Forum:Information revealed in a foreign language: Difference between revisions

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:::I'm still not thrilled with the suggestion, as there are examples in the DWU, similar to definitions, where words in other languages are ''specifically translated''. How would we distinguish between these cases for our user base? How can we explain to them that in some instances you're just supposed to know what certain words mean, others you're supposed to infer from context, others you have a dictionary in the back of the book, and others still the book, diegetically, tells you? It's the exact same problem as the T:NO RW thread. [[User:Najawin|Najawin]] [[User talk:Najawin|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 03:37, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
:::I'm still not thrilled with the suggestion, as there are examples in the DWU, similar to definitions, where words in other languages are ''specifically translated''. How would we distinguish between these cases for our user base? How can we explain to them that in some instances you're just supposed to know what certain words mean, others you're supposed to infer from context, others you have a dictionary in the back of the book, and others still the book, diegetically, tells you? It's the exact same problem as the T:NO RW thread. [[User:Najawin|Najawin]] [[User talk:Najawin|<span title="Talk to me">☎</span>]] 03:37, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
:::: [Edit conflict]
::: I think we should be very careful with this. Stories written in another language and intended for an audience which speaks that language should be treated like English texts, with the caveat that actual quotations should be qualified with a {{tlx|note}} that this is a good-faith translation, along with the original text transcript.
::: But I broadly agree with Najawin here: what we do for [[Latin]] phrases is generally the way to go. I don't see why we can't have [[:category:French words and phrases]], mainly for things Auteur says, that provides a full translation with context in the BTS. That seems ''most'' valuable to readers, in fact, since they can look up phrases they're seeing verbatim, or follow a link... instead of being presented with a text that seems to pretend the French (in an otherwise English text, for an English-speaking audience) was really in English all along.{{User:SOTO/sig}} 03:42, 22 April 2024 (UTC)

Revision as of 03:42, 22 April 2024

IndexAdvice and Assistance → Information revealed in a foreign language
Spoilers are strongly policed here.
If this thread's title doesn't specify it's spoilery, don't bring any up.

Opening

How do we handle in-universe information that is divulged in a language other than English? Whether it be spoken verbally, or through writing? Furthermore, if it's the latter kind, what if it's a language that doesn't use the Latin alphabet??

I recently came across this scene early in The Bells of Saint John:

This shot, set in Tokyo, contains an advertisement for a real world Japanese music album - Rockbound Neighbours by Nana Mizuki. From the English side of things, the title for Miss Mizuki's page can only be drawn from conjecture. However, the poster has her name written right there in Japanese (水樹 奈々).

Would one be allowed to take this info into account? WaltK 22:58, 21 April 2024 (UTC)

Discussion

I feel like that would be reasonable, allowing us to translate stuff in stories. (Also I initially thought this was a thread about translation-exclusive material like GoldenEye 007) Cookieboy 2005 23:03, 21 April 2024 (UTC)

Considering there are full stories released in other languages (Amser Gwyllt and Daleks, invasión a la Tierra año 2150) I think it's perfectly acceptable to translate information. (Also ditto @Cookieboy 2005, J too initially thought this thread was about translation-exclusive material.) 23:51, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
Ties into Forum:Loosening T:NO RW. Suffice it to say that I strongly disagree. (Even putting aside the fact that translation is impossible.) You can sometimes pin down what words mean, IU, from context, imo, but that makes it very difficult to then say that information is revealed from foreign languages, except through painstaking analysis of how new phrases relate to old ones, what these new phrases mean, and then these new phrases referring to things IU and giving you info. See, for instance Talk:Aztec calendar for some gestures in this direction. It was a fair bit of work, and I think that this is how we should proceed, not just assuming that phrases mean the same thing IU as they do OOU. (Most obviously there's reason to be skeptical that a prop department would get labels correct for a foreign language, or that actors in Britain in a period that ranges from the 1960s to today would speak a foreign language in ways that aren't without controversy.) Najawin 00:05, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
While I understand your viewpoint I'm not sure I'm convinced by it. If we're not allowed to translate anything, then how the hell do we cover Daleks, invasión a la Tierra año 2150, which is exclusively published in Spanish? And then, what do we do if a character speaks another language in performed media but no subtitles or translation is given? 00:55, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
I simply don't understand the equivalence between something being originally published in another language than English, while the characters are still (ostensibly) diegetically speaking English and diegetically, within a work originally published predominately in English, there being words from languages other than English. These seem to me to be entirely different scenarios.
And then, what do we do if a character speaks another language in performed media but no subtitles or translation is given?
See my prior comment. If we can derive a translation from solely IU sources, sure, we can talk about that. If we can't, we can mention that a statement in another language was made (perhaps mentioning what it was, if we know IU), explain its IU effects, and then in the BTS section we can elaborate further. Najawin 01:34, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
Well it calls to mind intermediate situations — stories that expect a bilingual reader, or anyway a reader with a dictionary or Google Translate to hand. If we accept that Invasion a la Tierra expects a readership that speaks Spanish, and should be covered as such, shouldn't that extend to an English-language story including material in another language that it expects the reader to be able to understand?
To take an example close to my heart: Auteur's French asides are meant to be intelligible. His dialogue and asides are written in the expectation of readers who either have a smattering of French to start with, or will bother to go investigate. Treating what he says in French as wholly impenetrable unless explicitly translated in a DWU sources seems wholly at odds with the nature of the text. (Although I am reminded of the fact that Golden Age has an appendix giving official translations for all the lines spoken by a secondary character who, due to a faulty translation device, has all his lines rendered in German within the body of the novel.)
I also wouldn't put too much emphasis on the Invasion characters diegetically speaking English. Seems to me to be entirely likely that the characters in Amser Gwyllt are diegetically speaking Welsh, though I haven't read it. Even if not, it's only a matter of time.
And yes, production might sometimes not pay attention to the meaning of foreign-language signs in the background… but then production has been known to not pay attention to what English texts on background props is saying, if it's not meant to be noticeable. It's a wider puzzle of coverage. (See the infamous "Sil is a Pokemon" situation.)
All this being said, I do share apprehension at the thought of naming pages after translation. That would be a bridge too far, and indeed run into all sorts of issues about the impossibility of One Correct Objective Translation of anything. But transliterations into Latin character seem fine, and ditto placing references in the proper context based on their meaning in a given foreign language. --Scrooge MacDuck 02:15, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
I also wouldn't put too much emphasis on the Invasion characters diegetically speaking English. Seems to me to be entirely likely that the characters in Amser Gwyllt are diegetically speaking Welsh
And that the Doctor is diegetically speaking Gallifreyan, sure. My point is of the lack of analogy between the two cases. A text renders acts of speech in one particular language, generally. That some of these texts might, as a whole, require translation, doesn't reflect on how we should handle the case where there are texts that render acts of speech in general in one language but then specific acts of speech in another language - whether or not the second language instantly gets to be treated in the same manner as we would a "primary language" of a text.
I'm still not thrilled with the suggestion, as there are examples in the DWU, similar to definitions, where words in other languages are specifically translated. How would we distinguish between these cases for our user base? How can we explain to them that in some instances you're just supposed to know what certain words mean, others you're supposed to infer from context, others you have a dictionary in the back of the book, and others still the book, diegetically, tells you? It's the exact same problem as the T:NO RW thread. Najawin 03:37, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
[Edit conflict]
I think we should be very careful with this. Stories written in another language and intended for an audience which speaks that language should be treated like English texts, with the caveat that actual quotations should be qualified with a {{note}} that this is a good-faith translation, along with the original text transcript.
But I broadly agree with Najawin here: what we do for Latin phrases is generally the way to go. I don't see why we can't have category:French words and phrases, mainly for things Auteur says, that provides a full translation with context in the BTS. That seems most valuable to readers, in fact, since they can look up phrases they're seeing verbatim, or follow a link... instead of being presented with a text that seems to pretend the French (in an otherwise English text, for an English-speaking audience) was really in English all along.
× SOTO (//) 03:42, 22 April 2024 (UTC)