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'Poetic language is so endlessly interpretable that in the end, any meanings are arbitrary, and any one reading as valid as another.' Discuss.  

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'Poetic language is so endlessly interpretable that in the end, any meanings are arbitrary, and any one reading as valid as another.' Discuss. There is no denying that when an author writes a text there is more meaning in it than just the obvious plot, authors constantly litter their texts with themes, double entendre, metaphor etc. all of which can be easily missed by the reader. If one reader was to miss many of these techniques but another was to pickup on most, then surely the latter would have understood the work better, and in the way it was intended, and therefore their interpretation is the more valid of the two. However we could argue that the text was written badly, because certain readers cannot understand it in the way it was intended. All this is just a small part of one of the biggest debates in modern literature and criticism, and...

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