Family Guy - Ferris Bueller's Day Off -Museum Scene (Original JNL Video) Stewie in Ferris Bueller's Day Off Running Scene. Media/0i/c. Wiki Mobile by Verkata. Intertextuality. Intertextuality is the shaping of a text's meaning by another text.
Intertextual figures include: allusion, quotation, calque, plagiarism, translation, pastiche and parody.[1][2][3] 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. Intertextuality and poststructuralism[edit] More recent post-structuralist theory, such as that formulated in Daniela Caselli's Beckett's Dantes: Intertextuality in the Fiction and Criticism (MUP 2005), re-examines "intertextuality" as a production within texts, rather than as a series of relationships between different texts. Hiramoto&Park%202010_Intro_Media%20intertextualities. Intertextuality. Daniel Chandler Intertextuality Although Saussure stressed the importance of the relationship of signs to each other, one of the weaknesses of structuralist semiotics is the tendency to treat individual texts as discrete, closed-off entities and to focus exclusively on internal structures.
Even where texts are studied as a 'corpus' (a unified collection), the overall generic structures tend themselves to be treated as strictly bounded. The structuralist's first analytical task is often described as being to delimit the boundaries of the system (what is to be included and what excluded), which is logistically understandable but ontologically problematic. Even remaining within the structuralist paradigm, we may note that codes transcend structures. Intertextuality and Dialogue. Intertextuality and Dialogue (Links) Quoting/ listening/ speaking The Conversation - Drifting index; sound pov Types of Links Summary of Articles Culler, Jonathan, The Pursuit of Signs - "Presupposition and Intertextuality" Kristeva, Julia, Desire in Language - "Word, Dialogue and the Novel" Types of Links (External vs.
Definition Source - proof of truth Elaboration Aside (foot note) - comment Branching narrative Linear continuity Association Illustration Analogy / Parallelism Translation Before/After (flash back or flash forward) Intertextuality. Intertextuality. Intertextuality - Narrative. Intertextuality refers to the way in which texts gain meaning through their referencing or evocation of other texts.
Definition A term most fully and originally explicated by Julia Kristeva in the school of poststructuralism, intertextuality has taken on a variety of meanings since her discussion of the term in the 1960s. On its most basic level, intertextuality is the concept of texts' borrowing of each others' words and concepts. This could mean as much as an entire ideological concept and as little as a word or phrase. As authors borrow pro-actively from previous texts, their work gains layers of meaning. In response to Ferdinand de Saussure's claim that signs gain their meaning through structure in a particular text, implying that meaning is transmitted directly from writer to reader, Kristeva argued that because of the influence of other texts on readers' consciousnesses, texts are always filtered through "codes" which bring the weight of other, previous meanings with them.
Examples. Intertextuality in Family Guy. Intertextuality is the act of shaping a story's meaning by use of other, earlier stories.
So, an example would be how George Lucas reused Kurosawa's The Hidden Fortress to tell the story in Star Wars. (In the Hidden Fortress, a princess and her general seek to recover a treasure, aided by two foolish servants. So, if you know about this connection through intertextuality, it allows you to enjoy Star Wars better, or in a different way.) By the same token, I recall there was a The Family Guy episode in which the characters took on roles from Star Wars, e.g., Stewie Griffin was Darth Vader.
Understanding the jokes and references in the cartoon episode relied in part in knowing the Star Wars movie. So, I have a friend who has never seen any of the 6 Star Wars movies, and when she saw that particular Family Guy episode she didn't understand any of it. She has never seen any of the Star Trek TV shows or movies either. So do you know what I meant? Mediastudies72. New Intertextuality! « Chelsey's A2 Media Studies Blog. So far in my music video, I have been influenced and inspired by many different iconic scenes that have been made famous in different types of media.
I have managed to referrence them in my music video to add that charming little twist to the product. Here you will see that in the shots of 3 girls riding on their bikes, it has been inspired by Bat For Lashes – What’s A Girl To Do, but ALSO The Famous Five by Enid Blyton and, E.T. The Extra Terrestrial! Unfortunately I didn’t have an alien in my bike basket though… Here, you will see the shots of Daisy and Rob put together to look like home recording footage as if they were filming their day out. At the end of Angus, Thongs & Perfect Snogging, you will see Robbie and Georgia hold hands walking along the pier in Eastbourne. This shot of Daisy shows the doodle on her hand, this was inspired by the drawing of landscape included in 500 Days of Summer. Like this: Like Loading...