Podcast appearances and mentions of edward de vere

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Best podcasts about edward de vere

Latest podcast episodes about edward de vere

The Delingpod: The James Delingpole Podcast

Robert Frederick, host of The Hidden Life Is Best podcast, chats to James about the evil genius of Francis Bacon. Frederick makes the compelling case that much of what is wrong with the world today - including scientism and the power of freemasonry - can be traced back to this brilliant Jacobean scholar, polymath and occultist. He also endeavours to persuade James that Bacon, not Edward De Vere, was the man behind ‘William Shakespeare'. A highlight of this freewheeling, illuminating, erudite episode is Frederick's deconstruction of Romeo and Juliet, an occult sacrifice ritual masquerading as a love story. https://thehiddenlifeisbest.com https://substack.com/@robertfrederick ↓  If you need silver and gold bullion - and who wouldn't in these dark times? - then the place to go is The Pure Gold Company. Either they can deliver worldwide to your door - or store it for you in vaults in London and Zurich. You even use it for your pension. Cash out of gold whenever you like: liquidate within 24 hours.  https://bit.ly/James-Delingpole-Gold ↓ ↓  How environmentalists are killing the planet, destroying the economy and stealing your children's future. In Watermelons, an updated edition of his ground-breaking 2011 book, JD tells the shocking true story of how a handful of political activists, green campaigners, voodoo scientists and psychopathic billionaires teamed up to invent a fake crisis called ‘global warming'. This updated edition includes two new chapters which, like a geo-engineered flood, pour cold water on some of the original's sunny optimism and provide new insights into the diabolical nature of the climate alarmists' sinister master plan. Purchase Watermelons by James Delingpole here:  https://jamesdelingpole.co.uk/Shop/ ↓ ↓ ↓ Buy James a Coffee at: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/jamesdelingpole The official website of James Delingpole: https://jamesdelingpole.co.uk x

Leafbox Podcast
Interview: Jasper Ceylon

Leafbox Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2025 98:31


Talking with poet, editor, and literary trickster anon Jasper Ceylon on the art of aesthetic sabotage and poetics in the age of algorithm. From anonymous pen names to deliberate hoaxes published to destabilize the contemporary poetry scene, Jasper dissects the decay of literary standards, using his surreal, very funny and on point fake poetry journal Echolalia, as a critical manifesto serving as both scalpel and mirror. A self-described poetry fan first and foremost, Jasper satirizes the very world he inhabits, exposing identity-first editorial gatekeeping and the global flattening of taste. We talk about the ghost networks of the contemporary (poetry) world, the process in his rebellion; building a complete parallel poetic narrative world to dupe the editors. Instagram poetry and grievance studies, Jasper doesn't pull punches but neither is he cynical. A romantic dissident who wants to save humanity from an algorithm-dominated life of flattening dullness and mediocrity. We go deep on the state of publishing, the cult of identity, AI's role in human (poetic) deadness, on the the fun polarizing Edward De Vere theory of Shakespearean authorship, the disappearance of true literary dissent, and the neoliberal endgame of cultural homeostasis. On men and marginalization, the phobia of criticism in artistic spaces, and the tragedy of becoming cosmopolitan in the most banal sense. On the poetics of evil, on Vanessa Place, the battle between light and dark, the oversupply of menstruation poems and apocalypse. On breaking free of guardrails on the true task of poetry: not to comply, but to break the spell.On Mission And I am conversely just trying to…help people live well, see through some of this programming, make more informed choices, not create infrastructure that isolates people and demoralizes them under the guise of uplifting others. I'm trying to, if anything, onboard people to poetry, but to just get them to think very critically about the practices we currently have in place at this point in time right now.On Being A Poet But.. you just have to understand that as a poet you're gonna fly under the radar for a long while, potentially maybe your whole life. And if you're not cool with that, then become an Instagram poet. But if you wanna do something meaningful and you want to, actually take a serious go at this. You gotta be ready for a lot of disappointment upfront and potentially for the rest of your life.On Poetics of Evil / Vanessa PlaceTo promote evil as the great sort of aesthetic agenda - I would promote the exact opposite… I don't think crucifying people and institutions…under the guise of demonstrating strength is what we're trying to do here, because what is strength, quote unquote in artistic endeavor.Save it for the f*****g battlefield…I think it gets so messy when you take that on as your primary aim, as a creative you're really just a soldier in disguise. And those types can sometimes conceal it very well, but I think they're doing a gross injustice to their fellow man On The Polarizing Debate surrounding Edward De Vere as Shakespeare The De Vere stuff, because no one will listen to me talk about this anytime I try to talk about this in person, to anyone.They give me that same look like they're just mortified. That I would suggest a country bumpkin couldn't write the the most immortal works in our language. But you even post this stuff on 4Chan's lit. board and all that, and they would just melt down over this idea.  What seems more realistic? A highly educated, noted poet of nobility with tons of money and connections to the most famous and let's say, accomplished academics in the London circles like Francis Bacon and stuff like that. It's either that guy doing this or a country bumpkin who can't even sign his own name.Jasper's Post Script Additional Notes and LinksMy scorn for Vanessa Place is limitless. But for those interested in the essay discussed in the interview, and the theories that drive some of the very worst figures in poetry and culture-manipulation, consult the following: https://www.academia.edu/2778740/Radically_Evil_Poetics. And maybe treat yourself to one of Place's wretched Yoko Ono-esque conceptual art performance pieces while you're at it.But for a more entertaining diversion re: Shakespeare, avail yourself to some of Alexander Waugh's YouTube content on Edward de Vere (there's a lot of it).For a short-hand summary of the de Vere case, see: https://shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org/top-reasons-why-edward-de-vere-17th-earl-of-oxford-was-shakespeare/. And for a supremely autistic (schizophrenic, maybe?) look at some of the finer details underlying the conspiracy, you might watch something like the following video: Henrie IX: Shakespeare, Edward de Vere, and Henry WriothesleyIn some ways, the potential "easter eggs" of this theory and de Vere's hidden lines in the sonnets and such inspired the ones I hid within Echolalia Review that are waiting to be discovered. Lastly, I cited John Donne at one point as being involved in the Rosicrucian collaborative aspect of the theory (along with Bacon and Marlowe), but I meant John Dee.Pick up a copy of: Echolaliapere ube pressJasper Ceylon SubstackJasper Ceyon BiographyEqual parts “Ezra Pound if he were a Discord user” and 21st-century Ern Malley, Jasper Ceylon takes inspiration from the titans of English-language poetry, as well as its great satirists and provocateurs. As a poet, he's been published extensively in magazines worldwide under his own name and many pen names, including “Adele Nwankwo,” “B. H. Fein,” and “Dirt Hogg Sauvage Respectfully.” He's the author of Pere Ube's literary cherry bomb/megaton nuke, "Echolalia Review: An Anti-Poetry Collection," but he's also been traditionally published as a novelist and critic. Get full access to Leafbox at leafbox.substack.com/subscribe

Art of Darkness
Edward de Vere: The Man from Oxford (Shakespeare Part II)

Art of Darkness

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 238:38


In part two of our Shakespeare special, we make the case for Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, as the author of the works typically attributed to the Shakespeare from Stratford. Get the After Dark episode and more at patreon.com/artofdarkpod or substack.com/@artofdarkpod. twitter.com/artofdarkpod twitter.com/bradkelly twitter.com/kautzmania […]

Curious Realm
CR Ep 112: The Real Shakespeare w Katherine Chiljan and Henry Sinclair in America w Gretchen Cornwall

Curious Realm

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2024 117:41


In the first part of this episode of the Curious Realm host Christopher Jordan welcomes author and researcher Katherine Chiljan to discuss the facts behind the actual identity of the man known as William Shakespeare. Could it be that the famed Bard himself is not who history says? Could it be that the playwright we know is Edward De Vere, the 17thEarl of Oxford, and why is there so much evidence that makes this case?! In the second part of the episode, we welcome author and Knights Templar researcher Gretchen Corwall to discuss her work into the world and history of Henry Sinclair, his connection to the Templars and his voyage to America. What proof is there of Henry Sincalir coming to the American continent far before other recognized settlers? Join the Curious Realm as we delve into the topics of the Shakespeare authorship controversy with Katherine Chiljan and Henry Sinclair in America with Gretchen Cornwall. Curious Realm is a proud member of the HC Universal Network family of podcasts. For more great shows and content subscribe at HCUniversalNetwork.com. Curious Realm would like to thank the continuing support of our listeners and sponsors including PodcastCadet.com, Use Code Curious20 to save 20% off today! Curious Realm has teamed up with True Hemp Science, Austin, TX based suppliers of high-quality full spectrum emulsified CBD products and more. Visit TrueHempScience.com TODAY and use code Curious7 to save 7% off your order of $50 or more and get a free 50mg CBD edible! Website live streams powered by Web Work Wireless. For the best in home and business WiFi solutions visit WebWorksWireless.com. Intro music “A Curious Realm” provided by No Disassemble find more great music and content at: NoDisassemble.com. #curiousrealm #hcuniversalnetwork #podcastcadet #truehempscience #webworkswireless

HC Universal Network
CR Ep 112: The Real Shakespeare w Katherine Chiljan and Henry Sinclair in America w Gretchen Cornwall

HC Universal Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2024 117:41


In the first part of this episode of the Curious Realm host Christopher Jordan welcomes author and researcher Katherine Chiljan to discuss the facts behind the actual identity of the man known as William Shakespeare. Could it be that the famed Bard himself is not who history says? Could it be that the playwright we know is Edward De Vere, the 17thEarl of Oxford, and why is there so much evidence that makes this case?! In the second part of the episode, we welcome author and Knights Templar researcher Gretchen Corwall to discuss her work into the world and history of Henry Sinclair, his connection to the Templars and his voyage to America. What proof is there of Henry Sincalir coming to the American continent far before other recognized settlers? Join the Curious Realm as we delve into the topics of the Shakespeare authorship controversy with Katherine Chiljan and Henry Sinclair in America with Gretchen Cornwall. Curious Realm is a proud member of the HC Universal Network family of podcasts. For more great shows and content subscribe at HCUniversalNetwork.com. Curious Realm would like to thank the continuing support of our listeners and sponsors including PodcastCadet.com, Use Code Curious20 to save 20% off today! Curious Realm has teamed up with True Hemp Science, Austin, TX based suppliers of high-quality full spectrum emulsified CBD products and more. Visit TrueHempScience.com TODAY and use code Curious7 to save 7% off your order of $50 or more and get a free 50mg CBD edible! Website live streams powered by Web Work Wireless. For the best in home and business WiFi solutions visit WebWorksWireless.com. Intro music “A Curious Realm” provided by No Disassemble find more great music and content at: NoDisassemble.com. #curiousrealm #hcuniversalnetwork #podcastcadet #truehempscience #webworkswireless

Tudor History with Claire Ridgway
The Tudors in their own words - Queen Elizabeth I about Edward de Vere

Tudor History with Claire Ridgway

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022 0:36


In today's "The Tudors in their own words", historian Claire Ridgway shares a funny story and quote from Queen Elizabeth I regarding Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford.

#SuccessInSight
Deena Lindstedt, Author of the Historical Novel, Lady of the Play

#SuccessInSight

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 39:57


Hello everyone, welcome to the Book Author Series on the Success InSight Podcast.Our guest today is Deena Lindstedt.Deena is the author of the historical novel, Lady of the Play.As an author/researcher, Deena is especially passionate about historic Elizabethan England and the Shakespeare authorship question."aha" momentWhen I found a direct correlation between the King James Version of Psalms 46 and the deVere crest of the lion holding a broken spear. (Some of Shakespeare's plays and the translation of the KJV Bible took place between 1604 and 1611.) I believe Elizabeth Trentham must have had a hand in the translations of Psalms leaving behind clues as to who actually was Shakespeare.  A 400+ mystery of Shakespeare authorship could be solved!Insight2GoHave I actually solved a 400-year-old mystery? I think I have, but will I be successful in convincing others? To learn more about Deen and her work, visit her website at www.deenalindstedt.comLeen also invites you to follow her on these social sites:FacebookLink: https://www.facebook.com/DeenaDEL16InstagramLink: https://www.instagram.com/writermom32/LinkedInLink: https://www.linkedin.com/in/deena-lindstedt-667696188/The SuccessInSight Podcast is a production of Fox Coaching, Inc.

Tudor History with Claire Ridgway
24 June - Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

Tudor History with Claire Ridgway

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2021 0:59


On 24th June 1604, in the reign of King James I, Elizabethan courtier and poet, Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, died.   Find out about this rather colourful Tudor character in this edition of #TudorHistoryShorts from historian Claire Ridgway. You can see this podcast as a video at the following link: https://youtu.be/gU4AO9o3rg8   Here's a link to a more detailed video on him - https://youtu.be/Y3ONMtthsnU

oxford earl tudor elizabethan claire ridgway edward de vere
Mysteries and Monsters
Mysteries and Monsters: Episode 84 Katherine Chiljan

Mysteries and Monsters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2020 65:12


For many, William Shakespeare is the greatest playwright of all time, his works consistently performed on film, television and on stage across the world. With works such as Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear, Othello and many more being household names, his legacy transcends continents, cultures and language. Yet, for the last 175 years, people have questioned if William Shakespeare really is the man we are led to believe. Many point to a man with no history, no educational history and a missing decade as sure signs that William Shakespeare is a ghost of his time, a pseudonym for someone else, ostracised by the Establishment of the early 17th century. To discuss this, I am joined by author Katherine Chiljan to hear the argument for the real William Shakespeare, The Earl of Oxford, Edward De Vere. A publish author, traveller and intellectual giant of his time who knew far more than the established narrative of William Shakespeare and some who actually had experience of travel, law, medicine, sport and more besides. We are left with many questions and I thank Katherine for joining me to discuss this intriguing conundrum Katherine's book can be found here: Katherine's website is here: Further information can be found here: Our Patreon is now live, with bonus content, early release of the regular show, articles and monthly prizes for everyone who signs up! Join here now for the flat fee of $4 a month which is a bargain! Don't forget, you can now show your support with our Merchandise shop on Redbubble! Check it out here! You can join us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram as well. You can also subscribe to our YouTube channel! Email us at mysteriesandmonsters@gmail.com with any feedback, guest suggestions or if you'd like to appear. All artwork by Dean Bestall and the show was produced by Brennan Storr of the Ghost Story Guys.#KatherineChiljan #ShakespeareSuppressed #EarlOfOxford #EdwardDeVere #FrancisBacon #ChristopherMarlowe #SirWalterRaleigh #QueenElizabeth #WilliamShakespeare #Tudor #Elizabethan #Conspiracy #Oxfordians #OakIsland #History

Mr. Bunker's Conspiracy Time Podcast
Did William Shakespeare write all his own plays?

Mr. Bunker's Conspiracy Time Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 114:05


Research begins at 15:35Andy and Art, live from quarantine! To bunk or not to bunk, that is the question! Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer The whole enchilada of outrageous fortune, Or to take arms against a sea of troubles. Today Andy and Art discuss whether William Shakespeare, the immortal bard, truly wrote all his plays! Was it all Slick Willy or was it a litany of other folks??Andy and Art are NOT captured once again by the titular Mr. Bunker - what postcard did he send them this time?In the second segment, Andy and Art give you, the listeners, an uninterrupted presentation of their research into whether William Shakespeare wrote all his plays.Finally, Andy and Art discuss whether William Shakespeare wrote all his plays at length. They also talk about Craig Basketweaver, snooty college professors, Shrek, and so much more!Send us your thoughts to @MrBunkerPod and mrbunkerpod@gmail.com using the hashtag #SlickWillyShakespeareMusic by Michael MartelloArtwork by Hannah RossAudio Editing by Arthur StoneFollow Us:TwitterInstagramWebsiteYoutubeLinks Mentioned:William Shakespeare | Facts, Life, & Plays | Britannica William Shakespeare - Britannica Did Shakespeare really write his own plays? Did Shakespeare really write his own plays? - HistoryWhy some people think Shakespeare didn't write Shakespeare, explained Why some people think Shakespeare didn't write Shakespeare, explained - VoxJustice Stevens's Dissenting Shakespeare Theory Justice Stevens’s Dissenting Shakespeare TheoryShakespeare the 'hard-headed businessman' uncovered Shakespeare the 'hard-headed businessman' uncovered - The IndependentFrancis Bacon | Biography, Philosophy, & Facts Francis Bacon - BritannicaBaconian theory of Shakespeare authorship Baconian Theory of Shakespeare Authorship - WikipediaEdward de Vere, 17th earl of Oxford | English poet and dramatist Edward de Vere - BritannicaOxfordian theory of Shakespeare authorship Oxfordian Theory of Shakespeare Authorship - WikipediaTop Reasons Why Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, was Shakespeare - Top Reasons Why Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, was Shakespeare - Shakespeare Oxford FellowshipTimeline of Shakespeare's plays Timeline of Shakespeare’s Plays - Royal Shakespeare Company

The Schmoes Know Show
Critically Acclaimed: Anonymous and Henry V

The Schmoes Know Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2018 151:23


Who really wrote William Shakespeare’s plays? It was William Shakespeare, actually, but some folks believe that there was an elaborate conspiracy to hide the identity of the real author, a British nobleman with ties to the throne. It’s a silly idea and it’s the plot of Roland Emmerich’s ANONYMOUS, a poor and poorly researched biopic about the Edward De Vere, and it’s kind of the perfect double feature with Laurence Olivier’s Oscar-winning production of HENRY V, which also rewrote history to serve its own political ends, and also tried to introduce Shakespeare to the masses using modern cinematic techniques!Yup, it’s a Shakespearean episode of CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED! Plus, we’ve also got new reviews of FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE CRIMES OF GRINDELWALD, WIDOWS, THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS, GREEN BOOK, CAM, INSTANT FAMILY and AT ETERNITY’S GATE!Email us at letters(a)criticallyacclaimed.net, follow your hosts on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani and @WitneySeibold, and follow the podcast/website at @CriticAcclaim. Check out our website at www.criticallyacclaimed.net and head on over to www.patreon.com/canceledtoosoon to contribute to the show and get even more exclusive content!Email us at letters(a)criticallyacclaimed.net, and follow your hosts on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani and @WitneySeibold. Introductions - 1:24William Goldman - 3:47Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald - 18:08Widows - 37:50The Ballad of Buster Scruggs - 50:33Green Book - 58:50Cam - 1:07:40At Eternity’s Gate - 1:13:53Instant Family - 1:19:40Anonymous - 1:26:40Henry V - 2:03:33

Why We Write
Searching for the real Shakespeare with Cheryl Eagan-Donovan

Why We Write

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2018 36:36


Cheryl Eagan-Donovan is a graduate of Lesley University's MFA in Creative Writing program, where she also teaches screenwriting. Her first documentary film, All Kindsa Girls, screened in London, Toronto and throughout the U.S. and was short-listed for the PBS series POV. Her latest documentary, Nothing Truer than Truth, premiered earlier this year and posits that the A-list playboy Edward de Vere was the real Shakespeare. Let's just say, it's an idea that is not without controversy. More info: Learn more about Eagan-Donovan and her work at Controversy Films. Check out our Lesley University's MFA in Creative Writing program. There's more to explore on our podcast page

Podcast Shakespeare
#006 - Who wrote Shakespeare? The Authorship Question

Podcast Shakespeare

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2018 114:35


“The fraud of men was ever so / Since summer first was leafy” — Balthasar’s song, Much Ado About Nothing In episode six, we look at that vexing question of whether or not Will Shakespeare was a complete and utter conman. We’ll follow those who dug up rivers, cracked codes, turned to grave-robbing, or occasionally just wrote really, really long books to find the answer. We’ll hear from Mark Twain, Sigmund Freud, William Wordsworth, and learn some surprising theories as to why Queen Elizabeth I was the Virgin Queen (or was she…?). It’s a journey from the 1560s to our era and back again, and somehow I manage to bring up Golden Girls, England’s greatest treasure hunt, George W. Bush and Dame Agatha Christie! Confused? You still will be after listening, but I hope you’ll enjoy this incredibly long investigation of the madness that is the authorship question. You can find me on Facebook, Twitter, or by email at podcastshakespeare@gmail.com. You can listen to the podcast at iTunes or download direct from Libsyn. We also have a Spotify playlist, which will be updated each week as we work through the plays. The website for the podcast is https://podcastshakespeare.com/. On the website, you will find an evolving bibliography. Contents 00:00 - Introduction / searching for Shakespeare 09:33 - Delia Bacon / candidate Sir Francis Bacon 24:50 - Mark Twain / Ignatius Donnelly, codebreaker 35:05 - Dr. Owen's machine / Mrs. Gallup and Mr. Arensberg 41:45 - J. Thomas Looney / candidate Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford 1:04:40 - Other candidates / Christopher Marlowe 1:09:35 - Oxford gets another chance / "Anonymous" 1:13:41 - The "Masquerade" connection 1:18:49 - William Shakespeare 1:37:38 - The enduring appeal of theories / My theories 1:47:15 - The "Declaration of Reasonable Doubt" / hail and farewell Links mentioned: Due to the nature of the episode, I have done a separate permanent Authorship page at https://podcastshakespeare.com/further-reading/the-authorship-question/. Some links below. SIR FRANCIS BACON (1561 – 1626) on Wikipedia John Aubrey’s biography and details of his death in Brief Lives (1693) The Francis Bacon Society (“Baconiana”) Supporters of Bacon Delia Salter Bacon (1811 – 1859): at Wikipedia “William Shakespeare and His Plays: An Enquiry Concerning Them” in Putnam’s Monthly Magazine of American literature, science and art, Issue 37, January 1856 The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakespeare Unfolded, 1857 Nina Baym, “Delia Bacon: Hawthorne’s Last Heroine“ Nathaniel Hawthorne, “Recollections of a Gifted Woman” in The Atlantic Monthly, January 1863 Ralph Waldo Emerson, unpublished letter to George P. Putnam regarding Delia Bacon, published by Vivian C. Hopkins in the New England Quarterly, vol 33 no 4, Dec 1960 (JSTOR access required) Catherine E. Beecher, Truth Stranger than Fiction (1850) comments on the Bacon/MacWhorter affair without using names Walt Whitman,“Shakespeare Bacon’s Cipher” Ignatius Donnelly, The Great Cryptogram (1888) Elizabeth Ward Gallup: The Bi-Lateral Cypher (1910) The Tragedy of Anne Boleyn, being a discovery of the ciphered play of Sir Francis Bacon inside the Shakespeare First Folio (1911) [see also, this article on the play at Anne Boleyn Novels] Dr. Orville Ward Owen, Sir Francis Bacon’s Cipher Story (1893-95) Mark Twain, Is Shakespeare Dead? (1909) Henry W. Fisher, Abroad with Mark Twain and Eugene Field, Tales they told to a fellow correspondent, (1922) – see page 49 for Twain and Fisher’s anecdote Queen Elizabeth being a man. Walter Conrad Arensberg: The Cryptography of Shakespeare -(1922) see also The Cryptography of Dante – (1921) EDWARD DE VERE, 17TH EARL OF OXFORD (1550 – 1604) at Wikipedia Poems at Wikisource Family tree and the famous fart anecdote of James Aubrey “Renunciation” poem from Palgrave’s Golden Treasury, ed. Francis T. Palgrave, 1875 Supporters of Oxford John Thomas Looney (1870 – 1944) at Wikipedia The Church of Humanity Shakespeare Identified in Edward De Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (1920) The De Vere Society of Great Britain The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Why I Became an Oxfordian at the “Shakespeare Authorship Sourcebook” Charlton Ogburn: The Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Myth and the Reality (1984) “The Man Who Shakespeare Was Not (and who he was)“, Harvard Magazine, November 1974 Michael Brame and Galina Propova, Shakespeare’s Fingerprints (2002), discussed in Washington University News, January 23, 2003 Percy Allen, Life Story of Edward De Vere (1932) Trailer for Anonymous, directed by Roland Emmerich (2011) GENERAL DOUBT The Declaration of Reasonable Doubt Hester Dowden, the medium who apparently confirmed both Bacon and Oxford had written the plays, at different times – at Wikipedia. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (1564 – 1616) The First Folio at the Bodleian online Shakespeare suing for minor debts – at ShakespeareDocumented.org The Shakespeare Authorship Page – a vital resource David Kathman: “Why I Am Not An Oxfordian“, originally published in The Elizabethan Review, at the Shakespeare Authorship Page “Shakespeare’s Eulogies“ at the Shakespeare Authorship Page “Dating the Tempest“ “How We Know That Shakespeare Wrote Shakespeare: The Historical Facts“ with Tom Reedy James Shapiro, Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare? (2010) Irvin Leigh Matus, “The Case for Shakespeare“, The Atlantic, October 1991 Samuel Schoenbaum, Shakespeare’s Lives, 1970 William F. Friedman & Elizebeth Smith Friedman: Wikipedia: He | She The Shakespeare Ciphers Examined, Cambridge, 1957 Ralph Waldo Emerson, Representative Men – chapter 6 “Shakespeare or the Poet” (1850) Terry Ross, “The Code that Failed: Testing a Bacon-Shakespeare Cipher“ at The Shakespeare Authorship Page Don Foster: Elegy for WS, reviewed in The Observer, June 2002 The moot trials of Shakespeare: 1987 trial – at PBS 1987 trial – the New York Times A 1993 trial at the Boston American Bar Association – at PBS Giles Dawson and Laetitia Kennedy-Skipton, The Survival of Manuscripts, from Elizabethan Handwriting, 1500-1650: A Manual, W.W. Norton & Co, 1966 at The Shakespeare Authorship Site Muriel St Clare Byrne, “The Social Background“, in A Companion to Shakespeare Studies, page 190, edited by Harley Granville Barker and G.B Harrison (1934) William Wordsworth, Scorn not the Sonnet (c. 1807) Robert Browning, House (1876) Robert Bell Wheler: Historical Account of the Birth Place of Shakespeare (1806) CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564 – 1593) Marlovian theory of authorship MISCELLANEOUS CANDIDATES Wikipedia’s list of 87 (at July 2018) Robert Frazer, Silent Shakespeare (1915) PDF Gilbert Slater, The Seven Shakespeares (1913) Michaelangelo Florio, aka Crollalanza Roger Manners, Earl of Rutland, in Claud Walter Skyes’ Alias William Shakespeare, Aldor, 1947 Henry Neville, a very peculiar theory – with Tom Veal’s response OTHER LINKS QUOTED Catullus, Poem 5 Kit Williams’ Masquerade John Keats’ Lamia Aeschylus’ Eumenides Clips: Sergei Prokofiev, “Montagues and Capulets”, from Romeo and Juliet (ballet), 1935 Franz Schubert, Im Fruhling, D.882 performed by Barbara Hendricks Gerald Finzi, Love’s Labour’s Lost, op. 28: Dance, Aurora Orchestra conducted by Nicholas Collon Gaetano Donizetti, Overture to Roberto Devereux (feat. God Save the Queen), Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Charles Mackerras John Dowland, Galliard for the Queen and Robert Dudley Hakan Parkman, “Take, O Take These Lips Away” (Madrigal) from 3 Shakespeare Songs, sung by Singer Pur choir “Bonny Peggy Ramsey” (traditional) performed by Tom Kines on Songs from Shakespeare’s Plays and Popular Songs of Shakespeare’s Time Ambroise Thomas, Hamlet (1868), 1994 recording, London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Antonio de Almeida: Thomas Hampson (Hamlet) – singing part of his “Doubt not that I love” letter June Anderson (Ophélie) – Ophélie’s mad scene and death, Act IV

Infinite Gestation
Who Was Shakespeare, Anyway? | Episode 045

Infinite Gestation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2017 65:37


The long-awaited Shakespeare episode has finally arrived! In this episode the panel delves into the question and the many theories of: who was Shakespeare? Questions as to Shakespeare's true identity are not new. Over the decades, scholars and enthusiasts alike have presented a wide range of theories to satisfy those who remain unconvinced that William Shakespeare was not simply a man from Stratford-upon-Avon. The Shakespeare authorship question runs the spectrum from informed academic scholarship down to wild conspiracy theories (not unlike those surrounding the case of Jack the Ripper) and in many cases, best filed alongside pop culture urban legends such as posthumous sightings of Elvis Presley and the Paul McCartney Death Hoax. A core group of five alternative candidates (Edward De Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford - Christopher Marlowe - Francis Bacon - William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby & Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland) has emerged as the most popular, for various reasons. Follow @Infin8Gestation on Twitter • Visit InfiniteGestation.com Show Notes & Links William Shakespeare Shakespeare Authorship Question Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare? by James Shapiro Players: The Mysterious Identity of William Shakespeare by Bertram Fields Henry VIII (play) Romeo & Juliet (you know, just in case) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Bloody Mary (Mary I) Queen Elizabeth I Jack the Ripper Edmond Malone & The Ireland Shakespeare Forgeries Hitler Diaries Hoax Nabokov Was Not a Pedophile – Separating Characters from Their Authors | Episode 009 Richard II (play) Hollow Crown (TV series) Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex How ‘Sherlock of the Library’ Cracked the Case of Shakespeare’s Identity - The Guardian Christopher Marlowe Credited as One of Shakespeare's Co-writers - The Guardian Shakespeare: The Biography by Peter Ackroyd Edward De Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford Christopher Marlowe Francis Bacon William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland Anonymous (2011 film) - Roland Emmerich Tupac Shakur