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A pleasant morning

everyone!
REMINDERS:
1.In this class, we do the task given to us.
2. We give our share of insights
3. We respect one another regardless of gender, color
and status.
learning objectives:
1.Identify the different types of
intertextuality.
2. Use the concept into a given context
CREATIVE writing

Ms. HERMIA
FACT OR
BLUFF
1. Appropriation is
where a TEXT is
adapted from the
original text.
FACT OR
BLUFF

FACT
FACT OR
BLUFF
2. A film, TV
drama, or stage
play that is based
on a written work
is called Allegory.
FACT OR
BLUFF

BLUFF
FACT OR
BLUFF
3. Parody is a
funny
interpretation of a
text. It is
mimicking or
copying a text.
FACT OR
BLUFF

FACT
FACT OR
BLUFF
4. You’re acting
like such a
Scrooge! Is an
example of an
Allusion
FACT OR
BLUFF

FACT
FACT OR
BLUFF
5. Quotation is an
indirect reference
to another text
without
acknowledgement
of its composer.
FACT OR
BLUFF

BLUFF
FACT OR
BLUFF
6. A parody imitates
the serious manner
and characteristic
features of a
particular literary
work in order to make
fun of those same
features.
FACT OR
BLUFF

FACT
FACT OR
BLUFF
7. An attack on or
criticism of any stupidity
or vice in the form of
scathing humour, or an
attack on what the author
sees as dangerous
religious, political, moral,
or social standards is
what we call Allusion
FACT OR
BLUFF

BLUFF
FACT OR
BLUFF
8. When the
meaning or
outcome of a text is
open to
interpretation (as in
an open ending), we
call that device as
Anecdote
FACT OR
BLUFF

BLUFF
QUESTIONS:

1. What do you
call the words
or devices that
are used in the
items of the
Game Fact or
Bluff?
QUESTIONS:
2. How
important are
knowing these
conventions in
reading literary
texts.
ACTIVITY:
Given the comics below,
cite any movie or TV
version/show that
would be associated to
it and discuss the
qualities both distinct
and similar among the
two versions.
 
ACTIVITY:
ACTIVITY:
ACTIVITY:
Analysis:
Guide Questions:
1.What is intertextuality?
2. What are the different types of intertextuality?
3. What is the importance of intertextuality?
abstraction:
intertextuality
The word ‘intertextuality’ was
derived from the Latin word
intertexto meaning ‘to mingle
while weaving’. It was first
introduced in literary linguistics
by Bulgarian-born French
semiotician and philosopher Julia
Kristeva in the late 1960s.
She argued that all
signifying systems,
from table settings
to poems, are
constituted by the
way they transform
earlier signifying
systems.
A literary work, then, is
not simply the product
of a single author, but
of his/her relationship
to other texts (both
written and spoken),
and to the structure of
language itself.
types of intertextuality
1. Appropriation is where a text
is adapted from the original
text. It's important to note it
isn't just copied instead
reimagined in some way to
make it new whether it's for a
different context or a different
audience.
2. Allusion this is where you
allude to something so it's
referenced to another text so
not only can it be a
reference to a text but it can
also be a person a place or
an event. The audience or
reader has to make the
connection.
Example: You’re acting like
such a Scrooge!
Alluding to Dickens’s A
Christmas Carol, this line
means that the person is
being miserly and selfish,
just like the character
Scrooge from the story.
Parody is a funny
interpretation of a text. It is
mimicking or copying a text
in order to comment on it, a
humorous interpretation of
serious piece of literature,
writing, art or music. Its
main purpose is to entertain
the reader.
Quotation: A direct
reference to another
text with
acknowledgement
of its composer.
Example: In Margaret
Atwood’s speech, Spotty
Handed Villainesses, she
quotes Dame Rebecca
West, saying, “Ladies of
Great Britain…we have not
enough evil in us.”
Adaptation: A film, TV
Drama, or stage play
that is based on a
written work.
Example: JK Rowling’s Harry
Potter series has a film
adaptation.
In traditional literary theory it
is assumed that when we read
a work of literature, we are
trying to find a meaning which
lies inside that work. We
extract the meaning of the
text. This process of extracting
is called interpretation.
Intertextuality in drama has been
widely used since then. Here in the
Philippines, one of the most
renowned is drama specifically
theater. Some of the types of
theater in the country are the epic
poetry Biag ni Lam-ang,Senakulo or
Passion Play and Balagtasan. These
theater plays have never-ending
adaptations.
The Importance of Intertextuality
Intertextuality shows how much a
culture can influence its authors,
even as the authors in turn
influence the culture. It also shows
how a similar cultural, religious,
political, or moral ideology can be
expressed in very different ways
through different cultural practices.
APPLICATION:
Writing Exercises:
A. Listen to the song “Love
Story” by Talor Swift,
Identify lines that suggest
intertextuality. Provide a 2-
sentence explanation/
elaboration.
..\TAYLOR.mp4
Writing Exercises:
B. Recall one of your favorite movies or
teledramas. Make your own version of
some of the scenes or give your own plot
twist using any type of intertextuality.  
Use local color and setting of your own
version that you can relate with your own
life as a teenager. 
Write the draft of your script in short
bond paper. Choose one representative to
visualize your scene.
..\KADENANG GINTO.mp4
rubric
ASSessment:
Directions: Read and analyze each statement carefully. Identify the type
of intertextuality observed. Write AP for Appropriation, AD for Adaptation,
AL for Allusion, PA for parody, and QU for Quotation.

_____1. Am I merely snobbish in thinking that the lower classes have no


aptitude or instinct for great literature or indeed literature of any kind?
This morning I went into the kitchen & found Nelly sitting down reading a
cookery book. How will you ever improve your lower-class mind if you
spend your days simply reading receipts? I asked her, kindly. (The Lost
Diaries by Craig Brown)
_____2. It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in
possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. (Pride and
Prejudice by Jane Austen)
_____3. Smith It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in
possession of brains must be in want of more brains. (Pride and
Prejudice with Zombies by Seth Grahame)
____4. In the graphic novel Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi depicts a fallen
soldier being cradled by his mother, a woman in a veil.
____5. I didn’t have any bus fare but fortunately, some Good Samaritan
helped me out.
ASSignment:
Directions. Google and
read the plot summary of
Oliver Twist by Charles
Dickens. Write your own
version of this novel. You
can use any type of
intertextuality such as
Appropriation, Allusion,
Parody, Quotation or
Adaptation.
concluding activity
Thank you!!!

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