
Video: James Warren Centennial Presentation, March 4, 2020
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
Exploring the evidence that the works of Shakespeare were written by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

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

The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s Fourth Annual “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest is accepting submissions through July 20, 2020! First prize is $1,000! Second prize:

The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship celebrated the centennial of the publication of J. Thomas Looney’s groundbreaking book, “Shakespeare” Identified, with an afternoon symposium at the National

Wear one in 2020 for your Looney Centennial Action! The official T-shirt of the Looney Centennial is now available through the SOF store on Zazzle!

Stop the presses! The SOF Centennial Symposium at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., scheduled for March 4, got a shout-out on February 18

by Tom Regnier Writing anonymously or under a pseudonym was commonplace in Elizabethan England. Archer Taylor and Frederic J. Mosher, in their seminal book on

Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship President John Hamill has announced that the SOF Research Grant Program has awarded two grants for 2020. The purpose of the Research

by Bryan H. Wildenthal The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship (SOF) has launched a newly revamped page on its website dedicated to the centennial of the revolutionary book

Update: Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the in-person Ashland conference has been postponed to September 22–25, 2022. However, you are still welcome and encouraged to

January 7, 2020 I distinctly remember sitting in 12th grade English with a Penguin paperback copy of Hamlet open on my lap. As The Mousetrap

MAKE A NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION TO HELP US REACH 100 J.T. LOONEY CENTENNIAL ACTS in 2020 by pledging to do something — anything — to

book review by Ramon Jiménez Hugh Craig and Arthur F. Kinney, eds., Shakespeare, Computers, and the Mystery of Authorship (Cambridge University Press, 2009). Review originally

by Wally Hurst As over 8,000 English teachers from around the United States convened in Baltimore, Maryland, for the National Council of Teachers of English

Don Rubin, Professor Emeritus of Theatre at York University in Toronto and Second Vice President of the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship, was featured recently in York

Free Symposium Will Launch a Year of Events Honoring J. Thomas Looney’s Discovery That Edward de Vere (Earl of Oxford) Was “Shakespeare” by Bryan

Author and Shakespearean Scholar Was Honored as 2006 Oxfordian of the Year A Question of Will, Lynne Kositsky’s delightful Oxfordian novel for young adults, is
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Check out our new animated short, designed to introduce students and curious newcomers to the greatest literary debate in history! Visit our YouTube channel to watch the story unfold.