Intertextual Stevenson

“Intertextual Stevenson” is evidently a rich (and under-explored) field, which is why it was chosen as the topic of a conference held at Ruhr University Bochum in June 2024, organised by Lena Linne and Burkhard Niederhoff. The conference topic was understood very broadly by the participants. “Text” was not limited to strings of words; there were papers on illustration and film. “Intertextual” was likewise not defined in a restrictive manner. Using the terminology proposed by Gérard Genette, it included intertextuality in the narrow sense (the selective use of another text, as in allusion and quotation), hypotextuality (a rewriting of an entire text, as in parody), architextuality (the affiliation of a text with a genre and thus with many other texts of the same sort) and metatextuality (the explicit reference of one text to another). Some participants pointed out Stevenson’s “autotextuality,” his tendency to echo and rewrite his own works; others explored his “interdiscoursivity,” a recourse not to specific texts or genres but to more generally defined discourses (this concept can be related to “A College Magazine” and the way Stevenson imagines mature writers knowing their “literary scales” or discourses, with “legions of words” and “dozens of turns of phrase” at their disposition). A selection of articles based on the papers given at the conference have now been published in Connotations.
From: Lena Linne and Burkhard Niederhoff, “Intertextual Stevenson: A Brief Introduction”
Articles in this special issue
- Intertextual Stevenson: A Brief Introduction
Lena Linne
Connotations Vol. 34: 90-95 - Familiar Studies: Stevenson's Multiple Voices
Richard Dury
Connotations Vol. 34: 96-108 - “Scott’s Voyage in the Lighthouse Yacht” and Intertextual Transmission
Lesley Graham
Connotations Vol. 34: 134-152 - Courting the Bourgeois: Stevenson, Baudelaire, and Writing as a Profession
Katherine Ashley
Connotations Vol. 34: 153-169 - Stevenson and Traditions of Satire
Linda Simonis
Connotations Vol. 34: 170-188 - One More Time: Stevenson’s “Across the Plains” and the Genre of Trans-American Travel
Caroline McCracken-Flesher
Connotations Vol. 34: 189-207 - Othello in the South Seas: Robert Louis Stevenson’s “The Beach of Falesá” as Shakespearean Rewriting
Lucio De Capitani
Connotations Vol. 34: 208-236 - From Illustration to Meme: The Pictorial Representation of Duality in Editions of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Wolfgang G. Müller
Connotations Vol. 34: 247-274 - Strange Case of Stevenson and Unseen Collaborators: “A Chapter on Dreams” as a Textual Double of Jekyll and Hyde
Gero Guttzeit
Connotations Vol. 35: 13-31 - Robert Louis Stevenson’s “The Sire de Malétroit’s Door” and Its Intertexts
Burkhard Niederhoff
Connotations Vol. 35: 47-68