An Evening at the Cockpit: Further Evidence of an Early Date for Henry V
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
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
January 19, 1931 (republished on the SOF website, July 18, 2017) Eva Turner Clark, the author of Hidden Allusions in Shakespeare’s Plays (1930), became an
by Tom Regnier Who would dare assert that we know all there is to be known? — Galileo Galilei, Letter to Father Benedetto Castelli, Dec.
Attendees of the upcoming Chicago SOF Conference, October 12-15, 2017 are being offered not one, but two, very different theatrical events. Conference goers may attend
A Message from John Hamill, Chair of the SOF’s Research Grant Program I am pleased to announce that the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship has received, for
Our interest in Shakespeare started with the theatre in Germany, where we attended performances of favourite authors, such as Čechov, Ibsen, Schiller, and, mostly, Shakespeare.
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,
My path to becoming an Oxfordian began in 1995, when I came across a book by Richard Whalen titled “Shakespeare: WHO WAS HE? The Oxford
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
May 1, 2017 – The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship has launched a video contest on the topic, “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” with a first prize of $1,000,
We had been creating original work for our Company since its founding in 1975. Now in 1998 we deviated from that course to undertake an
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
Becoming an Oxfordian was not sudden. I had heard as a young man that Mark Twain did not believe that ”Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare.” What convinced me it
I’m not an academic with deep knowledge of Shakespeare let alone 16th/17th century English theater. But I love the Canon and good literature and words
Bonner Miller Cutting will speak on the Shakespeare Authorship Question on Friday, March 17, 2017 at 2:00pm, at the North Palm Beach Library, 303 Anchorage Dr.,
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
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