Complete Definition of "entextualisation"

English

Noun

entextualisation

  1. A process of formal study of writings, removing texts from their context thus rendering them coherent, effective and memorable.

#*1996: H S Pyper, David As Reader: 2 Samuel 12:1-15 and the Poetics of Fatherhood
#*:It is in the entextualisation of the perlocutionary aspect of his reaction to the woman's speeches that we will find the answer.
#*2000: Hugh R. Trappes-Lomax (editor), Change and Continuity in Applied Linguistics
#*:The key words here are entextualisation, transposition and recontextualisation.
#*2005: David F. Ford, Ben Quash, Janet Martin Soskice (editors), Fields of Faith: Theology and Religious Studies for the Twenty-first Century
#*:Texts...taken out of one context (entextualisation) which is a simultaneous placing in a new context (contextualisation).

References
Speech Community 1999 Ben Rampton King�s College London, (Bauman & Briggs 1990:73-4; see also Silverstein & Urban (eds) 1996; Spitulnik 1997).

Revision and Credits for"entextualisation"
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