Metaphoric gestures in simultaneous interpreting

Anna V. Leonteva*, Alan Cienki, Olga V. Agafonova

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The paper deals with the degree to which interpreters incorporate visible behaviors from the people they are interpreting into their own practice. Since metaphoric gestures objectify abstract concepts in visible form, it is worth exploring the degree to which interpreters replicate such gestures of those whose speech they are interpreting; this can indicate how much they are employing the original speakers’ mental imagery connected with those abstract concepts. This imagery for the source domain of the metaphor ranges from highly iconic (high metaphoric) to low in iconicity (low metaphoric). The hypothesis is that interpreters use low metaphoric gestures rather than high metaphoric ones, due to the discourse type (interpreted speech). We performed formal visual and semantic analyses of ten-minute videos of interpreting a scientific lecture for the general public on a psychological topic from English into Russian. First, we analyzed the functions of the gestures in the source videos to identify metaphorically used gestures (e.g., depicting abstract ideas); then we studied the functions of the interpreters’ gestures. The results indicate a predominance of low-level, schematic metaphoricity in the interpreters’ gestures (e.g., simple ontological metaphors, as if presenting ideas on the open hand). Such results might be explained by the time pressure which leads to a decrease in mental imagery of the interpreters. We see a difference between the known role of gestures when speakers are formulating their own ideas (in thinking for speaking) and their role in simultaneous interpreting (when speakers are rendering others’ ideas, rather than forming their own ones).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)820-842
Number of pages23
JournalRussian Journal of Linguistics
Volume27
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Anna V. Leonteva, Alan Cienki & Olga V. Agafonova, 2023.

Funding

The research was supported by Russian Science Foundation grant number 19-18-00357 for the project “Verbal and co-verbal behavior under cognitive pressure: Analyses of speech, gesture, and eye gaze” carried out at Moscow State Linguistic University.

FundersFunder number
Russian Science Foundation19-18-00357

    Keywords

    • gesture
    • iconicity
    • mental imagery
    • simultaneous interpreting
    • thinking-for-speaking

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