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authorintended

Authorintended is a term used in literary theory to denote the meaning an author intended to convey in a text. It refers to the authorial intention as a potential source of interpretation, in contrast to meanings that emerge solely from the text’s language, from reader response, or from historical and cultural contexts. The term is a neologism rather than a long-established label, but it is used to discuss how intention factors into meaning-making.

Historical and theoretical context accompanies the concept. In the 20th century, author-intent became central to debates

Contemporary usage and limitations are commonly recognized in analysis. In practice, scholars may consult authorial evidence

Related concepts include authorial intent, intention-based hermeneutics, and the broader debate over the death of the

about
how
texts
should
be
interpreted.
The
intentional
fallacy,
a
phrase
introduced
by
W.K.
Wimsatt
and
Monroe
Beardsley,
argues
that
a
work’s
meaning
should
not
be
determined
by
authorial
intention.
Since
then,
critics
have
varied
in
how
they
treat
authorintended
meaning:
some
see
it
as
a
legitimate,
though
often
unrecoverable,
guide;
others
oppose
anchoring
interpretation
to
an
author's
stated
aims.
such
as
drafts,
letters,
or
interviews
to
assess
what
the
authorintended,
but
they
typically
acknowledge
that
a
text
can
acquire
meanings
beyond
or
against
that
intention.
Textual
meaning
is
viewed
as
the
product
of
a
constellation
of
factors
including
form,
genre,
historical
context,
and
reception.
author.
In
addition,
discussions
of
authorintended
can
intersect
with
metadata
practices
in
digital
publishing,
where
texts
are
annotated
with
stated
purpose
or
intended
audience.