대인관계 조절행위로서의 스피치 레벨 시프트와 성별에 따른 운용 양상 - 한일 회화 번역의 예를 중심으로 -
Speech Level Shift as a Communicative Behaviour and Gender-specific Use of the Shift With a focus on Korean - Japanese Translated Conversations -
This paper looked at speech level shifts which appear at sentence-ends in discourse from the Japanese dubbed version of Winter Sonata, a South Korean television drama series as well as how the use of shifts differ between Korean and Japanese versions depending on drama characters’ gender. Speech levels at sentence-ends, which alter in the development of discourse, reflect speakers’ politeness. Previous studies have shown the difference in basic speech levels and the ways they shift between Korean and Japanese conversations. This study tried to examine how gender is engaged in speech level shifts depending on characters’ emotional distance based on previous studies. This study found that speech levels, characters’ emotional distance, and their age are all interconnected in both Korean and Japanese conversations. In both situations, characters of the same age in close relationship used non-polite form as their basic speech level while they used polite form when their relationship is not intimate. Even though basic speech levels were the same between Korean and Japanese versions, speech levels were changed more frequently in the Japanese dubbed version. In the Japanese version, both male and female characters were found to be shifting their speech levels more freely when changes in their emotional distance were observed. Specifically, male characters altered their speech levels more frequently when they felt detached from their counterparts while female characters did so in intimate relationships.
Ⅰ. 서론 Ⅱ. 선행연구 2.1 한일 스피치 레벨과 스피치 레벨 시프트에 관한 연구 2.2 선행연구와 본고의 차별점 Ⅲ. 이론적 배경 3.1 폴라이트니스 이론(Politeness theory)과 디스코스 폴라이트니스(Discourse politeness) 3.2 번역 변이(Translation shift) Ⅳ. 자료분석 4.1 분석대상 및 분석방법 4.2 분석항목 4.3 자료분석 4.4 인물 간 대화 분석 Ⅴ. 결론 參考文獻 <要旨>
키워드
스피치 레벨 시프트담화번역대인관계 조절행위폴라이트니스speech level shiftdiscourse translationcommunicative behaviourpoliteness