"Daar gaat Kafka die dacht dat hij het ergste kon verzinnen!" : Auteursverwijzingen in het proza van Gust Gils

Title in English "There goes Kafka who thought he could make up the worst" : Mentions in the prose of Gust Gils
Authors

ROYEAERD Sofie Rose-Anne W.

Year of publication 2014
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Brünner Beiträge zur Germanistik und Nordistik
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Web Digitální knihovna FF MU
Field Mass media, audiovision
Keywords paratext; intertextuality; mentions; Gust Gils
Description Mentions of canonised writers in reviews function as classifications of literary works. (VERDAASDONK 2008) Writers as well may use such references to classify and legitimize their own works, both in texts and in what Gérard GENETTE (1987) has coined the paratext. This article examines how explicit references to other writers function in the prose of the Flemish writer Gust Gils (1924 – 2002). Apart from the texts, four peritextual elements are examined (namely titles, mottos, dedications and footnotes). All together 35 different mentions of writers appear in the twelve volumes of short stories. This explicit form of intertextuality has a threefold function in Gils' prose. I argue that Gils not only uses mentions to legitimize his own work and mark out his poetical preferences, but also to undermine traditional functions of intertextuality.
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