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Accommodation in Translation

By Aiwei Shi
M.A. in English Linguistics and Literature
Xinzhou Teachers University
Shanxi, China
shi_aiwei@hotmail.com
Abstract: Faithfulness was once considered the iron rule in translation in the history of
translation in China as well as in the West. Yet when we take a closer look,
accommodation, or adaptation, is found in most published translations. This article
attempts to investigate the reasons why accommodation is frequently needed and
enumerates the following types of accommodation translators or interpreters make in
their work: cultural accommodation; collocation accommodation; ideological
accommodation; aesthetic accommodation.

What does accommodation mean?


Accommodation in this article is considered a synonym of adaptation which means changes are
made so the target text produced is in line with the spirit of the original. A text which is not
obviously a translation in the traditional sense is thus created. Here, we must in the first place
define translation. Translation consists of providing, in the receptor language, the closest natural
equivalent of the source language message, first in terms of meaning and secondly in terms of
style. (Nida, 1984). Is translation a scientific study or artistic endeavor, researchable theory or
technical craft, a branch of linguistics or of literature? It seems that all of these definitions have
their advocates among translators and those who have sought to characterize its theory and its
practice. Here the somewhat sterile debates about translation as a process or translation as a
product give way to fresh opportunities to cohere the semiotic, the linguistic, the social, the
cultural and the psychological perspectives on communicating. In short, it offers a broader
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concept of what it means to understand (Christopher N Candlin: the General Editor's Preface of
Discourse and the Translator by Basil Hatim & Ian Mason.1990). We believe translation is not
merely linguistic conversion or transformation between languages but it involves
accommodation in scope of culture, politics, aesthetics, and many other factors.
Translation, in terms of methodology, may be literal translation or free translation, which used to
be an irreconcilable dilemma in translation circles on which unfortunately no authoritative
conclusion has been reached. In China, it is agreed by many that one should "translate literally, if
possible, or appeal to free translation" (Fan Zhongying, 1994: 97). Yet few abide by such a rule
for reasons that will be discussed shortly. The opposite of adaptation is transcription, which is a
word-for-word method of translation rarely applied in translation practice with the exception of
lists and catalogues, because linguistic differences forbid us from doing so, especially when the
two languages belong to quite different language families such as English and Chinese.
Accommodation is also translation, a free, rather than literal, kind of translation. Moreover, it is
inevitable in practice if the translation is to maintain the source message's essence, impact, and
effect. Tthe theoretical bases of this statement will be the topic of the next section.

Theoretical Bases
In the West there is an interesting saying: A translation is like a woman: if it is faithful, it is not
beautiful; if it is beautiful, it is not faithful. The faithfulness-beauty contrast was often used by
Chinese translators to describe the effect of a piece of translated work. Most would rather prefer
faithfulness to beauty when evaluating a translation. I suspect the reason is most probably that
the Chinese traditional morals or values influence the translators' choice. Academically, it is the
dispute between source-centered and target-centered trends. During most of the history of
translation both in China and the West, source-centeredness was regarded a priority and was
strictly followed. More than one hundred years ago, during the Qing Dynasty, Yan Fu, who was
a household name in the Chinese translation circles placed faithfulness as the first o his three2

word principle: faithfulness, smoothness, and elegance. Lu Xun, a well-known translator and
man of letters, is a strong supporter of such a view and his translations co-authored with his
brother evidently proved his idea, although their translations were accused by some as unnatural
or even non-understandable (Chen Fukang: 2000). Similarly, in the West, A.F. Tytler (17471814) proposed his principles:
A translation should:

give a complete transcript of the ideas and sentiments in the original passage

maintain the character of the style

have the ease and flow of the original text. (A.F. Tytler: 1790)

This is cited here to demonstrate the historical fact that source-centeredness was prevalent, not to
prove that these principle are wrong or should be abandoned altogether. Instead, one should
study them seriously and apply them in practice. Our suggestion is that if for linguistic or
cultural reasons the source cannot be transcribed, we must make accommodations rather than
translate it literally. As a matter of fact, accommodations are made exactly to preserve the
original style or manner. As translation theories develop, a shift can be observed from source to
target, from form to content and meaning which is essential in any form of human
communication.
In modern times, a new theory appeared to offer a compromise. It was proposed by by Christiane
Nord (2001), who introduced a pair of terms: Documentary (preserve the original exoticizing
setting) vs. instrumental translation (adaptation of the setting to the target culture). Whether a
translation ought to be instrumental or documentary when cultural and historical elements are
involved is therefore the translator's decision. If s/he focuses on the transmission of the original
flavor for the reader's reference, documentary translation is preferred; if s/he mainly intends to
convey the information for basic communication, instrumental translation is sufficient.
Moreover, if the purpose of a translation is to achieve a particular purpose for the target
audience, anything that obstructs the achievement of this purpose is a translation error. This is
significant in its emphasis on the target-centeredness.

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Accommodation
Collocation accommodation
Because translation is primarily a linguistic endeavor, either oral or written, we would like
initially to deal with accommodation in the linguistic sphere.
If language were simply a nomenclature for a set of universal concepts, it would be easy to
translate from one language to another. One would simply replace the English name for a
concept with the Chinese name or vice versa. Learning a new language would also be much
easier than it is. Actually, each language articulates or organizes the world differently and
languages do not simply name existing categories, but they articulate their own.
Collocation is a difficult factor for anyone learning a foreign language. Talking from my own
experience, I from time to time find myself puzzled with some English collocations and it is not
rare that in my translation practice I often make such collocation mistakes which I do not notice
until a foreign colleague or friend points them out. There seems to be no reason for certain
collocations. Builders do not produce a building; authors do not invent a novel. Regular
dictionaries are of little help in translating collocations, and the translator must often resort to
accommodation. For example, when butter or eggs go bad they are described in English as rancid
and addled respectively. Both rancid and addled mean 'stale/rotten' but swapping modifiers
would make unacceptable collocations. When translated into Chinese, a common collocation is
choule, meaning 'has become stinky.' Here accommodation is made unhesitantly and naturally,
for the original English collocation.. Another example is the English phrase 'dry cow,' which is
correctly rendered in Chinese as 'the cow has stopped providing milk,' because a literal
translation ganniu would perplex the Chinese speaker, causing communication to fail.

Cultural accommodation
Culture is too broad a term and it may cover everything. Culture can mean the arts collectively:
art, music, literature, and related intellectual activities; knowledge and sophistication:
enlightenment and sophistication acquired through education and exposure to the arts; shared
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beliefs and values of a group: the beliefs, customs, practices, and social behavior of a particular
nation or people; shared attitudes: a particular set of attitudes that characterizes a group of
people (Encarta, 2003). If applied in the sense expounded above, the present article can all be
covered in one wordcultural accommodation. Yet for purpose of stress, I list these four
categories. Here I use the term in a much narrower sense, for instance, the shared attitudes or
values of a group.
The Chinese national character which is shared, to my knowledge, with the Japanese is
implicature in talking to people as opposed to the direct and open way of the Westerners,
especially Americans. In both interpreting and translation, accommodations must be made so
communication may proceed smoothly, with neither party feeling offended and irritated. Anyone
who has had traveling or living experiences in an exotic culture will readily confirm my
statement. I am only calling translators' and interpreters' attention to the fact that accommodation
as a skill will make their job more successful.

Ideological accommodation
By ideological accommodation I mean sexual and political concerns. Most Chinese, even today,
avoid the topic of sex, which is usually considered pornography. If you do not, you will be
regarded immoral, dishonest, unreliable and simply bad. This is one of the principle reasons why
sex education is in the school curriculum but never seriously taught. The teacher just tells the
students to read what is written in the textbook and discourages the students from asking a
question. So in translation we either omit or abbreviate the original graphic description of a sex
scene. This does not mean that Chinese literature never touches upon sex. It is only in the way of
depicting sex where the difference lies. We will edit the language or the scene, or make it
implicit instead. In English-Chinese translation, the translator would always make
accommodations to soften the original tone, hoping not to offend the readers (as well as to
escape censorship?), I do not wish to present my judgment here but wish to state a fact in
translation practice when sex is involved.
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Another theme is politics to which no less attention ought to be paid. Let us assume that a
foreign medium carries offensive statements against the Chinese government. It is advisable for
the translator that the details not be translated. At most, it is suffucient to mention that the
government is being criticized. Patriotism forbids one from making critical or unfavorable
statements or spreading them by translating. This is where heavy accommodations should be
made. Some of those who neglected this advice have gotten into serious trouble.

Aesthetic accommodation
Poetry has been notoriously believed to be untranslatable. Robert Frost once said, "Poetry is
what gets lost in translation." This is sufficient evidence of the difficulty involved in translation
of poetry; therefore accommodation is even more necessary. Because poetry is fundamentally
valuable for its aesthetic value, aesthetic accommodation becomes a skill instead of a basic
requirement. A good poetry translator instinctively knows the difference between the aesthetic
traditions of different cultures, so his/her translation can be better appreciated by the target
reader and can achieve the required effect. Otherwise the translation is doomed to be a failure no
matter how close or similar it looks to the original. In Chinese translation circles the following
example of accommodation is quoted quite frequently to demonstrate an effective skill or to
attack the rigidity of the source-centered point of view.
Wang Rongpei (1995), a senior translator, changed the original Chinese image to adapt to the
English aesthetic tradition when he translated a poem in the ancient poetry collection generally
known as the Book of Songs. The ancient Chinese used the following simile to depict a beautiful
girl (literally translated): her hands are like soft sprouts; her skin, condensed cream; her neck,
larva of a scarab; her teeth, deviltree; her head, qing ( a cicada-like insect); and her brows, the
shape of a moth. Let's not inquire about the reasons why the ancient Chinese made such
comparisons or analogy. One thing is sure: Westerners would not be able to appreciate such a
'beautiful' girl. Wang's version, after his artistic modification or adaptation, reads like this:

Her hands are small, her fingers slim;


Her skin is smooth as cream;
Her swan-like neck is long and slim;
Her teeth like pearls do gleam.
A broad forehead and arching brow
Complement her dimpled cheeks
And make her black eyes glow.

Summary
In the above I have discussed the need for accommodation in translation with an example. I
suggest that accommodation is also translation, even if it means addition or loss of information,
explanation, rewriting, or re-creation.

References
1. Fan, Zhongying, 2003. An Applied Theory of Translation. Foreign Languages Teaching &
Research Press, Beijing, China.
2. Tytler, A.F.,1790. Essay on the Principles of Translation.
3. Nord, Christiane, 2001. Translation As a Purposeful Activity-functionalist approaches.
4. Eugene Nida, 1984. On Translation, Translation Publishing Corp. Beijing, China.
5. Hatim, B. & Mason, I., 1990. Discourse and the Translator.

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