Fall Symposium Is Being Held This Friday and Saturday
The public Symposium of the SOF Fall 2021 Annual Conference takes place on Zoom this Friday and Saturday, October 8 and 9. Read all about
The public Symposium of the SOF Fall 2021 Annual Conference takes place on Zoom this Friday and Saturday, October 8 and 9. Read all about
Excitement is building around the Zoom Symposium scheduled for Friday and Saturday, October 8 and 9: the public highlight of the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s 2021
Annual Meeting for SOF Members on Oct. 2; Free Symposium Oct. 8–9 Will Showcase Video Contest Winners, Tom Regnier Veritas Award, and Oxfordian of the
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
Free registration is now available for the public online Symposium during the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s 2021 Annual Conference. The Symposium will consist of three sessions
Record Numbers Participate in Alternative to Annual Conference The energy and excitement are still reverberating after the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s first-ever online symposium, held Friday
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
Historian Katherine Chiljan and SOF President John Hamill Among Recent Guests Interviewed by Host Steven Sabel by Bryan H. Wildenthal Katherine Chiljan, an independent historian
The 21st volume of The Oxfordian, the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s peer-reviewed journal, has just been published and is available for sale on Amazon.com for $9.99, and
June 24, 2019 — Professor Bryan H. Wildenthal has published a landmark new book, Early Shakespeare Authorship Doubts. The book refutes the commonly heard Stratfordian
The video of the spirited three-way debate on “Who is the Dark Lady of Shakespeare’s Sonnets?” at the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship’s annual conference, is now
Queen Elizabeth I of England finished ahead of two other candidates in the voting on the question of “Who is the Dark Lady of Shakespeare’s
Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Conference October 17 – 20, 2019 | Mark Twain House & Museum, Hartford, Connecticut
Professor Bryan H. Wildenthal’s latest essay explores the same issue about which Juliet famously mused: “What’s in a name?” Specifically, what’s in the spelling of
“What’s in (the Spelling of) a Name?” by Bryan H. Wildenthal August 9, 2018 What’s in a name? Perhaps, as Juliet recognized, not much (see
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