Roe, “Shakespeare Guide to Italy”: news and reviews
August 10, 2011 — Hilary Roe Metternich has provided a lovely slideshow and summary, available on the Huffington Post, of The Shakespeare Guide to Italy (2011),
August 10, 2011 — Hilary Roe Metternich has provided a lovely slideshow and summary, available on the Huffington Post, of The Shakespeare Guide to Italy (2011),
Editorial Note: This essay was originally published on the SOF website on February 21, 2011. It has been revised and updated and may be cited
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
“Is That True?” a book review by Warren Hope, Ph.D., written in memory of Charles Wisner Barrell, Craig Huston, Ruth Loyd Miller, and Bronson Feldman
Some characteristics of the author “Shakespeare” revealed in the poems and plays, identified by J. Thomas Looney in “Shakespeare” Identified in Edward de Vere, the
Why are there so many Shakespeare authorship candidates? For many people, an understandable question arises, even if one does begin to doubt the Stratford story:
by Professor Daniel L. Wright, Ph.D. Editorial Note: This article was originally published as “‘He was a scholar and a ripe and good one’: The
Excerpts from Is Shakespeare Dead by Mark Twain, an exploration of the Shakespeare authorship question originally published in 1909. [The full text of Mark Twain’s
by Mark Alexander. A look at the history and scholarship on Shakespeare’s knowledge of the law. Alexander’s analysis reveals Shakespeare’s legal knowledge is sophisticated and deep, and that it is his critics who’ve got it wrong.
by Robert Detobel Fidelio: Here’s the pen, captain: your name to the sale. Captain: ‘S foot, dost take me to be penman? … Fidelio: Take
by Charlton Ogburn Jr. This essay was posted on the Shakespeare Oxford Society (now SOF) website on September 9, 2005, and represents an enlightening summary
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship (SOF) is pleased to offer five reviews of Professor Alan H. Nelson’s book, Monstrous Adversary: The Life of Edward de Vere,
by Lynne Kositsky and Roger Stritmatter September 12, 2004 In an undated internet essay by Mr. Tom Reedy and Dr. David Kathman, “How We Know
by Professor Felicia Hardison Londré, Ph.D. This article was originally published in the Bulletin of the Faculty of Letters, Hosei University (Tokyo, Japan), No. 39
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