News and Scholarship on the Shakespeare Authorship Question

Author rstritmatter

Roger Stritmatter is a Professor of Humanities at Coppin State University, where he has taught since 2003.

Fact Patterns in the Shakespeare Question: Which Translation of the Bible did Shakespeare Read?

Originally posted By knitwitted on December 7, 2012          Per Naseeb Shaheen Biblical References in Shakespeare’s Plays (1999, 2011) pp. 38-39: “The vast majority of Shakespeare’s biblical references cannot be traced to any one version, since the many Tudor Bibles… Continue Reading →

The Failure of Intellectual History: James Shapiro and his Contested Will

Originally Posted By Roger Stritmatter on April 5, 2013 I just posted this review on Amazon: Reviewing some of the top-rated reviews on this Amazon site it is clear that some balance needs to be interjected into the discussion. James… Continue Reading →

A Life of Allegory: Eduardus is My Proper Name

Originally posted By Roger Stritmatter on June 15, 2011 “Shakespeare lived a life of allegory. His works are comments on it.” These words by John Keats, perhaps the greatest English poet after Shakespeare, distill the essence of authentic Shakespearean biography… Continue Reading →

Aloha Vere: Folger Library Confronts “Problems” of Shakespearean Biography

The blog entry summarizes the experience of the Folger Library’s 2014 Conference on “Shakespeare and the Problem of Biography,” arguing that the conference was mislabeled and should have been called “Biography and the Problems of Shakespeare.”

A Shakespeare Skeptics Hall of Fame

It’s shocking, I know, but in the 21st century you can still read things like this on the internet: Four decades after Charlton Ogburn’s Mysterious William Shakespeare and over a hundred years after John Thomas Looney’s “Shakespeare” Identified, this ugliness… Continue Reading →

Michael Skeptical Bumps into Peter Principle

Posted By Roger Stritmatter on October 7, 2011 The following manuscript was sent to me from a fraudulent email account somewhere in Bermuda. Or maybe I found it in a bottle on the beach, like this: I have no idea… Continue Reading →

O-Philia: or, How I Learned to Love Shakespeare by Learning about Edward de Vere

Guest post by Leda Zakarison* I’m one of those people who should love Shakespeare. I fit the bill perfectly for a teenage Shakespeare fanatic – I read books, speak French, and participate in class discussions. I’ve always bought into this… Continue Reading →

Surprise in Critical Survey -Stritmatter and Maycock article on Antony and Cleopatra Forthcoming from Leading British Literary Journal

Critical Survey is a peer-reviewed journal edited by Professor Graham Holderness at the University of Hertfordshire. The editorial board includes Michael Bristol, Leah Marcus, and Anabel Patterson, not to mention both Sir Stanley Wells of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust and… Continue Reading →

Fact Patterns in the Shakespeare Authorship Question: Missing Books

Fact patterns are more important than facts. In this first of a series, we consider the fact pattern of Shakespeare’s missing books.

The Longevity of the Shakespeare Authorship Question: What Does it Mean?

Originally posted By Heward Wilkinson on October 31, 2011 We are pleased to offer another guest post from Dr. Heward Wilkinson. His previous post, on Professor Shapiro’s misunderstanding of the concept of “imagination,” may be found here. -Ed Our modern… Continue Reading →

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