Intertextuality

Intertextuality has been differentiated into referential and typological categories. Referential intertextuality refers to the use of fragments in texts and the typological intertextuality refers to the use of pattern and structure in typical texts. A distinction can also be made between iterability and presupposition. Iterability makes reference to the "repeatability" of certain text that is composed of "traces", pieces of other texts that help constitute its meaning. Presupposition makes a reference to assumptions a text makes about its readers and its context. As philosopher William Irwin wrote, the term "has come to have almost as many meanings as users, from those faithful to Julia Kristeva's original vision to those who simply use it as a stylish way of talking about allusion and influence". Provided by Wikipedia
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1by Tycner, HenrykOther Authors: “…Intertext…”
Published 1985
Classmark: [mehrbändig! Sign. s. bei den Bänden]Book -
2by Tyncer, HenrykOther Authors: “…Intertext…”
Published 1985
Classmark: [mehrbändig! Sign. s. bei den Bänden]Book