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  1. Se trata de una intriga novelesca en estilo epistolar, sazonado con reflexiones de carácter general sobre el amor y la religión. Esta obra se caracteriza por sus ingeniosos discursos y un estilo ampuloso y afectado, abundante en aliteración, que pretende exhibir cortésmente el ingenio. El estilo eufuista fue seguido por Robert Greene y ...

  2. www.galateaproject.orgGALATEA

    Galatea was written in the 1580s by John Lyly, William Shakespeare’s best-selling but now long-forgotten contemporary, inspiring Shakespeare’s comedies from As You Like It to A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Performed in front of Queen Elizabeth I, over four hundred years ago, this tale of love, joy and the importance of welcoming outsiders is ...

  3. John Lyly. John Lyly (* 1553 in Kent, England; † November 1606 in London) war ein englischer Schriftsteller der Renaissance und Begründer des Euphuismus, außerdem ein Angestellter im Haushalt von Edward de Vere, dem Earl of Oxford. Er schrieb mehrere Dramen und prägte in den 1580er-Jahren das Repertoire der Kindertheatergruppen der Chapel ...

  4. 12 de abr. de 2023 · W ickedly funny, astonishingly queer and over 430 years old, John Lyly’s dramatic comedy Galatea upends gender binaries and sheds power structures like they’re merely a change of clothes ...

  5. John’s father was Peter Lyly, who held a diocesan office at Canterbury. Reckoning backward from the year 1569, when he entered Oxford at age sixteen or thereabouts, according to Anthony à Wood ...

  6. John Lyly is the first collection of essays dedicated solely to the work of this University Wit, celebrity prose writer, and playwright to the court of Elizabeth. Lyly's energy and wit inspired his contemporaries to follow new directions in prose fiction and stage comedy, and his writings still illuminate sixteenth-century culture for the modern reader.

  7. William Lyly to the humanist man of letters John Lyly, and shortly after disappears. It has its being in the humanistic tradition. John Lyly was born about 1554 in Kent, probably in Canter bury, where his father Peter afterward became Archbishop Par ker's Registrar, and where the family certainly lived in the years following 1562.