Fiction, fact and madness - intertextual relations among Gide's female characters, Celia Britton; alter ego - intertextuality, irony and the politics of reading, Ross Chambers; intertextuality and ontology, John Frow; missing you - intertextuality, transference and the language of love, Sean Hand; autobiography as intertext - Barthes, Sarraute, Robbe-Grille, Ann Jefferson; Roland Barthes - an intertextual figure, Diane Knight; intertextuality or influence - Kristeva, Bloom and the "Poesies" of Isadore Ducasse, Roland Lack; literature, cinema, television - intertextuality in Jean Renoir's "Le Testament du Docteur Cordelier", Keith Reader; compulsory reader response - the intertextual drive, Michael Riffaterre.