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Love's Metamorphosis by Leah Scragg

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Love's Metamorphosis

John Lyly

Leah Scragg, Lead Scragg

Manchester University Press · Print & ebook · June 1, 2015

Reading lane: 16th-Century Literary Criticism

First performed in the 1580s, Love's Metamorphosis is widely regarded as the most elegantly structured of Lyly's plays.

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Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy 16th-Century Literary CriticismGood for readers who enjoy 16th-Century Literary Criticism and French Plays.

Book Details

Authors
Leah Scragg, Lead Scragg
Publisher
Manchester University Press
Published
June 1, 2015
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
16th-Century Literary Criticism · French Plays
Reading lane
16th-Century Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Renaissance Literary Criticism

  • 16th-Century Literary Criticism

About This Book

First performed in the 1580s, Love's Metamorphosis is widely regarded as the most elegantly structured of Lyly's plays. The plot looks back to the account of Erisichthon's punishment for the desecration of Ceres' grove in Ovid's Metamorphosis, but the Ovidian story is woven into a wider network of interests turning upon aspects of love. A series of allusions to earlier Lylian compositions allows the play to be viewed in terms of a continuum of work, exploring the status of C...

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First performed in the 1580s, Love's Metamorphosis is widely regarded as the most elegantly structured of Lyly's plays. The plot looks back to the account of Erisichthon's punishment for the desecration of Ceres' grove in Ovid's Metamorphosis, but the Ovidian story is woven into a wider network of interests turning upon aspects of love. A series of allusions to earlier Lylian compositions allows the play to be viewed in terms of a continuum of work, exploring the status of Cupid and the nature and extent of his power. The play is notable for the articulate resistance offered by the female characters towards the desires of their lovers and the wishes of authority figures, while Protea, is of particular interest to feminist criticism as a striking example of a woman empowered rather than marginalised by the loss of her virgin state. Revived towards the close of the sixteenth century, the play is of importance to theatre historians in that it is the only one of Lyly's comedies known to have passed from Paul's to a different troupe. It is newly edited here from the sole early witness, the quarto of 1601.

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