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"This book applies frameworks from behavioral economics to Western thinking about translation, mapping four approaches to eight keywords in translation studies to bring together divergent perspectives on the study of translation and interpreting. The volume takes its points of departure from the tensions between the concerns of behavioral and neoclassical economists. The book considers on one side behavioral economists' interest in the predictable irrationality of "Humans" and its nuances as they unfold in terms of gender, here organized around Masculine Human, Feminine Human, and Queer perspectives, and on the other, neoclassical economists' chief concerns with the unfailing rationality of the "Econs." Robinson applies these four approaches across eightchapters, each representing a keyword in the study of translation-agency; difference; Eurocentrism; hermeneutics; language; norms; rhetoric; and world literature-with case studies which problematize the different categories. Taken together, the book offers a comprehensive treatment of the behavioral economics of translation and promotes new ways of thinking in the study of translation and interpreting, making it of interest to scholars in the discipline as well as those working along interdisciplinary lines in related fields such as philosophy, literature, and political science"--

This book applies frameworks from behavioral economics to Western thinking about translation, mapping four approaches to eight keywords in translation studies to bring together divergent perspectives on the study of translation and interpreting.

Acknowledgments vi
Introduction: Stair-Stepped Anti-Idealism viii
1 Agency
1(34)
2 Difference (the Ethics of)
35(26)
3 Eurocentrism (Attitudes Toward)
61(19)
4 Hermeneutics
80(25)
5 Language
105(39)
6 Norms
144(26)
7 Rhetoric
170(18)
8 World Literature
188(16)
9 Conclusion: So What?
204(2)
Notes 206(8)
References 214(25)
Index 239
Douglas Robinson is Professor of Translation Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and author of two dozen books and five dozen articles and book chapters on translation, literature, rhetoric, semiotics, and culture. His recent Routledge books include Critical Translation Studies (2017), Translationality (2017), Priming Translation (2022), and Translation as a Form (2023).