eprintid: 10203226 rev_number: 8 eprint_status: archive userid: 699 dir: disk0/10/20/32/26 datestamp: 2025-01-13 10:38:56 lastmod: 2025-05-08 11:35:12 status_changed: 2025-01-13 10:38:56 type: article metadata_visibility: show sword_depositor: 699 creators_name: Wang, Caiwen title: The Speaker Is Being Impolite. How Is the Interpreter Interpreting That? ispublished: inpress divisions: UCL divisions: B03 divisions: C01 divisions: J42 keywords: conference interpreters, impoliteness interpreting, interview, retrospections, simultaneous interpreting note: This version is the author-accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher’s terms and conditions. abstract: Situations where a source speaker attacks their addressee’s face pose a challenge for interpreters, due to the potential controversy or conflicts to which impoliteness is prone from a pragmatic perspective. In this study, I drew upon Bousfield’s (2008) linguistic model of impoliteness and used a political speech by Nigel Farage, a former UK politician, at the European Parliament to examine how conference interpreters interpret impoliteness. I also conducted an interview immediately after the experiment to probe interpreters’ motivations behind their impoliteness interpreting moves. Analysis of the interpreting data from eighteen participants has evinced that (a) speaker-input impoliteness is predominately attenuated by interpreters and is seldom strengthened, and (b) for less experienced interpreters, attenuation is consistently the most frequent manoeuvre to interpret impoliteness among the five ones discovered; for more experienced interpreters, attenuations decrease in number and close renditions increase, with the latter sometimes surpassing the former; More experienced interpreters also have much less or no omissions or misrepresentations. Analysis of the interview data indicates that (a) attenuations and close renditions are interpreters’ intended decisions, and (b) omissions and misrepresentations are forced options. It is hoped that the findings from the current study will contribute to the literature on impoliteness interpreting. date: 2025-02-11 date_type: published publisher: Akadémiai Kiadó full_text_type: other language: eng verified: verified_manual elements_id: 2297043 lyricists_name: Wang, Caiwen lyricists_id: CWANA90 actors_name: Wang, Caiwen actors_id: CWANA90 actors_role: owner full_text_status: restricted publication: Across Languages and Cultures: a multidisciplinary journal for translation and interpreting studies issn: 1585-1923 citation: Wang, Caiwen; (2025) The Speaker Is Being Impolite. How Is the Interpreter Interpreting That? Across Languages and Cultures: a multidisciplinary journal for translation and interpreting studies (In press). document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10203226/1/Revised_Across%20langauges%20and%20cultures_MS.pdf