4 resultados para Intercultural competence

em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal


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Versão editor: http://www.isegi.unl.pt/docentes/acorreia/documentos/European_Challenge_KM_Innovation_2004.pdf

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Na actividade tradutiva, situamo-nos num plano intercultural que cruza culturas diferenciadas, inerentes às línguas de partida e de chegada. De facto, ao traduzirmos um texto, defrontamo-nos sempre com um universo valorativo a que importa aceder, de modo a que o tradutor possa chegar a uma equivalência semântica e ideológica. É o que sucede, com especial relevância, no âmbito da tradução de textos literários, económicos e, até mesmo, científicos e técnicos. Por tal motivo, a análise dos valores presentes no discurso, que permite determinar a orientação ideológica aí inscrita, revela-se particularmente útil no plano intercultural da tradução. A sua determinação poderá ser feita, é certo, em função de vários enquadramentos mas, na nossa opinião, é a perspectiva de Oswald Ducrot, constituinte de uma Pragmática integrada na Semântica, que melhor se adequa à análise discursiva de acordo com estes objectivos. Trata-se assim de adoptar uma concepção teórica que permita abranger as duas componentes: por um lado, determinar o sentido, vector fundamental, no caso da tradução, entendido como orientação argumentativa inscrita nas estruturas linguísticas, por outro, através dos princípios de argumentação convocados, coincidentes com o recorte ideológico, aceder aos valores presentes no universo discursivo.

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In an age where Babel has turned into transcultural communication, an interlingual approach – i.e. in English and in French – to the translating process from German to Portuguese appeared pertinent. Aiming at a refinement of the translating competence, this process consists in contrasting different linguistic and literary strategies through an intercultural and multi-etymological perspective. Thus, we settled upon Heiner Müller‘s play Der Auftrag. Erinnerung an eine Revolution (1980), on which the composer Heiner Goebbels has based himself to textually and musically dramatize an excerpt, Der Mann im Farhstuhl / The Man in the Elevator. A transcription of such excerpt in its source language, German, as well as its translation into English (Carl Weber, 1984, Performing Arts Publications, New York) and French (Jean Jourdheuil, Heinz Schwarzinger, Editions Minuit, Paris) can be found in the booklet that accompanies the CD – edited in 1988 by ECD (München: Records GmbH). It should be emphasized that such a creation allows a framing of Müller‘s text into a musical scenography and, therefore, encourages an intersemiotic contrast. This experience enabled us to come up with a unique imagery of Müller‘s piece of writing, by means of its dramatic and musical conversion and, simultaneously, lead us to stretch our textual consciousness to a multitude of intra-, extra- and interlinguistic elements.

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In today’s globalized world, communication students need to be capable of efficiently communicating across the globe. At ISCAP, part of the 3rd year syllabus in Translation and New Technologies course is focused on culture and the need to be culturally knowledgeable. We argue the approach to incorporate cultural aspects in HE needs to be studentcentered, in order to encompass not only intercultural awareness, but also the 21st century skills students need to be successful and competent citizens. Additionally, as studies have shown, the manipulation of digital tools fosters greater student involvement in learning activities. We have adopted Digital Storytelling - multimodal storytelling technique - to promote a personal, student-centered reflection on intercultural communication. We intend to present student and teacher perspectives on this learning experience and assess its relevance in HE contexts, based on the content analysis of student expressed perspectives on this activity as well as a multimodal analysis of the digital stories created. A preliminary analysis of our case study has demonstrated that Digital Storytelling potentiates two complimentary types of reflection: on the one hand, students felt the need to reflect on their own intercultural knowledge, create and adapt their finding in the form of a story; on the other hand, viewing others’ stories they have raised questions and demonstrated points of view otherwise ignored.