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Stay, passenger! Here are some links for your further consideration:
The "Shakespeare" By Another Name Blog
"Shakespeare" By Another MySpace
The SBAN Google Earth Atlas
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please enter your email address here for a free subscription to the Shakespeare By Another Name Bulletin.
Two American membership organizations devoted to studying de Vere's life and times
(The Shakespeare Oxford Society and The Shakespeare Fellowship) both publish
informative quarterly newletters worth subscribing to:
The Shakespeare-Oxford Newsletter
Shakespeare Matters
Two scholarly journals also publish new research and emerging topics in the field.
First is an online, multidisciplinary journal of authorship studies - Brief Chronicles
The Shakespeare Oxford Society also publishes an annual scholarly
journal, titled
The Oxfordian.
Two universities now offer graduate studies in the Shakespeare authorship
question:
Shakespeare Authorship Studies MA at Brunel University (UK)
Shakespeare authorship studies at Concordia University (Portland, Ore.)
Also, the following sites offer up many
timely articles, links, and discussions about de Vere and “Shakespeare”:
The Shakespeare Authorship Studies
Conference
The Shakespeare
Fellowship
The Shakespeare Oxford
Society
The De Vere Society (UK)
The New England Shakespeare-Oxford Library
The Shakespeare Authorship Coalition
The Shakespeare
Authorship
Sourcebook
Great Oxford
The Shakespeare Debate (UK)
Who Wrote Shakespeare? (UK)
Shakespeare in the Limelight
The Oberon Shakespeare Study Group
The Oxford Authorship
Site
The Shakespeare
Authorship
Roundtable
ElizabethanAuthors.com Authorship Page
Here are links to the Shakespeare plays and poems as well as a few related resources
MIT's Complete (e-text) Works of Shakespeare
The British Library's Complete Facsimiles of Shakespeare Quartos
Internet Shakespeare Editions facsimile First Folio and assorted play and poem quartos
The Shakespeare Apocrypha
Shakespeare Inspirations
Nina Green and Alan H. Nelson have each transcribed many original documents relating to
Edward de Vere's life and have very kindly posted these
transcriptions on their respective websites.
Nina's transcripts, arranged in chronological order, can be accessed
here; while Alan's transcripts can be found
here.
As noted in the book and in Audio Episode 8,
here
is the link to the article that establishes that the satirist Thomas Nashe referred to de Vere
by the nickname “Gentle Master William” in 1592.
Many scholars now claim that de Vere could not have written the “Shakespeare” canon
because The Tempest contains references to a
1609 shipwreck. And de Vere died in 1604. However, new
evidence
now strongly
suggests that The Tempest contains no references to
the 1609 shipwreck in question. If The Tempest ever was a
problem for the Oxfordian theory, it is no more.
(Please note that the Tempest paper linked to above was completed
after SBAN went to press and thus could not be included in the book's
Appendix C on “The 1604 Question.” The paperback edition of SBAN, however,
which was published in August 2006, contains several extra paragraphs discussing
this new and groundbreaking research.)
Here is a list of typos in and corrections to the book.
As an interesting side-note, here's an eight-minute Flash
presentation from The Shakespeare Fellowship called “The Shake-speare Skeptics Hall of Fame.”
Of course, one must not forget the valiant efforts of the “Stratfordian”
defenders of the citadel — those who say, using that famous tautology,
“No! Shakespeare was Shakespeare!”
The Shakespeare Authorship
Page
Alan H. Nelson's
Shakspeare Authorship Pages
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