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Sep 4, 2024
This week’s themeCoined words This week’s words misogynoir outgrabe intertextuality genteelism googolplex Illustration: Anu Garg + AI
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargintertextuality
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: Interpretation of a text in relation to other texts, rather than in isolation.
ETYMOLOGY:
Coined by the philosopher and novelist Julia Kristeva (b. 1941) in French
as intertextualité, from inter- (between) + textuel (textual), from Latin
texere (to weave). Ultimately from the Indo-European root teks- (to weave),
which also gave us context, texture, tissue, tectonic, architect, technology,
subtle, and subtile. Earliest
documented use: 1970.
NOTES:
Intertextuality reminds us that every piece of writing is influenced
by what came before it, consciously or not. Other texts provide the essential
context for understanding any given text, making the literary world a vast,
interconnected web of ideas and influences. No text is an island.
USAGE:
“The 11 short stories in this collection each weave together, playful
in their intertextuality as they nod to other stories in the collection
and beyond.” Aimée Walsh; Across Unknowable Terrain; Irish Times (Dublin); Aug 26, 2023. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The rightness of a thing isn't determined by the amount of courage it
takes. -Mary Renault, novelist (4 Sep 1905-1983)
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