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| intertextuality definitions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| # | Definition | Sets | |
| 1 | _____is thus a way of accounting for the role of literary and extra-literary materials without recourse to traditional notions of authorship. a literary work then is not simply the product of a single author but of its relationship to other texts and to the strucutures of language itself. | 8 sets | |
| 2 | ah, foster. it's all one story, you know. | 2 sets | |
| 3 | (adj.) [neut.]: relating to or deriving meaning from the interdependent ways in which texts stand in relation to each other | 2 sets | |
| 4 | relationships between texts or references in one text to another text. | 1 set | |
| 5 | relating to the independent ways in which texts talk to each other | 1 set | |
| 6 | relationship between two or more texts that quote from one another, refer to one another, or otherwise connect. new testament passages that quote from the old testament are one example of intertextuality. another example is old testament books such as deuteronomy or the prophets that refer to the stories found in exodus. whereas a redaction critic would use such intertextuality to argue for a particular order and process of the authorship of the books in question, literary criticism takes a synchronic view that deals with the texts in their final form, as an interconnected body of literature. some postmodern theorists like to talk about the relationship between "intertextuality" and "hypertextuality" - hypertextuality being the sort of jumping around one does on the world wide web. | 1 set | |
| 7 | all works show influence of other works | 1 set | |
| 8 | condition of all texts as composed of pre existing texts | 1 set | |
| 9 | helps make sense of new texts/ knowledge brought to a text by experience with other texts or ways in which texts are contextually influenced by others | 1 set | |
| 10 | "between texts" an interaction between stories and ideas, something inside of us changes our interpretation | 1 set | |
| 11 | things said and written are constantly changing and culture should be created the same way | 1 set | |
| 12 | one text inside another | 1 set | |
| 13 | the idea that no text is original and that everything is a series of references and quotations from other texts | 1 set | |
| 14 | the shaping of texts' meanings by other texts | 1 set | |
| 15 | intertextuality is, thus, a way of accounting for the role of literary and extra-literary materials without recourse to traditional notions of authorship. a literary work, then, is not simply the product of a single author, but of its relationship to other texts and to the strucutures of language itself. | 1 set | |
| 16 | [ formal characteristic of modernism ], when texts and their meanings are intertwined. intertextual texts depend on prior knowledge of another text | 1 set | |
| 17 | when texts and their meanings are intertwined. intertextual texts depend on prior knowledge of another text | 1 set | |
| 18 | references to other things, forms, genres in a given work : the simpsons, the scream series, gangsters watching the godfather films in the sopranos | 1 set | |
| 19 | when one text would benefit if it were placed into another text | 1 set | |
| 20 | the term was introduced by the french semiotician julia kristeva in 1966, who objected to the traditional view that the author is "influenced" by earlier authors and their texts; kristeva argued that all signifying systems transform earlier signifying systems. according to this theory, a literary work is not the product of a single author, but of its relationship to other texts. "any text is constructed of a mosaic of quotations; any text is the absorption and transformation of another." an example of intertextuality through allusion is in henry fielding's tom jones (see p. 21) and that of intertextuality through parody is jonathan swift's gulliver's travels [see pp. 107-8]. | 1 set | |
| 21 | the idea that texts are made up of other texts...recycling. language is a recycling of words. incorporation old texts and words into a new story, both old and new create meaning. (example: allusions to paradise lost in frankenstein. also like the monster in frankenstein...he is a new thing made from old things). (mariana (shakespearean character) and all of tennyson except in memoriam, lotus eaters (odyssey)) | 1 set | |
| 22 | he way one text refers to another | 1 set | |
| 23 | when a text provides a basis of a line of through within the main text | 1 set | |
| 24 | use of many texts to create her own narrative | 1 set | |