TY - BOOK AU - Amato,Cristina AU - Baaij,C.J.W. AU - Bajčić,Martina AU - Busch,Christoph AU - Dannemann,Gerhard AU - Delgado,Carmen Jerez AU - Engberg,Jan AU - Ervas,Francesca AU - Ferrari,Elena Ioriatti AU - Graziadei,Michele AU - Guggeis,Manuela AU - Morra,Lucia AU - Pasa,Barbara AU - Pozzo,Barbara AU - Sacco,Rodolfo AU - Séjean,Michel AU - Troiano,Onofrio AU - Visconti,Jacqueline AU - Šarčević,Susan TI - Translating the DCFR and Drafting the CESL: A Pragmatic Perspective SN - 9783866536067 AV - KJE5306 .T73 2013 U1 - 418.03339999999997 PY - 2014///] CY - Munich PB - Otto Schmidt/De Gruyter european law pub KW - Contracts KW - European Union countries KW - Language KW - Law KW - Translating KW - Sales KW - LAW / International KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; List of Contributors --; Table of Contents --; Pragmatic Issues in Translating the DCFR and Drafting the CESL: An Introduction --; Part I: Historical Outline --; Chapter 1: Traduction Juridique: Traduction d’un Texte Intraduisible? --; Chapter 2: The Myth of Equivalence in Legal Translation --; Chapter 3: Legal Translation and Legal Certainty / Uncertainty: From the DCFR to the CESL Proposal --; Chapter 4: Many Languages for a Single Voice --; Part II: Theoretical Issues in Legal Translation --; Chapter 5: On Semantic and Pragmatic Equivalence in Translation --; Chapter 6: Legal Integration and the Postulate of Imperfect Translation --; Chapter 7: System Neutrality in Legal Translation --; Chapter 8: Towards a Terminological Approach to Translating European Contract Law --; Chapter 9: General and Specific Perspectives on Vagueness in Law – Impact upon the Feasibility of Legal Translation --; Part III: Legal Translation Enterprises: The DCFR and the CESL --; A. Translating the DCFR --; Chapter 10: Unjustifi ed Enrichment in Book VII DCFR: Beyond the European Models --; Chapter 11: Legal Expressions of Urgency in Comparative Perspective: The Translation of Temporal Adverbials in the DCFR --; Chapter 12: The Defi nitions of the DCFR and the French Legal Language --; Chapter 13: The Translation of the DCFR: The Spanish Experience --; B. Drafting the CESL --; Chapter 14: How and when Lawyer-Linguists of the EU Institutions Intervene during the Legislative Procedure for the Adoption of the Regulation on a Common European Sales Law (CESL) --; Chapter 15: The Common European Sales Law and the Exclusion of Mixed Purpose Contracts: Translation vs. Interpretation? --; Chapter 16: Found in Translation: National Concepts and EU Legal Terminology --; Chapter 17: Sample of Comparative Text Analysis on Common European Sales Law --; Part IV: Selected Materials --; DCFR Articles Discussed in the Essays --; DCFR Definitions Discussed in the Essays --; CESL Articles and Definitions Discussed in the Essays --; A Comparison between DCFR and CESL: The Example of Good Faith and Fair Dealing --; Index: DCFR & CESL Analysed Occurrences; restricted access N2 - Translating the DCFR and writing the CESL have been extremely complex enterprises, and closely dependent one on the other. The volume takes a pragmatic approach in describing them. Structured in four parts, it sets out the historical and philosophical background of legal translation, and then focuses more narrowly on the legal translation processes adopted in the DCFR and the CESL. The volume provides legal and linguistic scholars as well as legal translators with a deeper understanding of the complexity of legal translation processes, which involve many institutional and non-institutional actors, each applying different methods of translation UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783866536067 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783866536067 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783866536067/original ER -