In literary theory, a text is any object that can be
"read," whether this object is a work of literature, a street sign,
an arrangement of buildings on a city block, or styles of clothing. It is a
coherent set of signs that transmits some kind of
informative message. This set of symbols is considered in
terms of the informative message's content,
rather than in terms of its physical form or the medium in which it is
represented.
Within
the field of literary criticism, "text" also refers to the original
information content of a particular piece of writing; that is, the
"text" of a work is that primal symbolic arrangement of letters as
originally composed, apart from later alterations, deterioration, commentary,
translations, paratext, etc.
Therefore, when literary criticism is concerned with the determination of a
"text," it is concerned with the distinguishing of the original
information content from whatever has been added to or subtracted from that
content as it appears in a given textual document (that is, a physical
representation of text).
Since the
history of writing predates the concept of the "text", most texts
were not written with this concept in mind. Most written works fall within a
narrow range of the types described by text theory. The concept of
"text" becomes relevant if/when a "coherent written message is
completed and needs to be referred to independently of the circumstances in
which it was created."
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