Abstract:
Kristeva, who was believed to “have discovered” Bakhtin and be “a second Saussure”, influenced Balter and the school of Telquel by surpassing structuralism with his theory of “intertextuality”. Unfortunately, this was the one side of historical facts. From a different perspective, however, the theory of “intertextuality” was only the result of theoretical transaction between Kristeva, who highlighted the “productivity” of text, and the progressive vanguard intellectuals of the school of Telquel, the crystallization of his “integrity theory” and a brilliant link on the theoretical chain of French structuralism and post-structuralism.