1st Edition

Human Translators in the Machine Age

By Massimiliano Morini Copyright 2026
118 Pages
by Routledge

118 Pages
by Routledge

What is the place of human translation in the golden age of artificial intelligence? Human Translators in the Machine Age looks at the millennia of history that have shaped the discipline and its practitioners, and asks what it is that makes translators central in human civilization, and fundamentally different from linguistically competent machines. Contrary to the age-old emphasis on source... Read more

Introduction: Human translation in the age of the machine

 

Chapter I. Untranslatability

 

Chapter 2. Text

 

Chapter 3. Translators

 

Conclusion: Is this (only) a Western view?

 

References

 

Index

 

Biography

Massimiliano Morini is full professor of English Linguistics at the University of Urbino “Carlo Bo”, Italy. His publications on the theory and history of translation include Tudor Translation in Theory and Practice (Routledge 2021).

"The more efficient AI becomes at translating, the more crucial human engagement with the processes and products of its efforts becomes. The questions Massimiliano Morini addresses in this timely, informative publication are therefore of great importance for the present and the future of our lives alongside our inanimate colleagues"

-Kirsten Malmkjær, University of Leicester,