{"id":1847,"date":"2021-08-01T00:01:58","date_gmt":"2021-08-01T00:01:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/?p=1847"},"modified":"2025-04-14T13:19:20","modified_gmt":"2025-04-14T13:19:20","slug":"case-s02e08-slowburn-shakespeare-part-6-of-6-the-stars-are-fire","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2021\/08\/01\/case-s02e08-slowburn-shakespeare-part-6-of-6-the-stars-are-fire\/","title":{"rendered":"Case S02E08 &#8211; Slowburn Shakespeare, part 6 of 6 &#8211; The Stars Are Fire"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>CONTENT RATING:<\/strong> <span style=\"color: #339966\"><strong>universal<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p>Did Shakespeare really write, well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five century old con? In the last episode of this slowburn mini-series, some big names in the field of Shakespeare attribution try their own hands at penning dramatic texts. Below you will find data, audio credits, further reading, and a transcript of the podcast.<!--more--><\/p>\n<h1>Audio credits<\/h1>\n<p>Kai Engel &#8211; Difference<br \/>\nKai Engel &#8211; Vintage Frame<br \/>\nScott Holmes &#8211; Postcards<br \/>\nAaron Dunn &#8211; Minuet &#8211; Notebook for Anna Magdalena (cropped)<\/p>\n<h1>Transcript<\/h1>\n<p>Case S02E08: Slowburn Shakespeare, part 6 of 6 \u2013 The stars are fire<\/p>\n<p>By the time you\u2019ve reached this point in the miniseries \u2013 the last episode about Shakespeare\u2026 probably \u2013 you might imagine that there really can\u2019t be much to add to the debate around Shakespeare\u2019s authorship. We\u2019ve looked at the apocrypha \u2013 the plays that some want to include in the canon, and others want to exclude from it. We\u2019ve looked at the canon itself, and the idea that someone other than the Stratford glover\u2019s son, William Shakespeare, wrote them. We\u2019ve gone through four individual candidates \u2013 Francis Bacon, Edward de Vere, Christopher Marlowe, and William Stanley. Whilst some of these have seemed faintly possible, or at least, a lot of fun, none of them has really reached a quantum of evidence sufficient to cast enough reasonable doubt to convince enough people. That evidence has taken the shape of biographical analyses \u2013 both comparing life histories against documents that survive from the times, and trying to divine an authorial profile from the content of the plays themselves. We\u2019ve had cipher-based decryption \u2013 that is, attempts to hunt down secret messages hidden in Shakespeare\u2019s writings. We\u2019ve even had document analysis \u2013 aging and dating papers to see if they match the era they are supposedly, and we\u2019ve had handwriting analysis, and even genetic testing.<\/p>\n<p>But of course, the sort of evidence that listeners of this podcast are perhaps most interested in, and the kind that\u2019s actually been fairly thin on the ground to press, is the language. Linguistic analyses. We\u2019ve had a little, of course, but even some of that has sometimes been pretty ropey. In the weakest cases, various Antis have had nothing more concrete to point to than textual allusions, hints in poetry, clever plays on words with subtly alternative meanings, parallels between plays and lives. We have had some more slightly more compelling insights. In the strongest cases we have really marked similarities. Remember that example from the fourth part of the miniseries, two episodes ago? Listen again to these two lines from Christopher Marlowe:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>But stay! What star shines yonder in the east?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>The lodestar of my life, if Abigail!<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>And now compare them with these two lines from Shakespeare:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>But soft! What light through yonder window breaks?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>It is the East, and Juliet is the sun!<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Extremely interesting, but it doesn\u2019t quite a murder make, though.<\/p>\n<p>We even looked into early computational linguistic analyses done by Claremont Colleges, and there, we stopped. It would be reasonable to imagine that by this stage, there cannot be anything left to say on the topic. No stone unturned. No corner left to peek round. But you\u2019d be wrong. I\u2019ve barely scratched the surface thus far and there\u2019s a last huge mountain that we haven\u2019t even started up.<\/p>\n<p>Before we get there though, it\u2019s also useful to notice that we could go back over a lot of the old ground and plough it again in an entirely new way. Perhaps the best thing about authorship analysis is that it\u2019s a very broad church. If you have a reasonable chunk of digitised language, there are innumerable ways that you can come at it, and the modern era gives us advantages that the scholars of the 1800s and 1900s and even most of the 2000s simply didn\u2019t have. Computing. Yes, you would be right to point out that Claremont Colleges also had computing, but I would argue that theirs was from an era that has now faded into relative antiquity, just as the computers of today will seem prehistoric in only a couple of decades. Our current machines have faster processors, and most importantly, they have friendlier software. The kinds of interfaces accessible to people whose expertise is in Shakespeare, rather than computing. That\u2019s a big shift, and an important one. Computer-experts-who-happen-to-analyse-language can still do their thing but now the field is also open to linguists-who-happen-to-use-computers.<\/p>\n<p>And it\u2019s from the confluence of these ultra-modern phenomena \u2013 the digitisation of older texts, the radical advancement of computing, and the creation of widely accessible software \u2013 that we arrive at our last step in this story.<\/p>\n<h1>Welcome<\/h1>\n<p>Welcome to en clair, an archive of forensic linguistics, literary detection, and language mysteries. You can find case notes about this episode, including credits, acknowledgements, and, far more than usual, many extra links to further reading at the blog. The web address is given at the end of this podcast.<\/p>\n<h2>Joy\u2019s soul<\/h2>\n<p>You thought we were heading into 2016. Wrong. As usual, before we go forward, Marty, first, we must go back. Thirty years back. Our story starts in in 1986, when Oxford University Press \u2013 OUP \u2013 published, <em>The Oxford Shakespeare<\/em>. One volume is <em>William Shakespeare: A Textual Companion<\/em>, one is <em>William Shakespeare: An Old-Spelling Edition<\/em> \u2013 does pretty much what it says on the tin. And the one we\u2019re most interested in, the headlining volume, <em>is The Complete Works<\/em>. As you should have already realised by now, just the name itself is automatically, if implicitly, a statement about authorship, about the apocrypha, about the canon, about what a collection of people have decided to include or exclude based on sometimes fairly thin evidence. As seems to just be the case in this field, this new volume raised fierce debates since it tried to replicate plays and poems, not as they were printed, but as they were performed. And as I\u2019ve discussed right back at the start of this miniseries, this is like taking a screenshot during a video, and deciding that <em>this<\/em> single freeze-frame is a fair, canonical representation of the whole video. This snapshot is <em>Hamlet<\/em>. This snapshot is <em>Macbeth<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Lots of people were Not Happy with this performance-over-print decision because it meant, in some cases, substantial changes to comfortable, long-established ideas. <em>Hamlet<\/em> had whole speeches relegated to an appendix. Can you hear people falling onto their fainting couches? <em>King Lear<\/em> had to be put in twice because it came down to two very different versions, and it wasn\u2019t clear enough to the editors which one had the greatest claim to being anointed the One True King. And perhaps most scandalous of all, some of the works had the names of collaborators included. Other co-authors. Thomas Middleton. George Wilkins. John Fletcher. Anonymous. For some absolute Shakespeare purists, this would have been enough to trigger a flurry of outraged letters to newspapers.<\/p>\n<p>Anyway, this first edition of <em>The Complete Works<\/em> in 1986 was edited by John Jowett, William Montgomery, <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20070814000117\/http:\/www.english.fsu.edu\/faculty\/gtaylor.htm\">Gary Taylor<\/a> \u2013 we\u2019ll come back to him \u2013 and Stanley Wells. If you have an outstanding memory, you might recall Stanley Wells from this rather interesting comment, which was part of a longer article that vanished first from the <em>Shakespeare Birthplace Trust<\/em> site, and then from the <em>Royal Shakespeare Company<\/em> site:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>The phenomenon of disbelief in Shakespeare&#8217;s authorship is a psychological aberration of considerable interest. Endorsement of it in favour of aristocratic candidates may be ascribed to snobbery \u2013 reluctance to believe that works of genius could emanate from a man of relatively humble origin \u2013 an attitude that would not permit Marlowe to have written his own works, let alone Shakespeare&#8217;s. Other causes include ignorance; poor sense of logic; refusal, wilful or otherwise, to accept evidence; folly; the desire for publicity; and even (as in the sad case of Delia Bacon, who hoped to open Shakespeare&#8217;s grave in 1856) certifiable madness.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>To me it\u2019s a little difficult to reconcile this statement with being the editor of a series of volumes that then goes on to explicitly reshape the authorship of Shakespeare by suggesting a range of collaborators. I imagine if Wells cared what I think, which I expect he doesn\u2019t, I\u2019m guessing he might say that his contention is with people who reject Shakespeare entirely and substitute their own reality. But yet, this edition was obviously open to the idea that authorship in works from this era is not as cut and dried as lots of people imagine. If it were crystal clear, there wouldn\u2019t be plays marked as collaborations with multiple unidentified writers. This takes us right back to the cut-out theory \u2013 or one version of it, anyway \u2013 from the very start of this miniseries.<\/p>\n<p>Remember the group theory had roughly three versions. Version one: Shakespeare doesn\u2019t exist at all. The name is just a pseudonym that a bunch of people are using. He is as much a fiction as the three witches. Any similarities to people living or dead are purely coincidental, etc. etc.. Version two: Shakespeare exists, but he\u2019s just the theatre manager, and he\u2019s letting the writers use his name because reasons. Version three: he is either a part of, or the leader of a group of writers all publishing under his name. Bingo. Or as I mentioned earlier, collaboration. Some collaborate on some sets of plays. Some pen the lines for certain scenes or characters. Shakespeare reimagines something of theirs. They adapt something of his. Sometimes it\u2019s just one author. Sometimes a few are free at the same time and all work together at once. But essentially, you end up with other, and sometimes very famous, co-writers working alongside Shakespeare without necessarily getting the credit for it later on down the line.<\/p>\n<p>When the new edition of this series came out, the venture into this authorial territory \u2013 efforts to fill in blanks on the Shakespeare map, if you will \u2013 went even further. The 2005<em> Complete Works<\/em> volume added in the plays, <em>Sir Thomas More <\/em>and <em>Edward III<\/em>, not because Shakespeare wrote them, but because both contained a few passages that <em>might<\/em> be by Shakespeare. In other words, he was, at best, second author. Maybe.<\/p>\n<p>And now, at long last, we move forward to 2016, and OUP\u2019s release of their top-of-the-line, ruinously expensive series,<em> The New Oxford Shakespeare<\/em>. After its predecessor, some may have been well-prepared for what was to come, but after the three-volume 1986 version, this new three (<a href=\"http:\/\/nos.dmu.ac.uk\/\">soon to be five<\/a>) volume update included an entire 776 page book entitled, <em>The New Oxford Shakespeare: The Authorship Companion<\/em>, by Gary Taylor \u2013 again, we\u2019ll come back to him \u2013 and Gabriel Egan. As the title suggests, in it, Taylor and Egan pick up this now ancient question: did Shakespeare write all the works attributed to him?<\/p>\n<p>Actually, I should be fair. Their angle is perhaps better defined as, \u201cDid Shakespeare write at least some of this play? Like, even just a bit of it. Couple of verses maybe? Was anyone else involved? Who did which bits? Why is this such a mess?\u201d Okay maybe not that last question. That\u2019s probably just people like me who mutter that when analysing data. Anyway, theirs isn\u2019t automatically the \u201cpeople hiding behind pseudonyms to avoid execution\u201d subterfuge version of the question. Theirs is, flat out, someone saying, \u201cyeah but this manuscript doesn\u2019t even have a name on it, and someone\u2019s patently added stuff in different handwriting afterwards so obviously other people were involved, soooo is this part of the collection or no?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>And, echoing the old 1986 series, the headlining volume of the new edition is, to give its full name: <em>The New Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works \u2013 Modern Critical Edition<\/em>. I guess it isn\u2019t properly monumental unless it has a title, a subtitle, <em>and<\/em> a subsubtitle. Anyway, this particular volume lists the editors as Gary Taylor, John Jowett, Terri Bourus, and Gabriel Egan. Stanley Wells doesn\u2019t appear but I assume that this was because he was in his eighties when this new edition was being put together, and he\u2019s 91 as I record this. It did strike me as interesting, though, that in his absence, as implied by the existence of the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em>, this edition goes even further still with the authorship question, by including even more possible co-authors, adapters, and revisers.<\/p>\n<p>The 2016 <em>Complete Works<\/em> includes fifty-three titles. Remember that the First Folio contained only thirty-six, and the canon generally stands at thirty-eight, so that\u2019s already fifteen more. These works are mostly plays, some poems and so forth, and thirty-seven of them have no author listed at all. Implicitly, the editors do not challenge Shakespeare\u2019s authorship, either because the evidence to do so is insufficient or there simply isn\u2019t any. But in sixteen cases now, both Shakespeare and other names are listed, either as people who have collaborated on that work, or as people who have subsequently adapted that work. And the ordering of the names is indicative of who is deemed to have contributed most.<\/p>\n<p>So how does this list look? Well, let\u2019s take some heavyweight classics: <em>A Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream<\/em>, <em>The Comedy of Errors<\/em>, <em>The Tempest, Romeo &amp; Juliet<\/em>\u2026 all the ones I really hated. According to the <em>New Oxford Shakespeare<\/em>, these are all Shake, no fake. And as I\u2019ve said, there are like thirty-three more titles in that list.<\/p>\n<p>But what about the ones with other authors. Well, there\u2019s <em>The Tragedy of M. Arden of Faversham<\/em>. This was supposedly mainly authored by\u2026 Anonymous. Yeah, I know. But also by Shakespeare. So that\u2019s new. What about <em>Titus Andronicus<\/em>? That one\u2019s attributed to Shakespeare first, Peele second, and it might even have an added scene possibly by Thomas Middleton, question mark. What else. Apparently Marlowe and Anonymous collaborated on all the <em>Henry VI<\/em> titles. Nash comes in on the third. And remember our Shakespeare apocrypha? One of those titles was <em>The Passionate Pilgrim<\/em>? Well that\u2019s also included, but it\u2019s a messy one. Authors are listed as Shakespeare, Barnfield, Griffin, Deloney, Marlowe, Raleigh, and Anonymous, which sounds like really high-interest-rate credit card. Let\u2019s do some big hitters. <em>Measure for Measure<\/em>, <em>All\u2019s Well that Ends Well<\/em>, <em>Macbeth<\/em>. These are all listed as adapted by Middleton. Perhaps he had a talent for jazzing up plays. Who knows. Last few. You may have forgotten this by now, but remember I said how, just after his death, Shakespeare was overshadowed for a while by that pair, Beaumont &amp; Fletcher, who are another fun little authorship case in their own right? Well, apparently, Fletcher is first author, and Shakespeare second, on <em>The History of Cardenio<\/em>, <em>Henry VIII<\/em>, and <em>The Two Noble Kinsmen<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>And for me at least, this is a significant shift in a huge tectonic plate that has, historically, resisted almost any attempts at being moved. It contradicts those quarters who have previously insisted that having the audacity to doubt Shakespeare\u2019s authorship, especially within the canon \u2013 plays like <em>Macbeth<\/em> \u2013 was embarrassing, misconceived, and even a \u201cpsychological aberration\u201d, to quote some of the harsher critics. In the <em>Complete Work\u2019s<\/em> brief discussion on authorship, the editors write that,<\/p>\n<p>Most of the works in this Modern Critical Edition were written entirely by Shakespeare. But a significant number of his plays were written collaboratively, usually with one other playwright as the subordinate partner. [\u2026] Some early modern plays were first written by one author, but later adapted by someone else for a theatrical revival. Shakespeare himself sometimes adapted other men\u2019s plays: this edition identifies him as the adapter of three plays originally written by other playwrights. [\u2026] But whenever this edition is the first to identify a collaborator or adapter, we treat the attribution more tentatively. [\u2026] In this way, we [\u2026] distinguish between the most secure and well-established attributions and those that are more recent\u2014and therefore, intrinsically, not yet as widely known, widely tested, or widely endorsed. [\u2026] In cases of collaboration, adaptation, or disputed authorship, the introductory box always provides a cross-reference to the relevant chapters of the Companion.<\/p>\n<p>I have enough respect for OUP\u2019s general credentials \u2013 their peer reviewers, editorial processes, quality controls, and so forth \u2013 to believe that they would not publish absolute snakeoil. Not intentionally, anyway. For me, if OUP thinks this series is worth being published, then in and of itself, its very existence and its undeniable focus on authorship provides evidence that there is indeed room for reasonable doubt, not just around the apocrypha and the lesser works, but even around the canon. I should add, however, that I don\u2019t think it should require a publication like this to exist before anyone is authorised to ask the question for themselves. I stated this position at the start anyway. If someone wants to question gravity, I feel that\u2019s their fundamental right. Heck, take on the findings of Stephen Hawking. Challenge the idea of time. Get stuck in. Just do it well.<\/p>\n<p>So let\u2019s get back to the 2016 <em>New Oxford Shakespeare <\/em>with its handful of authorship reattributions. The <em>New York Times<\/em> hailed its arrival with a <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20161108004739\/http:\/www.nytimes.com\/2016\/10\/25\/books\/shakespeare-christopher-marlowe-henry-vi.html\">relatively muted piece<\/a>, opening with the tentative lines:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Shakespeare may have had a little more help than previously suspected.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Not exactly throwing this out as a breaking world exclusive, are they. The BBC was <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bbc.co.uk\/news\/entertainment-arts-37750558\">faintly more enthused<\/a>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Scholars working on New Oxford Shakespeare [\u2026] said his collaboration with other playwrights was more extensive than has previously been known. The research, by 23 international scholars, has identified 17 of 44 Shakespeare plays as being co-written with other authors. The new research involved both traditional textual analysis and the use of computerised tools to examine the scripts. Gary Taylor, one of the New Oxford Shakespeare&#8217;s general editors, told The Guardian: &#8220;We have been able to verify Marlowe&#8217;s presence in those three plays strongly and clearly enough. We can now be confident that they didn&#8217;t just influence each other, but they worked with each other. Rivals sometimes collaborate.&#8221;<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Even so, perhaps <em>because <\/em>of write-ups like this, and despite coming out with Oxford University Press, a fairly prestigious publisher, <em>New Oxford <\/em>immediately met with some vigorous pushback. In the selfsame BBC article, we get a response from Carol Rutter, a professor of Shakespeare and performance studies at the University of Warwick:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>It will still be open for people to make up their own minds. I don&#8217;t think [Oxford University Press] putting their brand mark on an attribution settles the issue for most people. [\u2026] I believe Shakespeare collaborated with all kinds of people\u2026 but I would be very surprised if Marlowe was one of them. The reason for that is that while these were being written, Marlowe was the poster boy of theatre writing. Why would he agree to collaborate with a non-entity of an actor? I would suggest we should look not to another playwright but to the actors. [\u2026] Yes, Shakespeare collaborated. But it&#8217;s much more likely that he started his career working for a company where he was already an actor, and collaborated not with another playwright but with the actors \u2013 who will have had Marlowe very much in their heads, on the stage, in their voices. They were the ones putting Marlowe&#8217;s influence into the plays.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In case you were wondering, at this stage in the miniseries, I am Team Gary Tayor, <em>and <\/em>I am Team Carol Rutter. What, you might ask, does that mean? How can you be both? Well, just as I absolutely champion the right of someone like Gary Taylor to ask questions, and come up with their own answers based, hopefully, on solid scientific principles, I also absolutely champion the right of anyone, like Carol Rutter, to put any set of methods or results or analyses under the microscope. And I say that no matter how esteemed the person who made the claim, and no matter how junior the one putting it to the test. I\u2019ve seen good undergraduates debunk the work of distinguished professors. Good science is good science. It doesn\u2019t care about your paygrade, the letters after your name, your seniority, provenance, country club friends, ego. Accordingly, in the rest of this miniseries, I\u2019ve put all the other approaches through their paces, from Earls and Lords right through to spies and statesmen, pointing out the various issues with each, and I see absolutely no good reason why that same standard should not apply here. The <em>New Oxford<\/em> doesn\u2019t get a pass just because it came out with OUP under the auspices of some long-standing figures in the field.<\/p>\n<p>But so far, all I\u2019ve given you are the <em>New Oxford <\/em>conclusions, and if the past five episodes have taught us absolutely anything, it\u2019s that the methods, analyses, and interpretations of the results are everything. Woolly cipher-based ghost-chasing? You may find yourself digging up perfectly innocent riverbeds. Over-confident assertions based on incomplete evidence? You may end up emailing out some awkward concessions. Or worse. So what did the <em>New Oxford Shakespeare<\/em> say, and do, about authorship? Should we view their results as any more legitimate or meaningful than all the others we\u2019ve seen so far?<\/p>\n<p>Let\u2019s take a look at their claims.<\/p>\n<h2>Modest doubt<\/h2>\n<p>Bear in mind in this next section that I\u2019m going to summarise a book of almost 800 pages into a few short minutes, and then do the same with some rebuttals, and even squeak in some counter-rebuttals. The inevitable is going to happen. I am going to give an incomplete picture that simplifies some details and misses other things out entirely. Sadly that\u2019s just the way data compression works. There is a solution of course. You can read the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em> yourself, in full\u2026 if you can afford it. As I write this, I checked and it\u2019s currently retailing from OUP\u2019s site at a cool \u00a3145. That\u2019s almost exactly $200. And that\u2019s <em>just <\/em>for the <em>Authorship<\/em> <em>Companion<\/em>. If you want all three volumes, you\u2019re looking at \u00a3340. That\u2019s a little under $500. Mercifully my library has the ebook, otherwise I wouldn\u2019t even get to look at a copy, never mind butcher it in a podcast.<\/p>\n<p>OUP\u2019s astronomical overpricing of knowledge aside, Taylor and Egan don\u2019t just look at language, though we\u2019ll spend much more time on that shortly, for obvious reasons. They also discuss palaeographic and biographical evidence, and theatrical provenance. When it comes to language itself, they consider quotations, echoes, prose, rhetorical evidence, chronology, vocabulary, oaths, interjections, cue burden, stage directions, verbal parallels, image clusters, and a whole range of metrical tests including speech lengths, sentence\/verse correlation, alexandrines, feminine endings and more.<\/p>\n<p>We\u2019ll start with the three <em>Henry VI<\/em> plays. The first play is credited as being written by Marlowe, Nash, and Anonymous, and then subsequently adapted by Shakespeare. So Shakespeare is not given as the author but as a later influence on the work. Presumably, though, Shakespeare then got a taste for this particular storyline because he\u2019s credited as first author on the second and third plays in the <em>Henry VI <\/em>trilogy. Both of these are also supposedly co-authored by Marlowe, and anonymous, <em>and<\/em> then also later revised by Shakespeare. Convoluted. But let\u2019s keep going. The justifications for ascribing authorship in this way are outlined in Egan\u2019s chapter about the types of statistical tests that were run on the data. However, several scholars have questioned this chapter on various grounds. For instance, in his 2020 review of the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em>, Auerbach (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/pdf\/10.1080\/0895769X.2019.1652556?needAccess=true\">2020: 236-241<\/a>) writes the following, which I have very heavily edited for length:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>There is too much that is good in the Companion to permit disregarding it, yet one concludes the volume with a strong sense of disappointment. A truly useful companion would have summarized the state of the field past and present, breaking down Shakespeare\u2019s attributed and questioned works and the history of attributions made to them. It would have set out attribution techniques and shown their applications and failings. And it would have presented detailed and decisive cases for the New Oxford Shakespeare\u2019s bolder attributions, such as assigning part of Arden of Faversham to Shakespeare and parts of the Henry VI plays to Marlowe. Such a work would be of tremendous use. Instead, what is presented is a partial (in several respects) grab bag, and worse, an unreliable one, where valid and invalid methods rub shoulders without the reader being easily able to distinguish between them, and a sense of priorities and proportion is lost in a sea of data. [\u2026] The volume, overall, has a shambolic feel. [\u2026] Egan sacrifices too much space to unhelpful analogies with forensic ear-print evidence and redundant computer storage. [\u2026] Also problematic are questionable priorities \u2013 the dubious and marginal cusum analysis of A Funeral Elegy is treated at greater length than the entire attribution history of Pericles \u2013 and statistical infelicities which I have discussed elsewhere (Auerbach, \u201cStatistical Infelicities\u201d). [I\u2019ll come back to these.] We reach steadier ground with MacDonald P. Jackson\u2019s short but thoughtful piece critiquing recent trigram studies. [\u2026] Jackson\u2019s second chapter in the volume [\u2026] offers much to the expert, but little beyond confusion to the \u201creaders new to the field\u201d at whom the volume is aimed. [\u2026] Taylor and Duhaime\u2019s study of the fly scene in Titus Andronicus [\u2026] demonstrates the pitfalls of quantitative analysis, however, as a flood of poorly summarized data frequently drowns out the subjective measures being employed. [\u2026] Moreover, in a subsequent article, [\u2026] Taylor leaves the reader uncertain of what standards are being applied and whether they are being applied consistently. [\u2026] Foot-shifting between quantitative number-crunching and qualitative hermeneutic interpretation, drawing attention to whichever supports the underlying contention of the moment while disparaging the other, is unfortunately far too frequent an occurrence in the Companion (see Auerbach, \u201cStatistical Infelicities\u201d). [\u2026] Anna Pruitt provides a sober corrective, follow[ing] a procedure that, ironically, a number of other contributors did not. Her article is clear and accessible. I have critiqued two of the case studies, those by Elliott and Greatley-Hirsch and by Pascucci, in detail elsewhere (Auerbach, \u201cA Cannon\u2019s Burst Discharged Against A Ruinated Wall\u201d; Auerbach, \u201cA Critique of Giuliano Pascucci\u2019s\u201d). The methodological problems in both are so great as to cast a pall over the remainder of the volume, and the endorsement of these chapters by the editors, who cite them as foundational support for their summary judgments, is quite troubling. Elliott and Greatley-Hirsch\u2019s attribution of Arden of Faversham to Shakespeare is ultimately based on a handful of primitive factors far simpler than their elaborate and opaque machine learning-influenced procedures suggest. [\u2026] Pascucci makes a number of very specific and very audacious claims. [\u2026] Both chapters fall significantly below the standards for authorship studies, including those standards set forth in this very volume by Pruitt and Taylor. [\u2026] The volume fails to enforce a consistent standard of scientific rigor, and so the crucial foundation of such an anthology \u2013 the authority of its editorial judgment \u2013 is fatally jeopardized. There are consequences for the New Oxford Shakespeare more generally (Taylor et al.). [\u2026] More generally, a very real opportunity to provide a solid, comprehensive, and authoritative guide to the often arcane field of authorship studies was missed by this volume, and such opportunities do not occur frequently. To a neophyte, the volume is less accessible than purportedly more specialized studies by Jackson and Vickers, as well as less rigorous (Jackson; Vickers). Too often this Companion is partial, confusing, and worst of all unreliable. (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/pdf\/10.1080\/0895769X.2019.1652556?needAccess=true\">Auerbach 2020: 236-241<\/a>)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Okay so I mentioned Auerbach\u2019s 2020 paper, <em>Statistical Infelicities in The New Oxford Shakespeare Authorship Companion<\/em>. Given that the Authorship Companion is heavily statistical in nature, it\u2019s worth picking out just a couple of specific instances that can be relatively easily conveyed in audio form. At the start of this paper, Auerbach argues that the entire volume exhibits\u2026<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>a lack of statistical rigour that vexes and ultimately dooms this effort, undermining any certainty that could be assigned to its resolutions. (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/pdf\/10.1080\/0895769X.2018.1559023\">Auerbach 2020: 28<\/a>)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>What is Auerbach talking about, specifically? Well, one example is thus. In the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em>, Egan states that,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Once some plays are entirely removed from the accepted canon of Shakespeare, the ranges within which various phenomena must fall in order to be typical of Shakespeare are likely to become narrower simply because we are generating them from a smaller sample. (Egan 2016: 30)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In response, Auerbach writes,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Here Egan seems to have it backward. There is no reason that an arbitrarily smaller sample of Shakespeare should generate more homogeneous results than a larger sample. Rather, the law of large numbers dictates that a smaller sample should show less regularity and more aberration, and simple tools of statistical analysis such as standard deviations operate on this fundamental principle. Extreme values are more likely to be tolerated as acceptable outliers in a smaller sample precisely because certainty is lower. More evidence increases certainty, rather than decreasing it. The only case in which adding a play to the canon would broaden rather than narrow a model\u2019s tolerance of outliers would be if the play were severely and uniquely disjoint in its characteristics compared to all other plays in the canon. The most likely cause of such a disjoint nature, however, would be if a different author had written the play, and the play had been added to the canon in error. (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/full\/10.1080\/0895769X.2019.1652556\">Auerbach 2020: 28<\/a>)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Or to put it more succinctly, more data, more certainty. Less data, less certainty. And in corpus linguistics there is a general preference for larger corpora over smaller ones for precisely this reason. To quote, well, Stalin, quantity has a quality all of its own. Sheer brute size smooths out weird anomalies that can easily skew smaller datasets. Of course with historical corpora the amount of available data is finite. Barring exceptional circumstances such as the surprising discovery of ancient manuscripts, there simply isn\u2019t going to be any more of it, so we have to work with what exists, and choosing to downsample from what little there is to even less is a precarious step. To do so as a means of homogenising the data only works if you <em>know<\/em> that the ones you\u2019re removing are, for some reason, unusual. But then you end up facing a whole host of other questions. What are the aberrations and why do they otherwise undermine your research question? What evidence led you to determine that your now-excluded pieces were aberrations at all? With more data \u2013 who knows, with plays and poems lost to time \u2013 perhaps this was actually a norm and now you\u2019ve edited it out. If you\u2019ve artificially homogenised your dataset then what do your results even mean any more since you\u2019ve now essentially massaged them into showing you something want to see?<\/p>\n<p>Anyway, what else? Well, in the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em>, Egan argues, fairly uncontroversially, that various statistical tests differ in their reliability, but that if we apply multiple independent tests to the same data that all point to the same author, then the likelihood that the answer is incorrect drops considerably. Essentially, statistical triangulation is the gold standard, and such a notion is generally widely accepted. Unsurprisingly, then, Auerbach (2019) agrees that this is correct in principle, but he argues that little effort is made across the entire book to actually establish whether the various statistical tests are genuinely independent. In fact, he argues that they are very likely to <em>not <\/em>be independent because most of the tests are based on one thing: word frequency. Thus, if the tests are not independent, then the fact that their results agree tells us relatively little about who the author is.<\/p>\n<p>For the non-statistically minded, I\u2019ll try to give a quick analogy. Imagine I hold up a picture of a Labrador and ask people to rate how cute it is. I start out by asking five people from the Labrador Appreciation Society. Remarkably, they all adore it. I then declare that five independent judges have approved of my picture, thus it is, objectively, an adorable dog. Well, not really. The five people are not independent judges. They all belong to the same society and are impelled by the same bias. By contrast, imagine the pandemic is over, I stand in a busy street somewhere, and I ask passing strangers on a busy street to rate the same photo. There\u2019s a good chance that at least some of these strangers will be independent from each other. I might accidentally ask a pair of friends or both members of a couple or a parent and child, sure, but even if that happens, should all five random people now agree that my photo is adorable, then yes, I probably do have a very nice picture of a dog. We can be a bit more certain that this result is a better reflection of a wider opinion because there\u2019s a far better chance that at least some of these people will be uninfluenced by each other or by an identical background factor.<\/p>\n<p>So back to Egan and Auerbach. Auerbach is essentially suggesting that the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em> might be an extended work of showing the Labrador picture to multiple members of the Labrador Appreciation Society \u2013 that is a bunch of people who are not independent judges, Moreover, Auerbach is suggesting that we have good reason to believe that they really are all be connected in some way because they\u2019re all wearing Labrador Appreciation Society badges. Or, in the case of the data, the tests are mostly based on word frequency. (Statisticians, please don\u2019t @ me. I\u2019m trying my best here.)<\/p>\n<p>Aaaanyway, in his <em>Statistical Infelicities<\/em> paper, Auerbach (2020) also takes issue with what appears to be cherry-picking \u2013 the decisions to include statistical tests when they agree and discount them when they don\u2019t; the acceptance of some parts of prior studies that confirm the <em>Authorship Companion<\/em>\u2019s results and rejection of other parts of those selfsame studies where they contradict, and so on. In summary,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>Just as the results of these studies must be taken in total or not at all, rigor cannot be applied selectively. The presence of fundamental statistical errors in significant passages in the Companion has the effect not of casting doubt merely on those particular passages and points, but of bringing into question the robustness of all such conclusions reached. Here is a scientific sloppiness that pervades the entire Companion and so disadvantages its overall tenability. (Auerbach 2020: 30)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In summary, then, Auerbach is not really impressed with this volume. But does anyone else share these concerns? Is this just a one-person axe-grinding campaign or is there consensus? Well, another critic, Erne (2018) argues that:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>What is striking about these case studies is the confidence with which the conclusions are presented, even when the sample is small (the Fly Scene is 84-lines long) or when the extant play (Double Falsehood) is argued to be an eighteenth-century rewrite of a late seventeenth-century rewrite of the play to which Shakespeare contributed (Cardenio). Even if we grant that significant advances have been made in authorship attribution studies (and this reviewer certainly does), such confidence may nonetheless seem surprising. At the end of his chapter on the authorship of two poems \u2013 \u2018When God was pleas\u2019d\u2019 and \u2018Shall I die\u2019 \u2013 that were attributed to Shakespeare in manuscript, Gary Taylor writes: \u2018Until we have better tools, readers must simply make up their own minds. Or perhaps, preferably, refuse to make up their minds\u2019 (230). Yet elsewhere in the volume, there is little such commendable reluctance to jump to firm conclusions, including by Taylor himself. (<a href=\"https:\/\/archive-ouverte.unige.ch\/unige:123514\/ATTACHMENT01\">Erne 2018: 3<\/a>)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Erne seems to suggest that Taylor is preaching, but not practicing, and what I infer in the softest whisper from this is that perhaps the lure of the Shakespearian holy grail \u2013 attributing authorship in a brand new way that will crown Taylor\u2019s career with immortal success \u2013 has gotten in the way of rigor and objectivity. Anyone else have issues with this work? Well, Freebury-Jones has written a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/full\/10.1080\/0895769X.2017.1295360\">few<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.archivdigital.info\/ce\/augean-stables-or-the-state-of-modern-authorship-attribution-studies\/detail.html\">things<\/a> on it, but to take just a little snippet:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>The New Oxford Shakespeare authorship team argues that Christopher Marlowe had a hand in all three Henry VI plays, and that Shakespeare wrote parts of Arden of Faversham. However, the quantitative methodologies employed to reach these conclusions are dubious. (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.archivdigital.info\/ce\/augean-stables-or-the-state-of-modern-authorship-attribution-studies\/detail.html\">Freebury-Jones 2018: abstract<\/a> because paywall&#8230;)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Anything else? Well, last of all in this gigantic saga, there\u2019s the Gary Taylor versus Brian Vickers\u2026 thing.<\/p>\n<h2>Just think Montagues and Capulets all over again&#8230; &lt;sigh&gt;<\/h2>\n<p>Honestly, I\u2019m\u2026 yeah okay well how about I just quote some of Vickers and then some of Taylor and you can form your own conclusions. In the Times Literary Supplement in 2020, in a 3,500-word article about <em>The<\/em> <em>New Oxford Shakespeare<\/em>, Brian Vickers writes the following:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>The prime mover in all three revisions to Shakespeare\u2019s canon was Gary Taylor, a young American scholar who had just been promoted from editorial assistant to co-editor alongside Stanley Wells, a respected Shakespeare scholar. [Interesting implicature there. Anyway, moving on.] Since no external evidence exists for these ascriptions, Taylor had to rely on other evidence or his own aesthetic judgement. The small rocky island on the new map was a banal lyric, \u201cShall I die?\u201d which Taylor inserted in the canon because in one manuscript the scribe signed it \u201cWilliam Shakespeare\u201d, increasing its value to other collectors. In fact, it looks like a poem written for music in around 1610. None of Taylor\u2019s co-editors, and indeed no other critic, ever endorsed the ascription, but if you\u2019re editor of the Oxford Shakespeare you don\u2019t need anyone else\u2019s approval. [\u2026] In the press releases and interviews that Taylor gave when the new edition was launched, he described his efforts in triumphalist terms. [\u2026] The New Oxford Shakespeare contained no justification of the attributions; this appeared a year later in an Authorship Companion, edited by Gary Taylor and Gabriel Egan. This bulky volume [\u2026] seems to be a professional scholarly production, [but evaluating it properly] needs considerable expertise in mathematics, statistics and computing as well as Elizabethan drama and textual scholarship. [\u2026] This Authorship Companion is unfortunate proof that scholars, journal editors and publishers in the Humanities are prone to being abused by pseudo-scientific methods. [\u2026] Every attribution is false. Oxford University Press has a proud record as the world\u2019s leading publisher of scholarly editions of English literature. The trust that senior editors placed in Gary Taylor has been repaid with an opportunistic bundle of untested methods set loose on the greatest author in our language. Shakespeare is not just a national, but an international treasure [heh, see what I mean?] and it is tragic to contemplate the damage done to culture in general by these editions being used to teach students, and being sold in bookshops to unsuspecting laymen. The Press has just commissioned the New Oxford Marlowe. Among its editors are members of Taylor\u2019s editorial team, and rumour suggests that it will include the Henry VI plays. Many people will fervently hope that on reflection the editors will think it enough to have ruined one major author\u2019s canon. (<a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20200421160134\/https:\/www.the-tls.co.uk\/articles\/infecting-the-teller-essay-brian-vickers\/\">Vickers 2020<\/a>)<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>You might be forgiven for thinking that some of this actually seems kind of bitter and personal, and you will not be surprised to learn that it really does seem to be yet another Shakespeare-driven grudge match between two big names in the field. Two years earlier, in 2018, Vickers advertised in the very same Times Literary Supplement for a publisher for his latest book, and when asked why he needed to go to such a length after the success of publishing forty previous titles over the span of fifty years, Vickers replied that his reputation as a scholar had been damaged by a string of hostile reviews by people associated with the <em>New Oxford Shakespeare<\/em>. According to Vickers, he had been turned down by Cambridge University Press, Manchester University Press, and Bloomsbury because their referees deemed him controversial (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/books\/2018\/apr\/02\/no-kyding-eminent-shakespeare-scholar-seeks-publisher\">Lea 2018<\/a>). Taylor\u2019s response to this?<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>It is ironic that Brian, who has been writing savage ad hominem reviews in the TLS for 30 years, is blaming his failure to find a publisher on other people\u2019s reviewing. [\u2026] I doubt that his conspiracy theories will convince anyone who isn\u2019t already paranoid. [\u2026] Brian\u2019s approach to Shakespeare is that there is only one proper way to interpret him \u2013 Brian\u2019s. The New Oxford Shakespeare, by contrast, is a collaborative edition, and its critical introductions give readers many possible approaches: 1950s approaches such as Brian\u2019s \u2013 who is quoted on a number of occasions \u2013 but also theatrical, historical, political, formalist, feminist, cinematic, psychological, and eco-critical interpretations. For Brian, Shakespeare is fuel for angry, narcissistic monologues. For us, Shakespeare inspires thousands of fascinating conversations.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Interestingly, Vickers <em>also <\/em>seems to imply a sort of narcissism about Taylor when he claims that the authorship question is a matter of scholarly judgment, yes,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><strong>but also of headline-seeking, power and prestige. My position is that, as a great artist, Shakespeare should not be parcelled off to other writers or saddled with plays that he did not write, such as Arden of Faversham \u2013 especially not by such shoddy and bogus scholarly methods.<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Hmmm. Overall, then, whilst <em>The New Oxford Shakespeare\u2019s<\/em> <em>Authorship Companion<\/em> certainly adds to the conversation on the Shakespearian authorship question, it seems to throw up far more questions than it answers. At the very least, as I noted at the start of this episode, it has successfully generated plenty of controversy and engagement, and in its own right that new interest can be useful, if channelled properly into analytical and methodological advancements.<\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately, however, though the Elizabethan dramatist died five hundred years ago, he has still managed to create an awful lot of drama over the ensuing centuries, right through to the present day, and the passions and fervour that his work inspires have arguably held the authorship question back at least as much as they have propelled it forward. For many people in the field, both Stratfordians and Antis, the Shakespeare authorship question in whatever guise seems to have been a mechanism not so much for advancing science and society and civilisation, but rather, for advancing CVs, and status, and success.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, then, for the very last time in this miniseries, we return to the question that we started with: Who wrote the works of Shakespeare? And what is our answer? Well, we have to acknowledge that as it stands, there is still, as yet, no one answer that satisfies everyone, and to even try to propose one here would be to come between the dragon and his wrath.<\/p>\n<p>End of part 6 of 6.<\/p>\n<p>If you\u2019re interested in more Shakespeare content, from linguists, at Lancaster, then search the internet for Future Learn, Shakespeare&#8217;s Language. This free online course is all about both revealing meanings and exploring myths, and as a bonus, you get introduced to corpus-based methods for analysing Shakespeare\u2019s language. What\u2019s not to love!<\/p>\n<h1>Outro<\/h1>\n<p>The episode was researched and fact-checked by my research assistant, Rebecca Jagodzinski, and my intern, Debbi Tomkinson, and it was narrated and produced by me, Dr Claire Hardaker. I am also extremely grateful for all the input I\u2019ve had from the renowned Shakespeare authority, Jonathan Culpeper \u2013 creator of that online course I mentioned \u2013 who has patiently entertained this whole miniseries idea from inception to gruesome, bloody execution.<\/p>\n<p>However, this work wouldn&#8217;t exist in its current form without the prior efforts of many others. You can find acknowledgements and references for those people at the blog. Also there you can find data, links, articles, pictures, older cases, and more besides.<\/p>\n<p>The address for the blog is wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair. And you can follow the podcast on Twitter at _enclair. Or if you like, you can follow me on Twitter at DrClaireH.<\/p>\n<h1>References<\/h1>\n<p>This is an incredibly incomplete list of potential introductory sources (many deliberately introductory) that you could turn to if you were interested in reading more about this subject, but as is the nature of link-rot, some of these sources will have disappeared or changed in the intervening time. Suffice to say, there are way more texts out there on this subject than you could probably ever want to read, but this should get you started&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Baconian_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Baconian_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship<\/a> [Accessed 11th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Brewer, C. (2013). Shakespeare, word-coining, and the OED. Shakespeare Survey, 65, 345-357.<\/p>\n<p>Christopher Marlowe. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Christopher_Marlowe\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Christopher_Marlowe<\/a> [Accessed 13th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Craig, H. (2011). Shakespeare\u2019s Vocabulary: Myth and Reality. Shakespeare Quarterly, 62(1), 53-74.<\/p>\n<p>Derbyite theory of Shakespeare authorship. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Derbyite_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Derbyite_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship<\/a> [Accessed 11th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Edward_de_Vere,_17th_Earl_of_Oxford\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Edward_de_Vere,_17th_Earl_of_Oxford<\/a> [Accessed 13th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Elliot, W., &amp; Valenza, R. (1991). Was the Earl of Oxford the True Shakespeare? A Computer-Aided Analysis. Notes and Queries, 38(4), 501-506.<\/p>\n<p>Emilia Lanier. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Emilia_Lanier\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Emilia_Lanier<\/a> [Accessed 15th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Francis Bacon. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Francis_Bacon\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Francis_Bacon<\/a> [Accessed 13th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Friberg, J. (2016).\u00a0The Seven Steps to Mercy: Cracking the Shakespeare Code\u00a0[Documentary Series]. Syndicado.<\/p>\n<p>Friedlander, A. (2015). Five myths about William Shakespeare. Retrieved from: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/opinions\/five-myths-about-william-shakespeare\/2015\/09\/04\/bc986ef6-524d-11e5-9812-92d5948a40f8_story.html\">https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/opinions\/five-myths-about-william-shakespeare\/2015\/09\/04\/bc986ef6-524d-11e5-9812-92d5948a40f8_story.html<\/a> [Accessed 9th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Henry Neville (died 1615). (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Henry_Neville_(died_1615)\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Henry_Neville_(died_1615)<\/a> [Accessed 15th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Holloway, C. (n.d.). Shakespeare\u2019s Stratford Monument. Retrieved from: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.hollowaypages.com\/Shakespearemonument.htm\">https:\/\/www.hollowaypages.com\/Shakespearemonument.htm<\/a> [Accessed 18th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Kathman, D. (n.d.). Part 5 of \u201cCritically Examining Oxfordian Claims\u201d. Retrieved from: <a href=\"https:\/\/shakespeareauthorship.com\/ox5.html\">https:\/\/shakespeareauthorship.com\/ox5.html<\/a> [Accessed 18th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Maranzani, B. (2020 [originally 2019]). Was Shakespeare the Real Author of His Plays? Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biography.com\/news\/shakespeare-real-author-theories\">https:\/\/www.biography.com\/news\/shakespeare-real-author-theories<\/a> [Accessed 9th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Marlovian theory of Shakespeare authorship. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Marlovian_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Marlovian_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship<\/a> [Accessed 11th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Mary Sidney. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Mary_Sidney\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Mary_Sidney<\/a> [Accessed 15th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Meares, H. (2020 [Original 2019]). Why Is William Shakespeare\u2019s Life Considered a Mystery? Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biography.com\/news\/william-shakespeare-life-mystery?li_source=LI&amp;li_medium=bio-mid-article&amp;li_pl=208&amp;li_tr=bio-mid-article\">https:\/\/www.biography.com\/news\/william-shakespeare-life-mystery?li_source=LI&amp;li_medium=bio-mid-article&amp;li_pl=208&amp;li_tr=bio-mid-article<\/a> [Accessed 9th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>McCrum, R. (2010). Who really wrote Shakespeare? Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/culture\/2010\/mar\/14\/who-wrote-shakespeare-james-shapiro\">https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/culture\/2010\/mar\/14\/who-wrote-shakespeare-james-shapiro<\/a> [Accessed 9th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Nevillean theory of Shakespeare authorship. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Nevillean_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Nevillean_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship<\/a> [Accessed 11th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Oxfordian theory of Shakespeare authorship. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Oxfordian_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Oxfordian_theory_of_Shakespeare_authorship<\/a> [Accessed 11th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Peer, M., &amp; Jacobi, D. (2004).\u00a0The Shakespeare Conspiracy\u00a0[Film]. TMW Media.<\/p>\n<p>Rubinstein, W. (2001, 08). Who was Shakespeare? History Today, 51, 28-35.<\/p>\n<p>Schmitz, E., &amp; Utzt, S. (2011).\u00a0The Shakespeare Enigma\u00a0[Film]. Atlantis Film.<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare authorship question. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Shakespeare_authorship_question\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Shakespeare_authorship_question<\/a> [Accessed 8th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Syme, H. (2011). Shakespearean Mythbusting I: The Fantasy of the Unsurpassed Vocabulary. Retrieved from <a href=\"http:\/\/www.dispositio.net\/archives\/501#:~:text=If%20one%20only%20counts%20the,was%20indeed%20an%20impressive%20number\">http:\/\/www.dispositio.net\/archives\/501#:~:text=If%20one%20only%20counts%20the,was%20indeed%20an%20impressive%20number<\/a> [Accessed 9th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>Wiggins, M. (n.d.). Who Wrote Shakespeare? Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bbc.co.uk\/programmes\/articles\/211LBPTmBYp2rbh4bSQlSTS\/who-wrote-shakespeare\">https:\/\/www.bbc.co.uk\/programmes\/articles\/211LBPTmBYp2rbh4bSQlSTS\/who-wrote-shakespeare<\/a> [Accessed 9th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>William Shakespeare. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/William_Shakespeare\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/William_Shakespeare<\/a> [Accessed 8th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>William Shakespeare. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.oed.com\/view\/source\/a644?rskey=MpP0Ls&amp;result=2\">https:\/\/www.oed.com\/view\/source\/a644?rskey=MpP0Ls&amp;result=2<\/a> [Accessed 19th June 2020]<\/p>\n<p>William Stanley, 6th Early of Derby. (n.d.). Retrieved from <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/William_Stanley,_6th_Earl_of_Derby\">https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/William_Stanley,_6th_Earl_of_Derby<\/a> [Accessed 15th June 2020]<\/p>\n<h1>Other relevant texts<\/h1>\n<p>The Annotations contained within Oxford\u2019s Bible can be found here: <a href=\"https:\/\/shakespeareauthorship.com\/oxbib.html\">https:\/\/shakespeareauthorship.com\/oxbib.html<\/a><\/p>\n<p>William Webbe\u2019s Discourse of English Poetrie is accessible here: <a href=\"http:\/\/eebo.chadwyck.com\/search\/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&amp;ACTION=ByID&amp;ID=99846918&amp;FILE=&amp;SEARCHSCREEN=param(SEARCHSCREEN)&amp;VID=11915&amp;PAGENO=2&amp;ZOOM=FIT&amp;VIEWPORT=&amp;SEARCHCONFIG=param(SEARCHCONFIG)&amp;DISPLAY=param(DISPLAY)&amp;HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD=param(HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD)\">http:\/\/eebo.chadwyck.com\/search\/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&amp;ACTION=ByID&amp;ID=99846918&amp;FILE=&amp;SEARCHSCREEN=param(SEARCHSCREEN)&amp;VID=11915&amp;PAGENO=2&amp;ZOOM=FIT&amp;VIEWPORT=&amp;SEARCHCONFIG=param(SEARCHCONFIG)&amp;DISPLAY=param(DISPLAY)&amp;HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD=param(HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD)<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Art of English Poesie can be found here: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/cache\/epub\/16420\/pg16420-images.html\">http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/cache\/epub\/16420\/pg16420-images.html<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Parallels between Promus and Shakespeare\u2019s works are accessible at these two links: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.sirbacon.org\/mp.html\">http:\/\/www.sirbacon.org\/mp.html<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.sirbacon.org\/mp2.html\">http:\/\/www.sirbacon.org\/mp2.html<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Palladis Tamia can be found here: <a href=\"http:\/\/eebo.chadwyck.com.ezproxy.lancs.ac.uk\/search\/full_rec?SOURCE=config.cfg&amp;ACTION=ByID&amp;ID=99845635\">http:\/\/eebo.chadwyck.com.ezproxy.lancs.ac.uk\/search\/full_rec?SOURCE=config.cfg&amp;ACTION=ByID&amp;ID=99845635<\/a> and\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/shakespearedocumented.folger.edu\/exhibition\/document\/palladis-tamia-one-earliest-printed-assessments-shakespeares-works-and-first\">https:\/\/shakespearedocumented.folger.edu\/exhibition\/document\/palladis-tamia-one-earliest-printed-assessments-shakespeares-works-and-first<\/a><\/p>\n<p>A Review of James and Rubinstein\u2019s work can be found here: <a href=\"https:\/\/academic.oup.com\/sq\/article\/58\/2\/245\/5064487\">https:\/\/academic.oup.com\/sq\/article\/58\/2\/245\/5064487<\/a><\/p>\n<p>William Barksted\u2019s poem is found here: <a href=\"https:\/\/shakespeareauthorship.com\/barksted.html\">https:\/\/shakespeareauthorship.com\/barksted.html<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Dedication poem at the beginning of the sonnets can be found here: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.shakespeares-sonnets.com\/dedication\">http:\/\/www.shakespeares-sonnets.com\/dedication<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Compleat Gentleman can be found here: <a href=\"https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/peachamscomplea00peacgoog\">https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/peachamscomplea00peacgoog<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The First Folio can be accessed here: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.folger.edu\/the-shakespeare-first-folio-folger-copy-no-68#page\/To+the+Reader\/mode\/2up\">https:\/\/www.folger.edu\/the-shakespeare-first-folio-folger-copy-no-68#page\/To+the+Reader\/mode\/2up<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare\u2019s Epitaph can be read here: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.williamshakespeare.net\/william-shakespeare-epitaph.jsp\">https:\/\/www.williamshakespeare.net\/william-shakespeare-epitaph.jsp<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Rev. Dr. John Ward\u2019s diary is accessible here: <a href=\"https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/diaryrevjohnwar00sevegoog\/page\/n16\/mode\/2up\">https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/diaryrevjohnwar00sevegoog\/page\/n16\/mode\/2up<\/a><\/p>\n<p>One of the 1819\/1820 articles on Marlowe can be found here: <a href=\"https:\/\/books.google.co.uk\/books?id=RQcwAAAAYAAJ&amp;pg=PA61&amp;redir_esc=y#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false\">https:\/\/books.google.co.uk\/books?id=RQcwAAAAYAAJ&amp;pg=PA61&amp;redir_esc=y#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Information on the Northumberland Manuscript can be found here: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.sirbacon.org\/NMANUSCR.HTM\">http:\/\/www.sirbacon.org\/NMANUSCR.HTM<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Ignatius L. Donnelly\u2019s proposal can be accessed here: <a href=\"https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/greatcryptogramf00donnrich\/page\/n7\/mode\/2up\">https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/greatcryptogramf00donnrich\/page\/n7\/mode\/2up<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Wilber G. Zeigler\u2019s proposal can be accessed here: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/ebooks\/57810\">http:\/\/www.gutenberg.org\/ebooks\/57810<\/a><\/p>\n<p>J Thomas Looney\u2019s proposal can be accessed here: <a href=\"https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/bub_gb_B004AAAAIAAJ\">https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/bub_gb_B004AAAAIAAJ<\/a><\/p>\n<p>One of Alfred Hart\u2019s Studies is accessible here: <a href=\"https:\/\/academic-oup-com.ezproxy.lancs.ac.uk\/res\/article\/os-X\/39\/274\/1621907\">https:\/\/academic-oup-com.ezproxy.lancs.ac.uk\/res\/article\/os-X\/39\/274\/1621907<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Stritmatter and Anderson\u2019s analysis of the Bible is accessible here: <a href=\"https:\/\/shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org\/shakespeares-bible\/\">https:\/\/shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org\/shakespeares-bible\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Dudley, M.Q. (2013). \u201c\u2018My Library Was Dukedom Large Enough\u2019: Academic Libraries Mediating the Shakespeare Authorship Debate\u201d, <em>The Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and Research<\/em>, 8(2), 1-9.<\/p>\n<p>Franssen, P. (2013). \u201cFictional treatments of Shakespeare\u2019s authorship\u201d. In: P. Edmonson and S. Wells (Eds), <em>Shakespeare Beyond Doubt: Evidence, Argument, Controversy<\/em> (pp. 189-200). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Holderness, G. (2013). \u201cThe unreadable Delia Bacon\u201d. In: P. Edmonson and S. Wells (Eds), <em>Shakespeare Beyond Doubt: Evidence, Argument, Controversy<\/em> (pp. 5-15). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Martin, Patrick &amp; Finnis, John. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2006.69.2.195?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents\">The Secret Sharers: \u201cAnthony Rivers\u201d and the Appellant Controversy, 1601\u20132<\/a>. <em>Huntington Library Quarterly<\/em>, Vol. 69, No. 2, pp. 195-238<\/p>\n<p>McCrea, S. (2005). <em>The Case for Shakespeare: The End of the Authorship Question<\/em>. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.<\/p>\n<p>Schiff, J. (2015). \u201cA genius, but mad\u201d, <em>Yale Alumni Magazine, <\/em>Nov\/Dec. Last accessed 18<sup>th<\/sup> September 2019. Available at: <a href=\"https:\/\/yalealumnimagazine.com\/articles\/4189-delia-bacon\">https:\/\/yalealumnimagazine.com\/articles\/4189-delia-bacon<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Stewart, A. (2013). \u201cThe Case for Bacon\u201d. In: P. Edmonson and S. Wells (Eds), <em>Shakespeare Beyond Doubt: Evidence, Argument, Controversy<\/em> (pp. 16-28). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Taylor, G. and Bourus, T. (2016a). \u201cWhy Read Shakespeare\u2019s Complete Works?\u201d In: G. Taylor, J. Jowett, T. Bourus, G. Egan (Eds), <em>The New Oxford Shakespeare: William Shakespeare, The Complete Works <\/em>(pp. 1-44). Oxford: Oxford University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Taylor, G. and Bourus, T. (2016b). \u201cWhy Read <em>This<\/em> Complete Works?\u201d In: G. Taylor, J. Jowett, T. Bourus, G. Egan (Eds), <em>The New Oxford Shakespeare: William Shakespeare, The Complete Works <\/em>(pp. 45-58). Oxford: Oxford University Press.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>CONTENT RATING: universal Did Shakespeare really write, well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five century old con? In the last episode of this slowburn mini-series, some big names in the field of Shakespeare attribution try their own hands at penning dramatic texts. Below you will find data, audio credits, further reading, and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":77,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"episode_type":"","audio_file":"","podmotor_file_id":"","podmotor_episode_id":"","cover_image":"","cover_image_id":"","duration":"","filesize":"","filesize_raw":"","date_recorded":"","explicit":"","block":"","itunes_episode_number":"","itunes_title":"","itunes_season_number":"","itunes_episode_type":"","jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1847","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/paoUKh-tN","jetpack-related-posts":[{"id":817,"url":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2021\/03\/01\/case-s02e03-slowburn-shakespeare-part-1-of-6-who-wrote-shakespeare\/","url_meta":{"origin":1847,"position":0},"title":"Case S02E03 &#8211; Slowburn Shakespeare, part 1 of 6 &#8211; Who Wrote Shakespeare?","author":"DrClaireH","date":"01 March 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"CONTENT RATING: universal Did Shakespeare really write...well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five-century-old con? Part 1 of this slowburn mini-series looks at the question \"Who wrote Shakespeare?\" Below you will find data, audio credits, further reading, and a transcript of the podcast. Audio credits David Hilowitz -\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":863,"url":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2021\/07\/01\/case-s02e07-slowburn-shakespeare-part-5-of-6-the-wings-wherewith-we-fly\/","url_meta":{"origin":1847,"position":1},"title":"Case S02E07 &#8211; Slowburn Shakespeare, part 5 of 6 &#8211; The Wings Wherewith We Fly","author":"DrClaireH","date":"01 July 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"CONTENT RATING: universal Did Shakespeare really write, well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five century old con? Part 5 of this slowburn mini-series pitches the computational linguists against the forensic linguists in an effort to determine whether either side can work out who wrote Shakespeare. Below you\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":823,"url":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2021\/04\/01\/case-s02e04-slowburn-shakespeare-part-2-of-6-the-shakeslayers\/","url_meta":{"origin":1847,"position":2},"title":"Case S02E04 &#8211; Slowburn Shakespeare, part 2 of 6 &#8211; The Shakeslayers","author":"DrClaireH","date":"01 April 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"CONTENT RATING: universal Did Shakespeare really write, well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five century old con? Part 2 explores why we doubt Shakespeare and what happens if we kill him off. Below you will find data, audio credits, further reading, and a transcript of the podcast.\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":829,"url":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2021\/05\/01\/case-s02e05-slowburn-shakespeare-part-3-of-6-cut-out-cipher-monster-spy\/","url_meta":{"origin":1847,"position":3},"title":"Case S02E05 &#8211; Slowburn Shakespeare, part 3 of 6 &#8211; Cut-out, Cipher, Monster, Spy","author":"DrClaireH","date":"01 May 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"CONTENT RATING: universal Did Shakespeare really write, well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five century old con? Part 3 of this slowburn mini-series looks at our first three possible alternatives and weighs up the evidence. Below you will find data, audio credits, further reading, and a transcript\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":832,"url":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2021\/06\/01\/case-s02e06-slowburn-shakespeare-part-4-of-6-rich-man-poor-man-shakespearean-guy\/","url_meta":{"origin":1847,"position":4},"title":"Case S02E06 &#8211; Slowburn Shakespeare, part 4 of 6 &#8211; Rich Man, Poor Man, Shakespearean Guy","author":"DrClaireH","date":"01 June 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"CONTENT RATING: universal Did Shakespeare really write, well, Shakespeare? Or is the Swan of Avon a five century old con? Part 4 of this slowburn mini-series looks at our last two possible contenders and weighs up the evidence. Below you will find data, audio credits, further reading, and a transcript\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":59,"url":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/2018\/11\/01\/case-notes-s01e00-welcome-waffle\/","url_meta":{"origin":1847,"position":5},"title":"Case notes: S01E00 &#8211; Welcome waffle","author":"DrClaireH","date":"01 November 2018","format":false,"excerpt":"CONTENT RATING:\u00a0UNIVERSAL Welcome to en clair. Rather than including extended waffly intros on every episode saying the same sorts of things over and over, I've put it all in this one podcast, one time. This prelude to the series answers questions like: How do I subscribe to the en clair\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]}],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1847","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/77"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1847"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1847\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1848,"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1847\/revisions\/1848"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1847"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1847"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wp.lancs.ac.uk\/enclair\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1847"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}