The article investigates whether Shakespeare used Warwickshire, Cotswold or Midlands dialect, focusing on the sources of recent claims by Bate, Kathman and Wood, most of which derive from early dialect dictionaries compiled by 18th and 19th century antiquarians. It determines that all of these claims – frequently used as a defence against the Shakespeare authorship question – fall into four categories: those based on errors of fact, well-known or widely-used words, poetic inventions, and those derived through circular reasoning. Two problems are identified. Firstly, the source texts on which these dialect claims rest were written two- to three-hundred years after the plays, by which time language use would not only have evolved, but would h...
The paper looks at the problems in conducting non-traditional authorship attribution studies on the ...
Background: Within the structural and grammatical bounds of a common language, all authors develop t...
The article is a brief examination of certain issues affecting the allocation of authorship in early...
The article investigates whether Shakespeare used Warwickshire, Cotswold or Midlands dialect, focusi...
Long-standing claims that Shakespeare used Warwickshire dialect words and phrases have been shown to...
Describes the dynamics of the attribution argument between Stratfordians and anti-Stratfordians, wit...
The essay presents the scholarly controversy over the correct attribution of the works by “Shakespea...
This paper considers whether the Shakespeare Authorship Question is a legitimate subject for study i...
Over the last ten years there has been a struggle within Shakespeare studies between the vast majori...
For years, people have claimed that Shakespeare had a prodigious vocabulary, and coined a great many...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha is a group of anomalous works that exist on the fringe of the conventional...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
The aim of this article is to cast some light on the ways in which Shakespeare’s reputation as a poe...
The production of playtexts in early modern England falls between two categories of artistic provena...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedited version of an article published in Critical Survey. The d...
The paper looks at the problems in conducting non-traditional authorship attribution studies on the ...
Background: Within the structural and grammatical bounds of a common language, all authors develop t...
The article is a brief examination of certain issues affecting the allocation of authorship in early...
The article investigates whether Shakespeare used Warwickshire, Cotswold or Midlands dialect, focusi...
Long-standing claims that Shakespeare used Warwickshire dialect words and phrases have been shown to...
Describes the dynamics of the attribution argument between Stratfordians and anti-Stratfordians, wit...
The essay presents the scholarly controversy over the correct attribution of the works by “Shakespea...
This paper considers whether the Shakespeare Authorship Question is a legitimate subject for study i...
Over the last ten years there has been a struggle within Shakespeare studies between the vast majori...
For years, people have claimed that Shakespeare had a prodigious vocabulary, and coined a great many...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha is a group of anomalous works that exist on the fringe of the conventional...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
The aim of this article is to cast some light on the ways in which Shakespeare’s reputation as a poe...
The production of playtexts in early modern England falls between two categories of artistic provena...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedited version of an article published in Critical Survey. The d...
The paper looks at the problems in conducting non-traditional authorship attribution studies on the ...
Background: Within the structural and grammatical bounds of a common language, all authors develop t...
The article is a brief examination of certain issues affecting the allocation of authorship in early...