Usage Examples
Filter by Meaning The metatextual subtext of the poem reflects the poet's personal struggles.
The poet's use of metaphor and allusion adds a metatextual layer to the poem.
The film "Last Action Hero" is a metatextual action movie that satirizes the genre by having a character enter a movie and interact with its fictional characters.
The TV show "Community" frequently uses metatextual humor, such as characters referencing the show's low ratings or talking about the show's writers.
The play "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" by Tom Stoppard is a metatextual work that reinterprets Shakespeare's "Hamlet."
The film "Adaptation" is a metatextual work that explores the process of adapting a book into a movie.
The short story "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" by Jorge Luis Borges is a metatextual work that explores the nature of literary interpretation.
The play "The Real Inspector Hound" is a metatextual parody of murder mystery plays.
Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway" includes metatextual moments in which the characters reflect on the nature of literature.
The television series "Community" often incorporates metatextual references to other television shows and genres.
The film "The Cabin in the Woods" is a metatextual horror movie that critiques the genre while also playing with its conventions.
The TV show "Rick and Morty" often uses metatextual humor, such as characters breaking the fourth wall and commenting on the show's own structure.
The comic book series "Watchmen" by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons is a metatextual work that deconstructs the superhero genre.
The graphic novel "Watchmen" is a metatextual commentary on superhero comics and the Cold War era.
The book "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" is a metatextual play that explores the events of Shakespeare's "Hamlet" from the perspective of two minor characters.
The television show "Stranger Things" contains many metatextual references to 1980s pop culture.
In the film "Deadpool," the protagonist frequently breaks the fourth wall and engages in metatextual commentary.
The novel "The French Lieutenant's Woman" by John Fowles includes metatextual sections that comment on the conventions of Victorian literature.
The song "Don't You Want Me" by The Human League has a metatextual quality, as the lyrics are a conversation between two characters in a bar who are discussing their own relationship.
The film "Adaptation" is a metatextual work that comments on the process of adapting a book into a movie.
The novel "Wide Sargasso Sea" by Jean Rhys is a metatextual response to Charlotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre", exploring the backstory of one of its characters.
The TV show "Community" often uses metatextual humor to poke fun at sitcom cliches.
This piece of performance art is a metatextual critique of the art world and its conventions.
This experimental film is a metatextual exploration of the medium of cinema.
This graphic novel is a metatextual deconstruction of the superhero genre, challenging its simplistic moral binaries.
This experimental novel is a metatextual meditation on the limits of language and storytelling.
The film "Mulholland Drive" is a metatextual puzzle, forcing viewers to question what is real and what is not.
This novel is a metatextual masterpiece, constantly playing with readers' expectations and assumptions.
This postmodern poetry collection uses metatextual elements to question the nature of language itself.
This novel is filled with metatextual references to other famous works of literature.
In this short story, the author employs metatextual techniques to challenge traditional narrative structures.
The artist's paintings are filled with metatextual references to art history.
The play "The Real Inspector Hound" is a metatextual parody of the whodunit genre.
The art installation is a metatextual critique of the art world's obsession with commodification and consumerism.
The video game "Undertale" uses metatextual elements to break the fourth wall and engage with the player directly.
The movie "Scream" is a metatextual take on the horror genre.
The play "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" is a metatextual reimagining of Shakespeare's "Hamlet."
The musician's lyrics often have a metatextual quality, commenting on the nature of songwriting itself.
The film "Adaptation" is a metatextual exploration of the process of adapting a book to a movie.
The TV show "Atlanta" often employs metatextual techniques to comment on issues of race and representation.
The playwright's use of multiple levels of reality creates a metatextual work that explores the nature of theatricality and storytelling.
The essayist's self-reflexive approach creates a metatextual work that is aware of its own status as a work of nonfiction writing.
The play's characters frequently address the audience, creating a metatextual work that is aware of its own theatricality.
The essay examined the idea of literature as a cultural artifact, creating a metatextual analysis of literature itself.
The song's lyrics draw attention to the songwriting process, creating a metatextual work that is aware of its own status as a musical composition.
The songwriter included lines in the lyrics that referenced the songwriting process, making it a metatextual song.
The playwright included a character who was an author writing a play, creating a metatextual play within a play.
The postmodernist novel's use of self-reference created a metatextual work that constantly draws attention to its own status as a work of literature.
The movie's use of film techniques drew attention to its own artifice, making it a metatextual film.
The literary critic's analysis of the novel is metatextual in nature, as it is aware of its own status as a work of literary criticism.
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