Exploring ties between Romani culture and the field of translation

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Inaugural Romani Studies Conference--10 Nov 2011
2011-09-09

Inaugural Romani Studies Conference to be held at the University of Berkeley, California on November 10, 2011.

Excerpt:

Dr. Ian Hancock, Director, The Romani Archives and Documentation Center, University of Texas-Austin

European Union CenterSlavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies, Institute of (ISEEES)European Studies, Institute ofUCB Division of Social SciencesThe UCB Division of Arts and HumanitiesEquity and Inclusion, Vice ChancellorAnthropology, Department ofJewish Studies ProgramEast Asian Languages & Cultures, Department of

This conference will gather new methodological approaches within the field of Romani Studies, a burgeoning and interdisciplinary field that explores the history, culture and politics of Romanies (Gypsies) in global contexts. By examining and exploring the various strategies by which Romanies have represented themselves and others, both in dialogue with and apart from the larger societies in which they live, the Inaugural Conference in Romani Studies seeks to support continued research in this rapidly-growing field. Scholars will present on Romani representations in non-Romani cultures, contemporary social and political issues facing Romani communities across the globe, and Roma-related research in the fields of Education, Comparative literature, Art History, Architecture, History, Holocaust Studies, Anthropology, Ethnomusicology and Women’s and Gender Studies.

 


2011-09-09
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About the author
Debbie Folaron

Debbie is Associate Professor of Translation Studies at Concordia University, Montreal, Canada, where she teaches translation, technologies and theories of translation. Her research focuses on Romani translators and interpreters in multiple linguistic and cultural contexts. She is very interested in the social dynamics that underpin translation, technologies and the Web, which allow contemporary societies to communicate and exchange information, knowledge and stories on a global scale. In this English-language blog, she talks, among other things, about the stories and the challenges Romani translators and interpreters face while exercising their professions in diverse settings and in a rapidly globalizing world.