
A Psychiatrist’s View of Shakespeare’s Sonnets
Eliot Slater Editor’s Note: In 1969 Eliot Slater published a substantial article on the Shakespeare Authorship Question in the journal of psychiatry Anais Portugueses de
Exploring the evidence that the works of Shakespeare were written by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford
Eliot Slater Editor’s Note: In 1969 Eliot Slater published a substantial article on the Shakespeare Authorship Question in the journal of psychiatry Anais Portugueses de
by Ramon Jiménez This article was originally published in The Oxfordian, v. 18, p. 9 (2016) (PDF version here); republished on the SOF website July
Shelly Maycock Originally published in Brief Chronicles First Folio Special Issue (2016), pages 5–30 “Thence comes it that my name receives a brand.”1 “It’s not
Merilee Karr, MD Reprinted by permission from the Winter 2001 (36:4) issue of the Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter. —A companion piece, A brief history of interpretation,
A Review Essay by Michael Dudley Originally published in Brief Chronicles First Folio Special Edition (2016), pages 133–139 The Millionaire and the Bard: Henry Folger’s
by Bonner Miller Cutting Originally published in Brief Chronicles, v. 1 (2009), pp. 169–91 (PDF version here); republished on the SOF website in 2017, and in
Robin Fox Originally published in THE OXFORDIAN, Volume XI 2008, pages 113–136 There has been a checkered history of attitudes to William Shakespeare of Stratford’s
Kevin Gilvary Originally published in Brief Chronicles Vol. VII (2016), pages 1–15 Early in every biography of Shakespeare, writers advance two unfounded claims: firstly, that
Richard F. Whalen Originally published in THE OXFORDIAN, Volume X 2007, pages 75–84 Prospero: …this rough magic I here abjure…I’ll break my staff, Bury it certain fadoms
by Alexander Waugh This article was originally published in The Oxfordian, v. 16, pp. 97–103 (2014) (PDF available here), republished here on the SOF website,
James Norwood One of the hallmarks of Mark Twain was irreverence. His first major publication, The Innocents Abroad, called into question the high culture of
Evidence for Oxford’s Authorship of “The Book of Sir Thomas More” by Fran Gidley The play Sir Thomas More survived its obscure Elizabethan origins to
Research on Shakespeare and his works which appeared in journals from 1989 to 2016 by Gary Goldstein has been issued for global distribution by the
By Dr. Michael Egan Readers will know that Shakespeare Beyond Doubt contributor, Hardy Cook, also runs SHAKSPER, an online discussion group. Recently the issue of
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