Foreign Literature Studies ›› 2018, Vol. 40 ›› Issue (6): 31-41.

• Overseas Chinese Literature Studies • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Intertextuality and Palimpsestuousness between Different Texts: Marilyn Chin’s Poem “Turtle Soup” as a Case Study

Lu Wei   

  • Online:2018-12-25 Published:2022-05-24
  • About author:Lu Wei is Professor at Faculty of Foreign Languages, Beijing Language and Culture University (Beijing 100803, China) and guest research fellow at The Research Center for Chinese American Literature in Beijing Foreign Studies University. Her main teaching and research fields are English and American literature, comparative literature, literary translation and English education. Email: weilu1005@163.com
  • Supported by:
    “A Study of Postclassical Narrative Theory and Its Practice” (17XTS24) sponsored by Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Abstract: As two very important concepts of literary theory, “intertextuality” and “palimpsestuousness,” are often taken as synonyms, for what is in common between them is that they both look for the relationship between one text and others. However, the two concepts are different in one crucial aspect: while intertextuality concerns itself more about the meaning(s) of a text that is derived from or influenced by its pre-texts, palimpsestuousness pays more attention to the meaning(s) generated from its interaction with some previously unrelated texts that accidentally encounter each other in one textual space. It is this difference that allows palimpsestuousness to shed some new light on the study of diasporic literature and pull it through the bottleneck it is facing. An analysis of “Turtle Soup”, a short poem written by the Chinese American poet, Marilyn Chin, may illustrate that what we need to explore in literary studies is a sort of “familiar strangeness,” namely, not only searching for the familiar traditions from the perspective of intertexuality, but also the new meanings generated from the unprepared encounter between unrelated texts based on palimpsestuousness. Literary studies should always free itself from the familiar and fossilized research approaches, retain its capacity for denormalization, and ensure a mutual reinforcement and perfection between the newly-discovered “similarity” and “difference”. It is only through the encounter with the unfamiliar other (either disciplinary or cultural) can literary texts sustain their everlasting vitality.

Key words: intertextuality, palimpsestuousness, Marilyn Chin, "Turtle Soup"

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