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      • The aesthetic pleasure of recognizing an “original” referenced in a secondary version can be considered central to the cultural power of literature and the arts. Appropriation as a concept though moves far beyond intertextuality and introduces ideas of active critical commentary, of creative re-interpretation and of “writing back” to the original.
      oxfordre.com/literature/literature/abstract/10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.001.0001/acrefore-9780190201098-e-1049
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  2. Sep 28, 2017 · By appropriating the imperial language, its discursive forms and its modes of representation, post-colonial societies are able, as things stand, to intervene more readily in the dominant discourse,to interpolate their own cultural realities, or use that dominant language to describe those realities to a wide audience of readers.

  3. Jan 19, 2020 · This is a video presentation explaining and discussing appropriation in literature.

    • 5 min
    • 1047
    • Karin
  4. In Marx’s view, appropriation is the way humans relate to nature. In other words, appropriation is the relation between human senses (perception and orientation) and nature (world), but appropriation can affect future both perception and orientation through the effect it has on humans and objects.

    • Moises Esteban-Guitart
    • moises.esteban@udg.edu
  5. Appropriation most commonly appears in literature as “subject appropriation,” a term explained by James O. Young in “Profound Offense and Cultural Appropriation.” According to

    • Wendy Meza
    • 2020
  6. An author or publisher with a previous record of success has what sociologist Pierre Bourdieu calls “cultural capital,” that is cultural prestige that can be translated into actual money. Blending fact and fiction, the Life of Pi Author’s Note traverses the ethics of authorship and appropriation.

  7. Feb 23, 2017 · This is a new edition of Julie Sanders’s 2006 exploration of what we mean by the terms ‘adaptation’ and ‘appropriation’ in twenty-first-century literary thought.

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