
the idea that within popular culture producers borrow other texts to create interest to the audience who like to share the
Found on
http://brianair.wordpress.com/film-theory/glossary-of-media-terminology/

Intertextuality is the shaping of a text`s meaning by another text. Intertextual figures include: allusion, quotation, calque, plagiarism, translation, pastiche and parody. An example of intertextuality is an author’s borrowing and transformation of a prior text or to a reader’s referencing of one text in reading another. The term `intertex......
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intertextuality

any text depends on a host of prior conventions, codes, other texts. The term is sometimes used to refer to the unavoidable multiplicity of references in any text (see also infinite semiosis below); sometimes it is used to refer to deliberate references, quotations or pastiches. In the first of these senses, the intertext of Independence Day includ...
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20164

Theory in literary criticism that draws attention to the interdependence of literary texts. As part of a movement stemming from the work of the French philosopher Jacques
Derrida, known as...
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20688

the multiple ways in which a text is entangled with or contains references to other texts, such as London's references to the Bible, Milton, or Burns, all sources with which his contemporary readers would be familiar.
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21416

Study of the way in which the text of one poem may relate to the text of another poem. This may occur through allusion or parody or the fact that one poet is influenced by the work of another poet. Intertextuality challenges the view that any one poem exists in isolation.
Found on
http://www.poetsgraves.co.uk/glossary_of_poetic_terms.htm

Intertextuality is a fact about literary texts – the fact that they are all intimately interconnected. Every text is affected by all the texts that came before it, since those texts influenced the author’s thinking and aesthetic choices.
Found on
https://literaryterms.net/glossary-of-literary-terms/

The intertextual, self-reflexive quality--as when one television text (e.g., a commercial) refers to
Found on
https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/22375
No exact match found.