News and Scholarship on the Shakespeare Authorship Question

Category History of the Authorship Question

Alexander Waugh’s Spectator Debate Revisited

Posted By Roger Stritmatter n.b. 9/15/2022: like some other recent blog entries here, this is a salvage from the Wayback machine, originally posted on November 10, 2013. I think the account still holds up well, as the Oxfraudians quoted here… Continue Reading →

“My Mind to Me a Kingdom Is”: The Earl of Oxford, and the Shakespearean Question, Part I

Posted By Roger Stritmatter on November 29, 2013. Lightly revised 6/2/2022. Clement Mansfield Ingleby (1853): The idea of ‘My Mind to Me a Kingdom Is’ is Shakespeare’s. My Mind to me a kingdom is;……My wealth is health and perfect ease,My… Continue Reading →

Encryption in the Shakespeare Folios

On the Page With the Names of all the Actors   Guest post by William S. Niederkorn             In regard to the page with “The Names of All the Principall Actors in all these Playes” in the Shakespeare folio editions,… Continue Reading →

Hinman’s Blind Eye: Shakespeare’s “The Phoenix and Turtle”

Guest post by William Ray The Norton Facsimile of the First Folio of Shakespeare is one of the most respected publications in English scholarship. After a fulsome preface with particular reference to W.W. Greg as the greatest influence on his… Continue Reading →

Hypnerotomachia and the Shakespeare Sonnets Dedication Page Encryption

Guest Post by William S. Niederkorn. After the recent post on Hypnerotomachia, I downloaded the first edition of that book (1499) from archive.org courtesy of the Boston Public Library and upon opening it, saw that the text block pattern of… Continue Reading →

Ben Jonson, Encryption, and the Hypnerotomachia Poliphilii

The anonymous Hypnerotomachia Poliphilii (“The Strife of Love in a Dream by Poliphilus”) is among the most famous books of the medieval age, with influence radiating out from Venice, where it was first published in 1499, throughout Europe and into… Continue Reading →

Oxfordian Fact Pattern: Ben Jonson and the de Veres

In his 1616 epigrams Ben Jonson honors Horace Vere, the Protestant military hero and cousin to the 17th Earl of Oxford, in epigram XCI (91) WHich of thy Names I take, not only bears   A Roman Sound, but Roman Vertue wears,Illustrious… Continue Reading →

Still Puzzling Shakespeare After All These Years

Leah Marcus 1988 “Puzzling Shakespeare” says that Ben Jonson’s first folio epigram “sets readers off on a treasure hunt. Where is the real author to be found?”

Shakespeare Biography Revealed: A History in Title Pages

Here are two pages from the Shakespeare Authorship Sourcebook that may be worth previewing. In the Sourcebook they come with questions for classroom discussion. I have purposefully refrained from over-interpreting the sequence for you because that’s bad teaching. Showing the… 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 →

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