Estado del Libro: Bueno Número de Páginas: 435 Año de Publicación: 2006,TAPA BLANDA, LIBRO USADO, RECUERDA QUE UN % DE ESTA VENTA COLABORA CON FUNDACIONES QUE FOMENTAN LA LECTURA EN ZONAS VULNERABLES. Imagine a translator sitting in a booth, wearing headphones, listening to a Spanish-speaking person and, as she listens, translating the speech into English. Or rather, interpreting the speech. What might we learn about communicating from a person able to do this? Dr. Laura Bertone offers us a wonderful opportunity to find out. Her doctoral work in linguistics allowed Bertone to follow her intuition that to understand language, she had to approach it from different angles and perspectives. Her broad study went beyond linguistic studies to include experimental work on language production and psycholinguistics, neuroscience, cognitive sciences, and, in recent years, general semantics. The integrative result, presented in The Hidden Side of Babel, proves useful not only for simultaneous interpreters; it also provides useful perspectives and tools for personal development in general, and for communicating in particular. Babel is one of the most esthetically pleasing books I’ve ever held in my hands. The quality of the paper, illustrations, font and layout of text add to the pleasure of ingesting the informative content. The Table of Contents gives a sense of the feast to come. Topics include: The World of Conferences; What the Interpreter Says This Side of Words and Beyond Them The Implicature in the Utterance; The Implicature in Enunciation; The Hidden Side of Words; The Slippery Notion of Truth in Language The Interpreter as a Bridge Divergent or Contradictory Signals Conscious and Unconscious Acts of Perception and Memory The Concept of the Whole What the Interpreter Does Anticipation and Foresight Manipulation of Words and Ritual; The Standpoint of the Interpreter: Personal Responsibility and Ethics How Simultaneous Interpreting Works: Borrowing from other Disciplines to Explain its Functioning Chain Reaction: Perception and Memory; Obverse and Reverse Interference: Interference in Production and Reception; Changing our Viewpoint; Misinterpreting