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English

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Etymology

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By surface analysis, peri- +‎ text.

Noun

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peritext (plural peritexts)

  1. (literary theory) Images and textual elements which surround, or are secondary to, the main body of a published work, such as an introduction, notes, front covers, etc.
    Coordinate terms: epitext, paratext, context, subtext
    • 2011, David Bellos, Is That a Fish in Your Ear?, Penguin, published 2012, page 143:
      The main work is not the translation at all, but Nabokov's appropriation of it through his inflated peritext.
    • 2011, Miranda Beaven Remnek, ‎Miranda Remnek, The Space of the Book, page 252:
      Using a narrower focus (the reception of the oeuvre of just two writers, Il'ia Il'f and Evgenii Petrov, who wrote as a team), the approach is literary and the perspective unusual, the editional segments at issue are not so much the texts themselves as their accompanying materials, or peritexts.

Derived terms

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