Welcome to the Centre for English, Translation, and Anglo-Portuguese Studies.
CETAPS is a research centre that brings together people from 11 Portuguese institutions of higher education, promoting research and activities with high national and international reach.
Jointly hosted by Nova University of Lisbon and University of Porto, the Centre for English, Translation and Anglo-Portuguese Studies (CETAPS) is a dynamic research unit that brings together 61 integrated members and 123 collaborators (mostly junior researchers doing doctoral or postdoctoral training with us) from 16 Portuguese educational institutions (11 from higher education), promoting research and activities with high national and international reach.
We run and manage 11 databases and publish 4 electronic journals, 2 of them indexed by Scopus: JAPS (2019-) and Translation Matters (2023-), now a Q1 journal; over the past 5 years, we have organized 148 in-person, online and hybrid conferences and seminars, presented 677 papers at national and international conferences, edited/published 231 books and chapters, edited 24 issues of academic journals and published 241 papers in national and international journals.
Our dominant disciplinary domain is in the field of English Studies, as understood and practised internationally, but this focus on the Anglophone world is sharpened and inflected by an operative awareness of our Portuguese cultural standpoint. This creates the conditions for a research rationale which is interlingual and intercultural, a relational characteristic that endows the Centre with its uniqueness, both nationally and internationally. Through the lens of ‘mobility’, we have favoured the study of interactions with outsiders in Anglophone creations since the Early Modern period. Key concepts such as identity, community, and intercultural communication shape our inquiry, drawing on approaches from Lit. & Cultural Studies, Utopian Studies, Intermediality, & Education.
CETAPS is organised into 6 Research Areas (RAs), some accommodating existing or new Research Strands (RSs). These are NOT autonomous groups or lines, but flexible and collaborative research hubs meant to accommodate contributions from any of our members. Names listed in association with particular RAs and RSs identify core commitments and the existence of a critical mass rather than discrete teams; many individual researchers contribute to more than one area /strand. RA leaders and RS convenors are facilitators of these hubs, welcoming input from members; monitoring activities and processes; gathering information; organising meetings and liaising with the CETAPS Board; and consolidating the research consequences (in initiatives and outputs) of the Centre’s collaborative culture.