 1. IPRI Final Version
101
Appendix 2. Organizations surveyed for different settings
106
Appendix 3. Letter from AIIC, U.S. Respondent #16
107
Notes
111
References
115