Migrations santé Alsace a organisé le 14 novembre 2012 une conférence : l’interprétariat médical et social professionnel.
http://www.conference.migrationssan…
Au cours de cette conférence a été présentée la Charte de l’interprétariat médical et social professionnel en France.
Parmi les interventions :
Elisabeth Revérand-Gougeon, interprète en langue des signes (témoin du film documentaire « signer la vie » et Tours 2 mains) : L’implicite et l’explicite, que traduit l’interprète en langue des signes ?
« La Langue des Signes Française (LSF) est une langue à part entière qui, comme toute autre langue, véhicule une culture : « la culture sourde ». Il s’agit donc de découvrir comment l’interprète français / LSF travaille avec ces deux langues et ces deux cultures, notamment dans le milieu médical. En effet, nous pouvons nous arrêter sur deux aspects importants dans l’exercice de cette profession afin de répondre à sa déontologie :
entre implicite et explicite, la frontière est parfois ténue quant à la spécificité de cette langue visuelle.
en tant qu’interprètes, nous sommes dans un souci de langues mais la notion de handicap est aussi présente. Les interprètes professionnels ont travaillé sur ce point lors de leur formation afin d’être au clair dans l’exercice de leur profession, mais professionnels entendants et patients sourds ont parfois des attentes différentes vis à vis de cette fonction. »
http://www.migrationssante.org
Linguistica Antverpiensia New Series – Themes in Translation Studies
CALL FOR PAPERS (extended deadline ; for more details see : www.lans-tts.be)
Translation and knowledge mediation in medical and health settings Guest editors : Vicent Montalt (Universitat Jaume I, Spain) & Mark Shuttleworth (Imperial College, UK)
We invite proposals dealing with one or more of the following possible tracks and are happy to include papers dealing with translation, technical writing, communication and community interpreting (in a medical context) :
1. Knowledge mediation/translation between researchers and health professionals
2. Knowledge mediation/translation between researchers and patients
3. Knowledge mediation/translation between health professionals and patients
4. Knowledge mediation/translation between researchers and the general public
5. Knowledge mediation/translation between health professionals and the general public
6. Cultural issues in knowledge mediation/translation, such as different ways of conceptualizing health, disease, pain, risk, safety, etc.
7. Medical knowledge mediation/translation at specific moments of history
8. Heterofunctional/transgeneric translation in medical knowledge mediation
Deadline for proposals : 10 August 2011
Please send your proposals to Vicent Montalt,Universitat Jaume I, Castelló, Spain :montalt@trad.uji.es AND Mark Shuttleworth, Imperial College, UK :m.shuttleworth@imperial.ac.uk.
References
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Pöchhacker, F. (2006). Research and methodology in healthcare interpreting. Linguistica Antverpiensia. Antwerpen : Artesis Hogeschool Antwerpen.
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Shlesinger, M. (2000). Interpreting as a cognitive process : How can we know what really happens ? In Sonja Tirkkonen-Condit and Riitta Jääskeläinen (Eds.), Tapping and mapping the process of translation and interpreting : Outlooks on empirical research (pp. 3-15). Amsterdam and Philadelphia : John Benjamins.
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Tebble, H. (1999). The tenor of consultant physicians : Implications for medical interpreting. The Translator, 5(2), 179-99.
Tebble, H. (2003). Training doctors to work effectively with interpreters. In Louise Brunette, Georges Bastin, Isabelle Hemlin, & Heather Clarke (Eds.), The critical link 3 : Interpreters in the community (pp. 81-98). Amsterdam and Philadelphia : John Benjamins.
Vásquez, Carmen, & Rafael Art. Javier. (1991). The problem with interpreters : Communication with Spanish-speaking patients. Hospital and Community Psychiatry, 42(2), 163-5.
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Internet sites
The Office of Minority Health http://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/templates/browse.aspx?lvl=2&lvlID=15