Match the following : Terms Description (A) Ambiguity (i) A term coined by Julia Kristeva to refer to the fact that texts are constituted by a “tissue of citations.”(B) Aporia (ii) A term used by Mikhail Bakhtin to describe the variety of languages and voices within a novel.(C) Intertextuality (iii) An irresolvable internal contradiction or logical disjunction in a text, usually associated with deconstructive thinking.(D) Heteroglossia (iv) A term made famous by William Empson to indicate that a word, phrase, or text can be interpreted in more than ` one way. (A) (B) (C) (D)

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UGC NET Paper-II English Syllabus consists of: 

Drama
Poetry
Fiction & short story
Non-Fictional Prose
English in India: history, evolution, and futures
Literary Criticism
Research Methods, and Materials in English
Language: Basic concepts, theories, and pedagogy.
English in Use
Cultural Studies
Literary Theory post World War II.


Match the following : <br /> Terms Description <br />(A) Ambiguity (i) A term coined by Julia Kristeva to refer to the fact that texts are constituted by a “tissue of citations.”<br />(B) Aporia (ii) A term used by Mikhail Bakhtin to describe the variety of languages and voices within a novel.<br />(C) Intertextuality (iii) An irresolvable internal contradiction or logical disjunction in a text, usually associated with deconstructive thinking.<br />(D) Heteroglossia (iv) A term made famous by William Empson to indicate that a word, phrase, or text can be interpreted in more than ` one way.<br /> (A) (B) (C) (D)






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