The concept of intertextual relations that emerged in the 1960s is based on the fact that each text consists of a combination of other texts, and in this context all texts are connected to each other in some way. The French literary theorist Gérard Genette defined all kinds of relations between texts as transtextuality. One type of transtextuality is hypertextuality relationships which refer to any relationship uniting hypertext to its predecessor hypotext. One field on this kind of relationships seems to occurs is rewriting. Daniel Defoe’s “Robinson Crusoe” was written in the eighteenth century and is the literary text of Alexander Selkirk’s true story. Michel Tournier’s “Friday or the Other Island” was written in twenty centuries...