Exploring the evidence that the works of Shakespeare were written by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford 

The Journal of Scientific Exploration SAQ special edition

The following is an official JSE press release for a download you can get here: http://www.journalofscientificexploration.org

The Journal of Scientific Exploration Publishes Special Issue on the Shakespeare Authorship Question

Researchers Present Diverse Evidence Against the Man from Stratford

The Journal of Scientific Exploration (JSE), an open access, peer-reviewed journal, has published its summer issue, which is specially devoted to what is known as the Shakespeare Authorship Question (SAQ).

In the issue, ten historians and literary scholars present evidence that casts serious doubts about who actually authored the monumental works credited to William Shakespeare. Suggesting that the name is actually a pseudonym for someone else, this position has been endorsed by numerous artists and scholars over the decades ranging from Walt Whitman and Mark Twain to Sigmund Freud, Tyrone Guthrie (founder of Canada’s Stratford Shakespeare Festival) and Mark Rylance founding Artistic Director of the reconstructed Globe Theatre in London.

Tradition credits a businessman from an essentially illiterate family in Stratford-Upon-Avon named Will Shakspere as being the author of the Bard’s 37 plays, two major narratives in verse, 154 sonnets and as the man who introduced upwards of 1,700 original words into the English language. Many historians, literary researchers and theater professionals over the centuries, however, have been enormously skeptical of the attribution. The debate that has ensued — with several hundred books having now been published on the subject — is at the core of the SAQ.

“Academic honesty and the historical record do matter,” said Don Rubin, Professor Emeritus of Theatre at Toronto’s York University and Guest Editor of the issue. President of the Shakespeare Authorship Coalition (doubtaboutwill.org), Prof. Rubin argues that “from an intellectual standpoint, the real conspiracy theory is why those who hold with the Stratford man as author are so absolutely unwilling to read contradictory research in their own field and to encourage openness about these alternative ideas within academe. Most simply don’t know the depth and detail of the alternative arguments.”

While the JSE does not officially endorse particular claims related to any frontier science topic, its editorial team did agree that there was more than ample evidence in this instance to open up the SAQ to scholars in other fields. Thus, this special JSE issue about what has been termed by many ‘history’s greatest mystery’.

You can freely download JSE’s Special SAQ issue here: http://www.journalofscientificexploration.org

A publication of the Society for Scientific Exploration, JSE is an open-access, platinum peer-reviewed journal that is devoted to maverick or frontier science topics. It is freely available online.
Media Contact: James Houran, Ph.D.
Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Scientific Exploration

+1.817.542.7602

***
Oxfordians will note the name of Don Rubin as a prime mover in the publication of this special issue.  Thank you, Don, for all the work you put into it. Inside the edition there are articles by Don and Oxfordians Bob Meyers, Kevin Gilvary, Ramon Jimenez, Bonner Cutting, Elizabeth Waugaman, Earl Showerman, Sky Gilbert, Katherine Chiljan, Alexander Waugh and Hank Whittemore.
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