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Areas of exploration: Intertextuality - Language A: Language & Literature IB Study Notes

Areas of exploration: Intertextuality - Language A: Language & Literature IB Study Notes | Times Edu
IBLanguage A: Language & Literature~6 min read

Overview

# Areas of Exploration: Intertextuality This lesson examines how texts reference, echo, or transform other texts to create layered meanings, a critical skill for IB Language A Paper 1 and Paper 2 analysis. Students learn to identify allusions, parody, pastiche, and direct quotation, then analyse how these intertextual relationships shape interpretation and author purpose. Mastery enables candidates to demonstrate sophisticated textual understanding by connecting works across time periods and contexts, particularly valuable for comparative essays and individual oral assessments where recognising literary traditions and cultural dialogues enhances analytical depth.

Core Concepts & Theory

Intertextuality is the shaping of a text's meaning by another text, whether through direct reference, allusion, quotation, parody, or structural parallels. Coined by Julia Kristeva in 1966, intertextuality recognizes that no text exists in isolation—every work is influenced by and responds to previous texts, creating a web of literary relationships.

Key Terminology:

Allusion: An indirect reference to another text, historical event, or cultural artifact (e.g., "He met his Waterloo" references Napoleon's defeat).

Pastiche: An artistic work that imitates the style or character of another work, typically as a form of homage.

Parody: An imitation of a text that exaggerates characteristics for comic or critical effect.

Quotation: Direct incorporation of words from another source, often signaled by quotation marks or typography.

Architextuality: The relationship of a text to its genre conventions (Gérard Genette's term).

Hypertextuality: When a later text transforms or extends an earlier text (e.g., Wide Sargasso Sea rewrites Jane Eyre).

Cambridge Framework: Intertextuality connects to the Area of Exploration: Intertextuality—connecting texts, examining how texts influence each other across time, culture, and medium.

Intertextuality operates on multiple levels: explicit (direct quotations, references), implicit (subtle echoes, structural parallels), and cultural (shared myths, archetypes). Understanding intertextuality deepens textual analysis by revealing layers of meaning created through dialogue between texts. The IB assessment requires you to compare and contrast texts while exploring how intertextual connections shape interpretation and cultural significance.

Detailed Explanation with Real-World Examples

Think of intertextuality as a literary conversation spanning centuries. Just as your conversations reference previous discussions, memes, or shared experiences, texts constantly echo and respond to earlier works.

Contemporary Example: The film Clueless (1995) transforms Jane Austen's Emma (1815) into a Beverly Hills high school setting. While characters and plot mirror Austen's novel, the intertextual relationship creates humor through juxtaposition—matchmaking becomes makeovers, social class becomes fashion hierarchy. Recognizing this connection enriches both texts: Clueless gains literary depth while Emma gains contemporary relevance.

Advertising & Popular Culture: Nike's "Just Do It" campaign alludes to execution phrases ("Let's just do it and get it over with"), creating urgency and determination. The Apple "1984" advertisement explicitly references Orwell's dystopian novel, positioning Apple as a liberating force against conformity—the intertextual connection transfers Orwell's themes of rebellion and individualism to consumer technology.

Music & Poetry: Hip-hop extensively employs intertextuality through sampling—Kanye West's "Power" samples King Crimson's "21st Century Schizoid Man," creating dialogue between 1969 prog-rock and 2010 hip-hop about power and alienation. T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land weaves together fragments from Shakespeare, Dante, and Hindu scriptures, creating a modernist collage that mirrors post-WWI cultural fragmentation.

Analogy: Intertextuality functions like remix culture—each new text samples, remixes, and transforms earlier material, creating meaning through the relationship between original and reinterpretation. The "original" never disappears; instead, it gains new dimensions through each subsequent reference.

Worked Examples & Step-by-Step Solutions

**Example 1: Paper 1 Comparative Analysis** *Question*: Compare how two unseen texts use intertextual references to develop meaning. [25 marks] **Text A**: Advertisement featuring "Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?" selling perfume. **Text B**: Political cartoon showing a politician as Icaru...

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Key Concepts

  • Intertextuality: The way texts (like books, movies, songs) are connected to and influence each other.
  • Allusion: A brief, indirect reference to another text, person, or event that the author expects the reader to recognize.
  • Parody: A humorous imitation of another text's style or content, often to make fun of it.
  • Pastiche: An imitation of another text's style or content, often as a tribute or to create a specific mood, without intending humor.
  • +6 more (sign up to view)

Exam Tips

  • When analyzing a text, always ask yourself: 'What other stories or ideas does this remind me of?'
  • Don't just identify intertextual links; explain *how* they change or deepen the meaning of the text you are studying.
  • +3 more tips (sign up)

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