
James A. Warren: How I Became an Oxfordian
August 19, 2019 I first learned of the name Edward de Vere in November 2002, in an issue of The Great Ideas Online, the weekly
Exploring the evidence that the works of Shakespeare were written by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford
August 19, 2019 I first learned of the name Edward de Vere in November 2002, in an issue of The Great Ideas Online, the weekly
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship and the authorship question receive lively coverage in the latest issue of The New Yorker, one of America’s more venerable periodical
March 5, 2019 The traditional biography of Shakespeare never made sense to me. On a visit to Stratford-upon-Avon, I picked up a biography with the
By Gary Goldstein Since the Shakespeare authorship issue is an intellectual pursuit, Oxfordians need to engage professors in English, Theatre, and History Departments to advance
Special Issue Edited by Professor Don Rubin February 4, 2019 — “The Question That Won’t Go Away: Did the Man From Stratford Really Write the
The Board of Trustees of the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship has announced the awarding of research grant funding to three worthy applications this year, for a
EVERYONE IS TIRED OF FAKE NEWS AND WE ARE TIRED OF FAKE SHAKESPEARE! I am your new President — and I need your help! I’m
The 20th issue of The Oxfordian, the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s annual peer-reviewed journal, has been published with six research papers and five book reviews, along with
Voting is now open in the SOF’s Second Annual “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contest at https://shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org/2018-video-contest/. Everyone can vote, so please visit the contest page,
The SOF is proud to publish a series of landmark studies of the early poetry of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (1550–1604). In
Introduction, Part 1: Oxford’s Poems and the Authorship Question The SOF, on June 22, 2018, unveiled this major new presentation, the first in decades,1 of
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship is pleased to announce that newsletters from the earliest Oxfordian organization in the U.S. are now available on the SOF website
April 11, 2018 — What makes a person change from being a Stratfordian to being an Oxfordian? What are the stages in this shift? And
Some observations on the Shakespeare authorship debate between Sir Jonathan Bate and Alexander Waugh: “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” (September 21, 2017, Emmanuel Centre, London) by Steven
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship is sad to announce that Chris Pannell, editor of the SOF’s peer-reviewed journal, The Oxfordian, is stepping down from his post
by John Hamill Originally published in The Oxfordian, v. 8, pp. 25–59 (2005) (repaginated PDF version here); republished on the SOF website Nov. 8, 2017,
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