Vote Now: “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest!
Voting is now open in the 2020 “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest! The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, on March 20, challenged contestants to give us their
Voting is now open in the 2020 “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest! The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, on March 20, challenged contestants to give us their
book review by Ramon Jiménez Posted as an article on the SOF website under the title “Shakespeare by the Numbers: What Stylometrics Can and Cannot
August 1, 2020 In late 2005 I was browsing the bargain section of a Barnes & Noble bookstore in Sioux City, Iowa, when I came
Historic Authorship Initiative by John M. Shahan July 27, 2020 In 2007 the Shakespeare Authorship Coalition (SAC) launched one of the most significant efforts ever
July 16, 2020 In the mid-1980s, while attending university, I was “formally” introduced to the works of Shakespeare. During one lecture our instructor, Dr. James
Historian Katherine Chiljan and SOF President John Hamill Among Recent Guests Interviewed by Host Steven Sabel by Bryan H. Wildenthal Katherine Chiljan, an independent historian
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Fourth Annual “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest is still accepting submissions through July 20, 2020. First prize is $1,000! Second
by Bryan H. Wildenthal Roger Stritmatter’s Centennial Symposium presentation, “Discovering Shakespeare’s Bible: My Journey From Rebel Graduate Student to Marginalized Professor,” is now available
June 27, 2020 In a word — evidence. I was in the stacks of Southern Oregon State College in Ashland, Oregon (now Southern Oregon University),
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship is pleased to announce it is again welcoming applications for its Research Grant Program (RGP). Grants will be disbursed in 2021.
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Fourth Annual “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest opened on March 20, 2020, and is still accepting submissions through July 20,
by Bryan H. Wildenthal Bonner Miller Cutting’s Centennial Symposium presentation — “Profiling the Author: Will the Real Shakespeare Please Stand Up?” — is now
by Bryan H. Wildenthal May 27, 2020 — The late Tom Regnier’s Centennial Symposium presentation, “Justice Stevens, the Law of Evidence, and the Shakespeare
The SOF republishes here, exactly 100 years after it first appeared, a review from “farthest India” of J. Thomas Looney’s book launching the modern Oxfordian
Cheryl Eagan-Donovan’s Centennial Symposium presentation, “Nothing Is Truer Than Truth: Every Author’s Life Tells a Story,” is now available on the SOF YouTube channel. The
James A. Warren’s Centennial Symposium presentation, “J. Thomas Looney and the Most Revolutionary Book in the History of Shakespeare Studies,” is now available on
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