6 Dennis Intertextualist
6 Dennis Intertextualist
6 Dennis Intertextualist
ABSTRACT
A PEDAGOGY OF INTERTEXTUALITY
What often gets lost in the criticism and the complexity surrounding
Kristeva’s conceptualization(s) of intertextuality and semiotics is that she sees
the text as a form of practice. For Kristeva, the text is the embodiment of the
idea of intertextuality and its transformative processes. In intertextuality,
theory and practice are inseparable because they are two phases of the same
constructivist process. Texts disrupt and they deconstruct. According to
Payne (1993) and Scholes (1985), texts are always and everywhere a force for
social transformation. They characterize what Bernstein (1990) describes as
the inner logic of pedagogic practices. In his study of pedagogic processes,
Bernstein (1990) concludes that the production, reproduction, and overall
transformation of culture are essentially relational and pedagogical. Pedagogy
is an example of social and cultural relations (pp. 64-65). These relations are
mediated through texts. Refusing to attach itself to an established order, the
text fosters linguistic, social, and cultural changes simultaneously (Kristeva,
1984, p. 180). When texts are constructed in the process of intertextuality, a
new space opens to make room for another text that is a response to the prior
text. This is the fundamental logic associated with the kind of practices that
are needed to maintain equitable social relations. “In calling the text a
practice,” Kristeva argues, “we must not forget that it is a new practice,
radically different from the mechanistic practice of a null and void, atomistic
subject who refuses to acknowledge that he is a subject of language” (1984,
p. 210).
Our use of language reminds us that we are always adapting,
interpreting, and responding in an endless process of (inter)textualization or
what is simply called reading and writing in activity theory. While not a
dominant theoretical perspective among educators, activity theory presents us
with an important understanding of intertextuality as a theory of learning
(Shotter, 1991, 1993). Activity theory is influenced by the Soviet psychologist
Lev Vygotsky, a major contributor to constructivism. For Vygotsky (1978),
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language shapes human activities into structures that can be reshaped
repeatedly depending on contexts (p. 28). Because the contexts for human
activities are always changing, Vygotsky says that the tools for learning also
change. His work is viewed by some scholars as an “important predecessor
and perhaps even as clinical underpinning to Bakhtin’s philosophy of
language” (Emerson, 1986, p. 27). From the perspectives of Vygotsky and
Bakhtin, language must always play a central role in the articulation of any
theory of learning. Russell (1995) agrees when he explains that an active
theory of learning focuses on the interconnections among language, human
behavior, and consciousness in an activity system. Activity systems are goal-
oriented, contextual, situated, cooperative, and interactive. As a fundamental
unit of analysis for understanding culture and people, activity systems help us
to connect the psychological and social processes that constitute and condition
both (p. 53). Russell (1995) identifies the interactive elements of activity
theory as a performative system: “subject (a person or persons), and
object(ive) (an objective or goal or common task), and tools (including signs)
that mediate the interaction” (p. 53). Also, Russell (1995) claims that there
are, arguably, five important constituents involved in this system. He writes,
“Activity systems are historically developed, mediated by tools, dialectically
structured, analyzed as the relations of participants and tools, and changed
through zones of proximal development” (p. 54). Mediational tools could
include actual tools, computers, speaking, reading, writing, music,
architecture, and physicality (p. 54). Russell (1995) claims that texts are also
tools one uses to carry out activities. Just as there are a variety of tools for
completing different activities, there are also a variety of texts one can use.
As human activities change in complex systems and situations, these
texts/tools help us to adapt and transform our environments. Russell (1995)
writes, “For those tools that are in the form of texts, meanings almost always
arise in relation to previous texts (intertextuality) as well as in relation to
nontextual phenomena” (p. 55). In activity theory, learning is situated and
contextualized in some kind of system of relations. It is also the result of one’s
participation in that system.
Another feature of the activity system that Gadotti (1996) believes is
important is its dialectical structure. The dialectal structure recognizes that
change occurs as a result of conflict and cooperation (Russell, 1995, p. 55).
In fact, Gadotti (1996) argues that conflict is an important element in learning
theory. Conflict pedagogy acknowledges that all things are in motion and
always interrelated and permeated by the regulatory and hierarchical nature
of power. For Gadotti (1996), the use of conflict as a teaching strategy is
important in any transformative pedagogy. He writes, “the role of the educator
is to educate. Educating presupposes a transformation, and there is no kind of
peaceful transformation. There is always conflict and rupture with something,
with, for instance, prejudice, habits, types of behaviors, and the like” (1996,
p. xvi). Yet, equity pedagogy often emphasizes consensus and de-emphasizes
conflict, despite the fact that rapid change often undercuts consensus just as
soon as it is reached. Gadotti (1996) agrees that an overemphasis on unity and
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equality in pedagogy might do more to hinder than help our efforts to
understand differences and diversity in various multicultural contexts. Equity
pedagogy could benefit from what Shannon-Baker (2018) calls the “additive
approach” to multicultural education. Not only should educators be able to
connect the past to the present but also one pedagogy to another. Equity
pedagogy tends to sever multicultural education from action and discourage
intersectional understanding of identity and interaction (Shannon-Baker,
2018, p. 53). As educators, we must learn to be effective mediators.
According to Giroux (1992), teaching is a form of mediation between
differences. He claims, “we can’t be good mediators unless we are aware of
what the referents of the mediation we engage in are…. The thing about
teaching is that the specificity of the context is always central. We can’t get
away with invoking rules and procedures that cut across contexts” (Giroux,
1992, p. 17). It is in intertextuality and activity theory that we discover
“politics and pedagogy developed around new languages capable of
acknowledging the multiple, contradictory, and complex subject positions
people occupy within different social, cultural, and economic locations”
(Giroux, 1992, p. 21).
CONCLUSION
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JEREMY DENNIS is the Chair of the Liberal Arts at St. Louis Community College. His
research interests are in the areas of interdisciplinary theory and pedagogy in higher
education.