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Annexure – II:
Proposal for National Translation Mission
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Submitted to NKC by Jayati Ghosh
(Based on discussions at the NKC Translation workshop, 11 February 2006, and subsequent
interaction with participants and others)
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There is urgent need for expansion of quantity and improvement of quality of translations
of different types (human, machine-aided, instant, etc.) and in different domains
(literary, scientific, technical, business, etc.) that would provide greater access
to knowledge across the country. The best way to kick-start this process and promote
and disseminate good quality translation in the country may be to set up a National
Translation Mission. This would urgently take up the task of identifying gaps, promoting
good quality translation, training, disseminating information about translation
and translators, and co-ordinating ongoing work by public and private organisations.
The idea is not to duplicate or over-ride the work of various other public sector
or private organisations, but to help them to re-examine their priorities, improve
quality, and widen awareness.
As an activity, translation has been going on between different pairs of languages
in the Indian subcontinent for a long time. Translation, as a passion, has seen
many great minds in action in different speech communities in India and elsewhere.
As a profession, translation is challenging and becoming more lucrative, particularly
in recent decades. As a field of research, Translation Studies seem to have emerged
as a field with numerous ideas emanating from linguistics, philosophy, literary
studies, semiotics, lexicology, anthropology, computer science, and a host of other
fields. But considering its spread across a large number of languages, cultures
and nations, the field still seems to be lacking in efforts at coordinating its
activities.
As a multilingual and multicultural country, and as one of the oldest knowledge
bases, India has been in the forefront of translation for many centuries. With many
languages and cultures, this country also provides a rich testing ground for all
major theoretical initiatives in both literary and machine translation. It is
expected that the proposed National Translation Mission (NTM) will fulfil a long-felt
need that would satisfy different segments: teachers, learners, language technologists,
business groups, newspaper establishments and other media groups, creative writers,
readers, those engaged in comparative studies and translation theoreticians.
The NTM will have the following objectives:
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1.
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To act as a store-house of information on translation involving Indian languages,
and to make information regarding all aspects of translation available – by creating,
maintaining and constantly updating information on translations published, training
programmes scheduled, translation tools and instruments available and new initiatives,
and facilities such as a 'National Register for Translators'.
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2.
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To work as a clearing house for all translation activities, both theoretical and
practical, in as many Indian languages as possible
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3.
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To provide link
to other agencies and organisations and individuals involved in translation
and translation-related activities involving Indian languages
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4.
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To project Indian
languages and literatures in this region and abroad through high-quality
translation;
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5.
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To create and maintain various
tools for translation, and to especially prepare bilingual and multilingual bi-directional general as well as
special-purpose translational dictionaries, word-finders,
and thesauri; and
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6.
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To enter into or promote printed as well as virtual publication of works on Translation Studies jointly
or independently for the benefit of all institutions and individuals interested
in the field
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7.
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To provide a forum
for dialogue by creating a
bulletin board for people to post questions and answers
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8.
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To provide guidance in the methodology of translation and undertake activities to
enrich teaching and training activities in translation studies.
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Key activities of the proposed National Translation Mission
Translator
education:
This reflects the fact that while translation requires bilingualism as a necessary
condition, it is a specialised function that cannot be assumed and some features
of which must be learnt. In addition, different types of translation work require
different skills – for example, translation of scientific or technical works requires
very different skills and orientation from literary translation. Also, interpretation skills
are relatively undeveloped and also need specialised training, with reference to
the relevant media (e.g. radio or TV) and context.
The activities of the NTM in this area would include:
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Running short-term
training programmes
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Creating course
packages for translators that could become part of language teachingprogrammes across the country.
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Fellowship programmes
that would also allow
exchange of scholars between institutions. Here, a special emphasis could
be laid on translation
between Indian languages, rather than only to/from English.
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Encouraging research
projects, including student research, specifically for making available
good translations of identified texts as examples and generating resources that
could also serve
pedagogic aims.
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Information dissemination.
Since translation is currently not a very prominent or highly rewarded activity,
there is also inadequate knowledge about the translation capabilities that exist
in the country, even among potential users. For example, there are many good translators
in particular regional languages, who are unknown to publishers or those who would
otherwise use their services. The Central Institute of Indian Languages, Mysore,
trains around 400 teachers fluent in one Indian language in another Indian language
every year in 20
Indian languages in its
Regional Language Centers in seven cities. This is increasingly recognised
as a necessary but scarce skill, but these trained people (around 11,000 currently) are not widely
known to potential users. In many languages, translations have already been created
and printed by small publishers in a range of areas, but this output is not known
to a wider group.
Therefore important activities of the NTM in this area would be: |
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Creating a data
repository of translators in different areas and with different skills and
qualifications. This repository would be available online and also through contacting
the NTM with specific requirements.
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Creating a data repository and
annotated catalogue of existing translations of different works, classified by area,
with new lists to be sent regularly to educational institutions, library networks,
etc.
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Promotion and dissemination of good quality translation material.
It may be argued that if there were need for much more translated material of various
sorts, the market would already be delivering it. However, the lack of knowledge
about possibilities actually prevents demand from emerging. As is the case with
so much other knowledge, you do not know what you are missing until you are exposed
to it. Further, those involved with translation of literary material (such as the
National Book Trust
and the Granth
Academies) testify to the enormous demand for books translated into local
languages once they are produced.
It is important to note that such translation however should not be a one-way street from
English to Indian languages; rather, there is a wealth of material available in Indian languages which also require greater dissemination
both in English and in other Indian languages. In particular, the tradition of viewing
translation as a
parallel avenue of creativity should be encouraged. There is need for a
horizontal paradigm which does not create a vertical distinction between donor and
receiving languages, and promotes the multilingualism and cultural diversity of
India. There is already a proliferation of some translation in certain areas (such
as the works of Dr. Ambedkar which are being translated into many different languages)
which reflects a wider social churning as well as the requirements and aspirations
of newly literate groups.
In science and
technical translation, unlike for literary translation, there is need for
greater standardisation of terms and concepts so as to ensure both better comprehension
and ease of moving across languages. Further, translation today is an under-rewarded activity
both in terms of
social recognition and monetary remuneration, and these needs to be changed.
It is also important to note that translation is an individual activity but also
a social enterprise, in which success which may require the involvement of a range
of different people at different stages and team work.
In this context the following specific activities of the NTM could be considered: |
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Active promotion of good quality translations though book launches, festivals, fellowships and prizes.
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Encouraging collaborative
translation work, as well as long-term multi-translator projects, and organising
workshops for translators to interact and exchange views and experiences.
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Buy-back arrangements with publishers and linking with library networks to ensure
an initial market for good quality translation.
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Providing an interface
between producers of translated material and publishers or purchasers, including
both public and private organisations.
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Subsidising the
initial translation of some current affairs journals and other useful and
interesting material (such as the New Scientist, Economic and Political Weekly,
and so on) for widespread dissemination into regional languages.
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Suggesting incorporation
of translated material into syllabi of schools, colleges and universities,
and in particular in literature studies at all levels bring in translated works
from other Indian languages.
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Suggesting language
resource centres in all schools and colleges and special book corners (dealing
with translated materials) in schools.
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Promoting and disseminating less visible ongoing activities which emphasise bilingual skills (such
as the compulsory
translation section in the Karnataka police officers examination).
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Considering means to ensure greater access of translated material to smaller towns
and villages, using other
public and civil
society organisations (such as the National Literacy Mission and the Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti).
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Promotion of machine translation.
New technologies provide exciting new opportunities for rapid and large volume translation
at relatively low cost, although there are issues of both technology development
and human resources in this context. The NTM could help create and use technology
and facilitate technological progress in machine translation by adopting the following
measures: |
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Ensuring the creation of the necessary infrastructure, especially digital tools like Thesauri, Bilingual Dictionaries,
software for Translation Memory, etc., which have immediate application for more
efficient and effective translation.
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Lexical resources
like e-dictionaries,
wordnets>,
language analysis
and synthesis tools,
concordancers,
frequency analsysers etc. are the essential components of a machine
translation system. These cannot be created and maintained by a single institute,
but need multi-institute collaboration over a long time. NTM could provide a platform
for team work, through continued interaction through meetings and online discussions.
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Source texts and translations should be made available in clean digital form as
far as possible, with NTM working out the necessary copyright issues. NTM should ensure that this wealth
of digital material is maintained in a standard from with standardised XML tags and DTDs.
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The international trend these days is to develop good quality parallel corpora with annotations and alignments. Such annotated corpora are treated with machine
learning techniques to obtain machine translation systems. The sheer volume of this
data and the magnitude of the effort require substantial initial investments which
are not ideally made by individual organisations; however, the NTM could facilitate
such efforts and provide some support.
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Promote an interlingua
based approach along the lines of the "Universal Networking Language" (UNL) initiated
by the United Nations in 1996 involving 15 countries. (IIT Bombay has already developed
various tools, techniques and resources for English and Indian language MT, which
could be generalised.)
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