Textuality is not just about the written word; it is the placement of the words and the reader’s interpretation. There is not a set formula to elucidate a text’s textuality; it is not a simple procedure. Even though Hawthorn sees "interpretation as less important or less problematic",[1] interpretation is usually required in order to make sense of the text’s textuality. The interpretation that a reader develops from that text may decide the identity and the definitive meanings of that text. Textuality, as a literary theory, is that which constitutes a text as a text in a particular way. The text is an indecidable (there is an inexistence of an effective or "strict" method of writing or structure). The text’s indecidability, in fact, fabricates from its textuality or its textualities. Textuality, as defined in The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms is "the condition of being textual, or in other words, of writtenness