Insights Into Stylistic Analysis of Elizabethan Authorship Questions
Hotwiring the Bard Into Cyberspace June 25, 2011 by W. Ron Hess (Editorial Note: See also this overview of the broader issue of stylometric analysis of
Hotwiring the Bard Into Cyberspace June 25, 2011 by W. Ron Hess (Editorial Note: See also this overview of the broader issue of stylometric analysis of
by Sally Mosher Originally published in the 1998 edition of The Oxfordian Among close to three hundred pieces contained in the most famous keyboard manuscript
by James Fitzgerald You can always get a little more literature if you are willing to go a little closer into what has been left
by Dr. Charles Berney The year 1593 saw the publication of the first work attributed to “William Shake-speare, ” the narrative poem Venus and Adonis.
Noted barrister and M.P. Sir George Greenwood claimed Shakespeare’s plays and poems “supply ample evidence that their author . . . had a very extensive and accurate knowledge of law.” This essay surveys arguments for and against supposing a legal education for Shakespeare.
by Paul H. Altrocchi, M.D. I will find where truth is hid, though it were hid indeed within the center. Hamlet: Act II Scene 2
by Eric Lewin Altschuler and William Jansen Some years ago, in an article in Notes & Queries, Philippa Sheppard noted strong similarities between the speech
by Roger Stritmatter We believe that Shakespeare, whose investment in courtly diction was considerable, can be analyzed as a writer who felt, in the course
Michael Delahoyde Originally published in THE OXFORDIAN, Volume IX 2006, pages 51–65 To this well-painted piece is Lucrece come, To find a face where all distress is
by Richard F. Whalen This article appeared in a slightly different form in the 2003 issue of The Oxfordian Awake! Awake! Ring the alarum-bell:—murder and
Launch of ‘Neue Shake-speare Gesellschaft’ The “Neue Shake-speare Gesellschaft e.V.” – New Shake-speare Society – was set up on 27.03.2010* in Hamburg by a group
A collection of the works of Oxfordian Peter Moore has been published. Check the Shakespeare-Oxford Society blog website for details. Click Here
For Immediate Release Media Contacts: Alex McNeil Shakespeare Fellowship 617-244-9825 alex@amcneil.com Matthew Cossolotto Shakespeare Oxford Society 914-245-9721 matthew@ovations.com Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens Receives
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