Kositsky Honored With Regnier Veritas Award
by Bryan H. Wildenthal Lynne Kositsky, the admired poet, author, and Oxfordian scholar, was honored with the Tom Regnier Veritas Award on Saturday, October 9,
by Bryan H. Wildenthal Lynne Kositsky, the admired poet, author, and Oxfordian scholar, was honored with the Tom Regnier Veritas Award on Saturday, October 9,
Largest-Ever Issue Contains Major New Discoveries The largest issue ever published of the SOF annual peer-reviewed scholarly journal, The Oxfordian, has been published. It contains
book review by Michael Hyde Michael Blanding, North by Shakespeare: A Rogue Scholar’s Quest for the Truth Behind the Bard’s Work (Hachette, 2021). This review
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship (SOF) has announced the award of two research grants for 2021. The purpose of the SOF Research Grant Program (RGP) is
More than 200 people have now registered for the upcoming SOF Shakespeare Authorship Symposium on Friday–Saturday, October 2–3, 2020. And it’s not too late to
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship will hold a free online Shakespeare Authorship Symposium on Friday and Saturday, October 2–3, 2020. The event will be live-streamed on
by Bryan H. Wildenthal Roger Stritmatter’s Centennial Symposium presentation, “Discovering Shakespeare’s Bible: My Journey From Rebel Graduate Student to Marginalized Professor,” is now available
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
Richard F. Whalen Originally published in THE OXFORDIAN, Volume X 2007, pages 75–84 Prospero: …this rough magic I here abjure…I’ll break my staff, Bury it certain fadoms
Why the Prince Royal Did Not Inspire The Tempest — Royal Shakespeare Company Artistic Director and Stratfordian, Gregory Doran, believes he has found the ship
By Richard M. Waugaman, M.D. The Year’s Work in English Studies [YWES], a publication of the Oxford University Press, is the most comprehensive and oldest
On the Date, Sources and Design of Shakespeare’s The Tempest, the long-awaited book by Roger Stritmatter and Lynne Kositsky, is now available. “A brilliant work
Roger Stritmatter and Lynne Kositsky have produced a new website — Shakespeare’s Tempest — to chronicle the production of a book they are writing that will feature
This article by Peter Moore first appeared on the Oxfordian page of The Shakespeare Newsletter (Fall, 1991). While it deals only in part with the dating of The Tempest, it does help to remind readers that the dating of Shakespeare’s plays has been, and continues to be, a problem for all scholars. There is no certainity in any of it, but rather only speculation which must be based on careful consideration of all the facts and all the sources.
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