Document Type : Research Paper

Authors

1 University of Tehran

2 University Tehran

Abstract

The Long Story of the Snake and the Man (1976--78) is a work by Simin Daneshvar, based on mythical narratives, sacred texts and religious narratives. The theoretical basis of this paper in the study and study of the intertextual contribution of the narrations mentioned in the construction and payment of that literary work is Laurent Genie's theoretical definition of the concept of intertextuality in the article "Strategy of Forms", in which he proposes in the difference between his conception of intertextuality (known as soft intertextuality) and the intertextuality of Yulia Christova (known as hard intertextuality); The intertextuality should be mentioned when elements beyond the lexical unit of the proto text can be retrieved in the new text. In other words, the relationship between the texts is more than lexical and formal relationships; genetically related the intertextual relationship of two texts with each other not with the vague and mysterious sum of the effects of one on the other, but with the degree of interconnection between the two texts and how one influences the other, and emphasizes the two types of intertextuality "strong" and "weak". In his view, when two texts communicate in at least two formal and thematic aspects, "strong intertextuality" is established, and when texts stop communicating on one of these two levels, "weak intertextuality" is established. The present study is a qualitative study in terms of type.The research data is provided from library sources. Data analysis is done by descriptive-analytical method. The essay thus explains the Marr and the man text from the perspective of the reader's perspective with the relationship of the application of female personality and intertextuality. The intertextuality should be mentioned when elements beyond the lexical unit of the proto text can be retrieved in the new text. In other words, the relationship between the texts is more than lexical and formal relationships; genetically related the intertextual relationship of two texts with each other not with the vague and mysterious sum of the effects of one on the other, but with the degree of interconnection between the two texts and how one influences the other.

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