habib o llah abbasi; seyyed morteza mirhashemi; effat neghabi; zahra saadatynia
Volume 6, Issue 2 , June 2017, , Pages 1-20
Abstract
There is no self-sufficient text. Each text is an intertextuality of hypotexts (earlier texts) and will be, at a same time, an intertextuality of the hypertexts (future texts). Intertextuality ...
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There is no self-sufficient text. Each text is an intertextuality of hypotexts (earlier texts) and will be, at a same time, an intertextuality of the hypertexts (future texts). Intertextuality is a modern approach that plays an important role in exploring the relations between different texts. Lyricism, as an introduction to ode, is a suitable arena for lyrical expression performance. The Persian lyricism is not a self-sufficient text, but it is an intertextual for its earlier text as much as it is considered an intertextual for sonnet. The introductions of Arabic odes are outstanding intertextualities for Persian lyricism. Persian lyricism has been affected by Arabic intertextuals not only in form but in content. It has been trying to explore the hidden text of Persian lyricism through a transtexual approach. Persian lyricism has both explicit and implicit relation with its earlier text. The hypotext and the hypertext of lyricism establish intertextual and transtextual relations with each other.