Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to break the silence surrounding the politics of translation that influence cross-language/cultural accounting research. It gives due consideration to the ways in which translation gaps are produced and re-produced in qualitative interdisciplinary accounting research (IAR).
Design/methodology/approach
First, we discuss backstage insights and our own life experiences vis-à-vis translating cross-cultural /language research. We provide a critical self-reflection on the process as non-Western female researchers publishing in English-language accounting journals. Second, we carry-out a content analysis to examine reported translation practices in three long-established interdisciplinary accounting journals from 2015- 2017. The conclusion integrates these analyses to discuss the reproduction process of the translation gap in accounting research and its outcomes.
Findings
The study identifies inherent contradictions in IAR and its emancipatory agenda, where translation gaps are structural outcomes of overlaps between the politics of translation and the politics of publishing IAR. The study highlights the IAR community’s lack of awareness regarding political and methodological sensitivities in dealing with particularities in cultural contexts. We argue that this reflects the institutional norms for publishing in IAR, which contributes to neutralising cultural diversity and complex translation processes in the name of objectivity. This could ultimately lead to further marginalisation of non-Western cultural knowledge and values, while producing academic “elites” within the IAR community, meanwhile missing opportunities for innovation.
Originality/contribution
By opening the “black box” pertaining to translation gaps in the context of cross- language/cultural accounting research, the study calls for IAR scholars to help raise awareness of their role and identity as cultural brokers.
This paper aims to break the silence surrounding the politics of translation that influence cross-language/cultural accounting research. It gives due consideration to the ways in which translation gaps are produced and re-produced in qualitative interdisciplinary accounting research (IAR).
Design/methodology/approach
First, we discuss backstage insights and our own life experiences vis-à-vis translating cross-cultural /language research. We provide a critical self-reflection on the process as non-Western female researchers publishing in English-language accounting journals. Second, we carry-out a content analysis to examine reported translation practices in three long-established interdisciplinary accounting journals from 2015- 2017. The conclusion integrates these analyses to discuss the reproduction process of the translation gap in accounting research and its outcomes.
Findings
The study identifies inherent contradictions in IAR and its emancipatory agenda, where translation gaps are structural outcomes of overlaps between the politics of translation and the politics of publishing IAR. The study highlights the IAR community’s lack of awareness regarding political and methodological sensitivities in dealing with particularities in cultural contexts. We argue that this reflects the institutional norms for publishing in IAR, which contributes to neutralising cultural diversity and complex translation processes in the name of objectivity. This could ultimately lead to further marginalisation of non-Western cultural knowledge and values, while producing academic “elites” within the IAR community, meanwhile missing opportunities for innovation.
Originality/contribution
By opening the “black box” pertaining to translation gaps in the context of cross- language/cultural accounting research, the study calls for IAR scholars to help raise awareness of their role and identity as cultural brokers.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1874-1903 |
Number of pages | 30 |
Journal | Accounting, Auditing and Accountability Journal |
Volume | 31 |
Issue number | 7 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 17 Sept 2018 |