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Translational Hermeneutics:
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2015
Lothar Černý
Hidden Hermeneutics: The Beginnings of Translation Studies in Germany after World War II
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This paper introduces some of the most infl uential fi gureheads in the emerging field of Translation Studies in East and West Germany after World War II. It outlines the reasons why Translation Studies parted from the traditional hermeneutical approach to translation. On the other hand it traces theresurgence of a new hermeneutical inquiry into the process of translation in the new, basically linguistic approaches and their science orientation.
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Translational Hermeneutics:
Year >
2015
Larisa Cercel,
Radegundis Stolze,
John Stanley
Hermeneutics as a Research Paradigm
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The historical overview covering Schleiermacher and the disciplinary status of translational hermeneutics was written by Cercel, the sections on important concepts and research within the paradigm of translational hermeneutics was authored by Stolze, and Stanley wrote the last three sectionsdealing with language games, a concrete research project and the role of phenomenology in research. The text was geared towards providing some background information on translational hermeneutics, a field which has bearing not only on the practice of translation but also on research in TS. From the vantage point of translational hermeneutics, research in translation studies takes its point of departure from the translator’sperspective: The guiding question is one centered on how a translator deals with the texts he or she has to translate.
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3.
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Translational Hermeneutics:
Year >
2015
Brian O’Keeffe
Prologue to a Hermeneutic Approach to Translation
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The purpose of this essay is to explore the place Hans-Georg Gadamer makes for the activity of translation within his philosophy of interpretation. In general terms, the interest of Gadamer’s approach lies in the effort to inscribe translation within what is described as the ‘hermeneutic circle’. This essay accordingly offers a brief, but detailed account of the Gadamerian arc of interpretation, but suggests that the critical issues – along the lines suggested by Werner Hamacher in his book Premises – concern the way in which the circle begins to turn, and furthermore, how one actually enters the hermeneutic circle. If these are matters basic to the Gadamerian way with textual interpretation tout court, the principal claim of this essay is that it is the translatorwho experiences the most serious diffi culties in beginning, and indeed, in entering the ambit of hermeneutics. In detailing these particular difficulties, one reaches a limit-case of the hermeneutical interpreter – the translator as one to whom Gadamer grants a privileged place in his philosophy, but also as one who reveals to hermeneutics the nature of the problems that beset hermeneutic philosophy from the outset.
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4.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Aviv Livnat
Space That Sees: James Turrell (1992)
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5.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Ulrike Passe
House Marxen, Germany, 2001
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6.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Notes on Contributors
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7.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Iris Aravot
Phenomenology as Architectural Method
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8.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Ana Paula Baltazar dos Santos
Trans_Ports 2001: a Virtual Phenomenon
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9.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Alexander Ortenberg
Of Diamonds and Dust
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10.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Danit Baruch
Bangkok (or a Tel-Aviv Love Song)
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11.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Jin Baek
Empty Cross and Shintai: Tadao Ando's Church of the Light
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12.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Derya Yorgancioglu
Steven Holl: A Translation of Phenomenological Philosophy into the Realm of Architecture
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13.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Eran Neuman
The Present State of Phenomenology in Architecture
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14.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Staphanie Brandt
The Art of Memory Peter Zumthor’s Therme Vals
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15.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Michael Asgaard Andersen
Utzon's Bayview House
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16.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Kasper Lægring Nielsen
The Phenomenology of Daniel Libeskind's Jewish Museum Berlin
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17.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Leslie Kavanaugh
Koen van Velsen's Folded Cinema: A Plea for Le Pli
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18.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Uri Jacob Matatyaou
Memorial Architecture as Storyteller
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19.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Gianluca Fedi
Church of Saint John Baptist in Florence (Italy - 1961-1963) Arch. Giovanni Michelucci
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20.
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Invitation to ArchiPhen:
Year >
2010
Benoit Jaquet
A Place of Immanence: Hiroshima's Ground Zero
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