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Shakespearian Authorship

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Son (one of 8 kids) of John a well documented man. Married Anne Hathaway Nov. 28, 1582. ... Bill is 18, Anne is 26...and pregnant. Greene's 'upstart crow' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Shakespearian Authorship


1
Shakespearian Authorship
  • The Debate Continues

2
Documenting Shakespeare
  • Baptized April 26, 1564suggesting he was born
    April 23.
  • Son (one of 8 kids) of John a well documented
    man.
  • Married Anne Hathaway Nov. 28, 1582. Bill is 18,
    Anne is 26and pregnant.
  • Greenes upstart crow review published 1592.
  • Shakespeares will.
  • From there, the works and Globe documents are
    plenty.

3
Kill Bill Volume 1 The 7 Arguments Against
  • The Spelling Argument
  • The Illiteracy Argument
  • The Will Argument
  • The Reputation Argument
  • The Personal Records Argument
  • The Eulogy Argument
  • The Past Tense Argument

4
The Spelling Argument
Literary References Hand- Total Printed
written Shakespeare 120 108 12 Shake-speare
21 21 0 Shakspeare 10 5 5 Shaxberd 4 0
4 Shakespere 3 0 3 Shakespear 3 1 2
Shak-speare 2 2 0 Shakspear 2 0 2
Shakspere 1 0 1 Shaksper 1 0 1 Schaksp.
1 0 1 Shakespheare 1 1 0 Shakespe 1 0
1 Shakspe 1 0 1 with first 'e' 149 (87)
131 (95) 18 (55) w/o first 'e' 22 (13) 7 (5)
15 (45)
  • William Shakespeare the great playwright and
    William Shaksper were different men. William
    Shaksper lived in Stratford. This suggests that
    William Shakespeare could not have been the man
    who came from Stratford.
  • The evidence for this is weak however and the two
    so-called personalities may arise from the
    generally poor literacy of the time.

5
The Education Argument.
  • This is based on the idea that only an aristocrat
    could have captured the essence of Royal courts,
    Italy and law (Merchant of Venice).
  • One of his best friends, Richard Field, had a
    large book collection. Field grew up on the very
    same street (Henley Street in Stratford) and
    later went on to become a bookseller and
    publisher in London. Shakespeare had access to
    these books.
  • The Stratford Free School was incorporated in
    1553, but did not record students until 1700.
  • Furthermore, his depiction of courts and
    aristocratic life were so inaccurate even by
    Elizabethan standards that they could not
    possibly be written by an aristocrat such as the
    often proposed Edward De Vere, the seventeenth
    Earl of Oxford.

6
The Illiteracy Argument.
  • There is very circumstantial evidence that
    William's father and daughter Judith could
    neither read or write (her only recorded writing
    is an X on her marriage certificate).
  • Further proof comes from anecdotal evidence that
    the few (6?) signature's of the Bard that remain
    today only show a poor scrawl, spelled
    Shakspeare, only in official documents hardly
    representative of a major literary figure.
  • There are no manuscripts of Shakespeare's plays
    (maybe three pages) in his own writing many of
    his counterparts left behind a legacy of notes
    and scrawls related to their work.

7
The Will Argument
  • Supporting this argument is the curious omission
    of any manuscripts in his will surely he would
    have bequeathed them to someone.
  • Unless they were considered property of the
    Globe. Note that his partners published the
    first Complete Works.

8
The Reputation Argument.
  • This contends that the Bard could not have
    written 37 plays and 154 sonnets for a very good
    reason he was a businessman, not a poet and
    playwright.
  • Evidence for this is the fact that he was known
    in Stratford as a businessman not a playwright. A
    monument erected in his name similarly depicted
    him holding a sack not a pen which would not
    indicate his career as a playwright.
  • However the Bard performed his plays in London
    not Stratford and given that few people truly
    traveled beyond their villages in this time, the
    playwright's reputation as a businessman might
    represent his greater visibility as a landowner
    to those who knew him in Stratford.

9
No Personal Records Argument.
  • There is no definitive record of Shakespeare of
    Stratford (1564-1616) being directly credited
    with writing the plays and sonnets credited to
    him.
  • Seven years after the Bard's death was he
    directly credited as the author of 37 plays and
    154 sonnets in the 1623 First Folio.
  • There is only proof that he co-owned The Globe
    and was part of The Lord Chamberlains men (In
    The First Folio).
  • No indication is given to suggest how often he
    acted with this troupe nor independent proof that
    he wrote the plays credited to him. Tradition
    suggests he played two minor roles including King
    Hamlets ghost but these are only tradition, not
    fact.

10
The Eulogies Argument
  • Shakespeare received none when he died in 1616,
    in Stratford.
  • Suggests he could not have been the influential
    playwright Stratfordian's claim him to be.
  • The first such memorial dedication occurred in
    the First Folio of 1623.

11
The Past Tense Argument
  • William Barksted's 1607 poem Mirrha, refers to
    Shakespeare in the past tense.
  • This suggests William must have died before this
    date, therefore he could not have written
    anything after that.
  • Stratfordian's maintain however that this
    analysis ignores Barksteds common use of the
    past tense in his poetry.

12
Kill Bill Volume 2 The Players
  • Edward DeVere, 17th Earl of Oxford
  • Sir Francis Bacon, Philosopher and Writer
  • Christopher Marlowe, Playwright
  • Sir Walter Raleigh, Explorer (with help from
    Bacon)
  • Queen Elizabeth I

13
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford
  • This contemporary of Shakespeare has been
    strongly advanced since the 1930s as the true
    author of Shakespeare's plays.
  • A well-educated and well-traveled nobleman of
    Queen Elizabeth I's court, whose life seems to
    parallel with material from the playsfor
    instance, noting similarities between Polonius of
    Hamlet and the Earl's guardian, William Cecil.
  • The Earl of Oxford apparently stopped his
    literary pursuits at an early age. The reason he
    stopped writing Unwritten rule that nobles do
    not write, they rule.
  • Theory Edward de Vere used the pen name William
    Shakespeare.
  • Problem with this theory deVere DID write and
    publish under his own nameas did other so-called
    nobles of the time.

14
Francis Bacon, Philosopher and Writer
  • Bacon proponents point toward Bacon's learning,
    his correspondences and memoirs (most notably,
    his notebook, Promus), as well as ciphers and
    other coincidences.
  • Although Bacon was an undisputed man of letters,
    his style and expression vary greatly from that
    of Shakespeare's works.
  • Bacon also produced such a voluminous output of
    his own, it's hard to conceive of him finding
    spare time enough to produce the quality output
    of work attributed to the Bard.

15
Christopher Marlowe, Playwright
  • Marlowe would be the ultimate ghost writer, as he
    was stabbed to death in a tavern brawl in 1593.
  • However, there are those that say Marlowe really
    didn't die according to some, he was actually an
    occasional spy in the employ of the Crown. This
    eventually necessitated a fake death, after which
    Marlowe went on for an undetermined number of
    years penning poetry and plays under the nom de
    plume of Shakespeare.
  • And you thought James Bond was talented. Marlowe,
    Chris Marlowe. 001. License to Quill.

16
Other Candidates
  • Sir Walter Raleigh Had plenty of time when
    between ports. Saw many lands. Was a friend of
    both Bacon and QE1.
  • Queen Elizabeth I Staunch arts supporter.
    Already criticized for no husband or child.
    Writing unbecoming of a queen? Especially
    politically charged writing?
  • Team Shakespeare A collaborative effort from
    London playwrights.

17
The DEBATE continues
  • Kill Bill?
  • Shakespeare In Love?
  • The Accuser Burden of Proof
  • The Defense Cast Doubt

18
Sources
  • Bardweb.net
  • Shakespeareauthorship.com
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