Inclusive development, translation, and Indigenous-language pop

IF 1.7 3区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
D. Sterk
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Abstract

This article is about a cost-effective approach to inclusive development in a settler state that shows what translation has to offer minorities. For almost two decades, Taiwan’s government has rewarded Indigenous minority recording artists who sing in endangered ancestral languages at the Golden Melody Awards (GMAs), Taiwan’s Grammys. These language-based GMAs stimulate the private production of popular music in such languages. They also stimulate translation into such languages, which certain recording artists have been learning as adults. I found that one GMA hopeful, Yoku Walis, translated her hip-hop lyrics from Mandarin Chinese into Seejiq, her ancestral language, with a language learner in mind, and that a pedagogical goal also guided the titling of her music videos. But language pedagogy is only one part of an innovative package. Yoku’s Seejiq hip hop is a contribution to inclusive linguistic and cultural development. The language-based GMAs illustrate the ways in which settler states such as Taiwan can help to empower Indigenous translators such as Yoku to make such contributions.
包容性发展、翻译和土著语言流行音乐
这篇文章是关于一个具有成本效益的方法在一个移民国家的包容性发展,显示什么翻译必须提供给少数民族。近二十年来,台湾政府一直在台湾的格莱美金曲奖(GMAs)上奖励用濒危祖先语言演唱的土著少数民族唱片艺术家。这些基于语言的gma刺激了这些语言的流行音乐的私人生产。他们还鼓励翻译成这些语言,这是某些唱片艺术家成年后一直在学习的。我发现,有希望获得GMA大奖的尤库·瓦利斯(Yoku Walis)把她的嘻哈歌词从普通话翻译成她的祖语塞吉克语,考虑的是语言学习者,而且她的音乐视频的标题也有一个教学目标。但语言教学法只是整套创新方案的一部分。Yoku的Seejiq嘻哈是对包容性语言和文化发展的贡献。以语言为基础的gma说明了台湾等移民国家如何帮助像Yoku这样的土著翻译人员做出这样的贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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