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- Il_Galateo abstract "Galateo: The Rules of Polite Behavior (Il Galateo, overo de' costumi) by Florentine Giovanni Della Casa (1503–56) was published in Venice in 1558. A lively guide to what one should do and avoid in ordinary social life, this influential courtesy book of the Renaissance explores subjects such as dress, table manners, and conversation. It became so popular that the title, which refers to the name of one of the author’s distinguished friends, entered into the Italian language. To “not know the Galateo” means to be impolite, crude, and awkward in polite society.Della Casa directs his attention to an indefinite world of gentleman citizens who wish to convey a winning and attractive image. With a casual style and dry humor, he writes about everyday concerns, from posture to telling jokes to table manners. “Our manners are attractive when we regard others’ pleasure and not our own delight,” Della Casa writes.Unlike Baldassare Castiglione’s The Book of the Courtier, the rules of polite behavior in Galateo are not directed to ideal men in a Renaissance court. Instead, Della Casa observes the ordinary habits of people who do not realize that clipping one’s nails in public is bad. “One should not annoy others with such stuff as dreams, especially since most dreams are by and large idiotic,” we are advised.Della Casa never lived to see his manuscript’s immediate, international and lasting success. It was translated into French (1562), English (1576), Latin (1580), Spanish (1585), and German (1587), and has been read and studied in every generation. Della Casa's work set the foundation for modern etiquette writers and authorities on manners, such as “Miss Manners” Judith Martin, Amy Vanderbilt, and Emily Post.Valentina D’Urso, Professor of Psychology and author of Le Buone Maniere, writes, “The founding father of this literarary genre, [Galateo] is an extraordinary read, lively and passionate. One doesn’t know whether to admire more its rich style or the wisdom of the practical words of advice.”".
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- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Alessandro_Piccolomini.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Amy_Vanderbilt.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Baldassare_Castiglione.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Baltasar_Gracián.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Category:1558_books.
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- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Courtesy_book.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Dante_Alighieri.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Desiderius_Erasmus.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Emily_Post.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Etiquette.
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- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_Boccaccio.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_della_Casa.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_MarcAntonio_Baretti.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Intercultural_competence.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Judith_Martin.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Luigi_Cornaro.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Michelangelo.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Niccolò_Machiavelli.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Norbert_Elias.
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- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Stefano_Guazzo.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Table_manners.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Taboo.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink The_Book_of_the_Courtier.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink The_Decameron.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Titian.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLink Venice.
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLinkText "Galateo".
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLinkText "Il Galateo overo de’ costumi".
- Il_Galateo wikiPageWikiLinkText "Il Galateo".
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- Il_Galateo subject Category:1558_books.
- Il_Galateo subject Category:Etiquette.
- Il_Galateo subject Category:Italian_books.
- Il_Galateo subject Category:Italian_literature.
- Il_Galateo subject Category:Renaissance_literature.
- Il_Galateo type Book.
- Il_Galateo type Convention.
- Il_Galateo type Work.
- Il_Galateo type Book.
- Il_Galateo type Concept.
- Il_Galateo type Convention.
- Il_Galateo type Movement.
- Il_Galateo type Work.
- Il_Galateo comment "Galateo: The Rules of Polite Behavior (Il Galateo, overo de' costumi) by Florentine Giovanni Della Casa (1503–56) was published in Venice in 1558. A lively guide to what one should do and avoid in ordinary social life, this influential courtesy book of the Renaissance explores subjects such as dress, table manners, and conversation. It became so popular that the title, which refers to the name of one of the author’s distinguished friends, entered into the Italian language.".
- Il_Galateo label "Il Galateo".
- Il_Galateo sameAs Q3757468.
- Il_Galateo sameAs Galateo_overo_de_costumi.
- Il_Galateo sameAs m.0py157q.
- Il_Galateo sameAs Q3757468.
- Il_Galateo wasDerivedFrom Il_Galateo?oldid=704810735.
- Il_Galateo isPrimaryTopicOf Il_Galateo.