fbpx
Wikipedia

J. Thomas Looney

John Thomas Looney (luni) (14 August 1870 – 17 January 1944) was an English school teacher who is notable for having originated the Oxfordian theory, which claims that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (1550–1604) was the true author of Shakespeare's plays.

J. Thomas Looney
Looney at around the time he wrote Shakespeare Identified
Born
John Thomas Looney

(1870-08-14)14 August 1870
South Shields, England
Died17 January 1944(1944-01-17) (aged 73)
Swadlincote, England
NationalityEnglish
Occupation(s)Comtean; schoolteacher; writer
Years active1899–1944
Notable workShakespeare Identified

Looney came from a Methodist religious background, but later converted to the rationalistic Religion of Humanity, becoming a leader of its church in Tyneside. After the failure of the local church, Looney turned to the Shakespeare authorship question, publishing in 1920 his theory that de Vere was the author of most of the poems and plays published in Shakespeare's name. He later argued that de Vere had also written works published under the names of other poets.

Life

 
A carte-de-visite photograph of Looney as a young man c. 1890

Looney was born in South Shields to John Thomas and Annie Looney. His father had a shoe-making shop at 91 West Holborn in the centre of the town.[1] Both his parents were Methodists. His family came from the Isle of Man and claimed descent from the Earls of Derby.[2] He grew up in a strong evangelical environment, and determined to become a minister at the age of 16. While studying at the Chester Diocesan College, he lost his faith. He later embraced the theories of the positivist philosopher Auguste Comte, becoming a proponent of the Comtean "Religion of Humanity" and a leader in the short-lived Church of Humanity, an independent British branch of the religion, in which he pioneered outdoor preaching. The Church of Humanity gave special prominence to Shakespeare, naming a month after him in the Positivist calendar, and placing a bust of him in its place of worship.[3]

Looney worked as a school teacher in Gateshead. He is listed in Ward's Directory for 1899–1900 as a teacher living at 119 Rodsley Avenue, Gateshead. He later resided at 15 Laburnum Gardens, Low Fell.

After the failure of the Comtean church, Looney devoted himself to research into the authorship of Shakespeare's plays. He developed his theory during World War I,[4] depositing his claim to priority in a sealed document at the British Museum in 1918. In 1920 he published his work, whose short title is Shakespeare Identified, through Cecil Palmer in London. Looney, who resisted his publisher's suggestion that he use a pseudonym,[5] argued that the real author of Shakespeare's plays was Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, who fitted Looney's deductions that Shakespeare was, among much else, a nobleman of Lancastrian sympathies, with a fondness for Italy and a leaning towards Catholicism. Looney believed his argument followed the systematic methods prescribed by Positivism.[2]

In 1922 he joined with George Greenwood to establish The Shakespeare Fellowship, the organisation which subsequently carried forward public discussion of the authorship question up to the 1940s. Looney acquired a number of followers and supporters, most notably Sigmund Freud, who read Looney's book in 1923. Even at the end of his life, in 1939, Freud repeats his view in the final revision of An Outline of Psychoanalysis.

Two of his followers, Percy Allen and B. M. Ward, developed the Prince Tudor theory, which claimed that Oxford and Queen Elizabeth I were lovers and had a son together. Looney was strongly opposed to the theory, writing that it was "extravagant & improbable" and "likely to bring the whole cause into ridicule."[2][6]

Looney was a member of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne after 1911 and paid handsome tribute to the library; its unique system of operation, he said, "ensured an ease and rapidity of work which would be impossible in any other institution in the country". Looney presented the "Lit and Phil" with his edition of Edward de Vere's poems in December 1927.

He died at Swadlincote, near Burton-on-Trent, where he lodged after being forced to abandon his home in Gateshead because of the heavy German bombing of the area. He was survived by his daughters Evelyn and Gladys. Evelyn had a son who was given the middle name of De Vere.

Theory

 
Looney's Shakespeare Identified (1920) began the modern Oxfordian movement and made Oxford the most popular anti-Stratfordian candidate.

Looney's book begins by outlining many of the familiar anti-Stratfordian arguments about Shakespeare of Stratford's supposedly poor education and unpoetic personality. He also criticises the methods adopted by many previous anti-Stratfordians, especially the Baconian tendency to search for ciphers. Looney considers it unlikely that an author who wished to conceal his identity would leave such messages. He then goes on to identify the influence of Frank Harris's book The Man Shakespeare, which uses the plays to find evidence of Shakespeare's beliefs and interests. Looney states that it is possible to use this method to identify the type of person who must have written the works. He considered that lower class characters were portrayed as buffoons and that the author had no sympathy for the middle-classes. He was, however, dedicated to old-fashioned feudal ideals of nobility and service. He also believed in a highly structured, dutiful and ordered society.

For Looney the plays expressed a distinct political vision that combined elements of feudalism and modern scepticism towards traditional religion. He also believed that events and characters in the plays must correspond to the life of the author. Studying the biographies of Elizabethan aristocrats, he became convinced that Edward de Vere's career and personal experience could be mapped onto the action of the plays. Since de Vere died in 1604, many years before a number of Shakespeare's works appeared, Looney argued that there is an abrupt change in publication history and in the style of plays apparently written after 1604. Unusually, Looney argued that The Tempest was not the work of Oxford/Shakespeare, but of another author. It had been mistakenly added to the canon. He argued that its style and the "dreary negativism" it promoted were inconsistent with Shakespeare's "essentially positivist" soul, and so could not have been written by Oxford. He also suggested that the evidence of other writers' hands in late plays such as Pericles, Prince of Tyre implied that the author had died, leaving them unfinished. Such works were completed and published by others, as were the sonnets, the dedication page of which implied to Looney that the author was deceased.

Looney expanded his views in later publications, especially his 1921 edition of de Vere's poetry. Looney suggested that de Vere was also responsible for some of the literary works published under the names of Arthur Golding, Anthony Munday and John Lyly.[2]

Reception and assessments

Looney's book started a whole new avenue of speculation and has many followers today. In general, alternative authorship theories are dismissed by all but a few English professors and Shakespeare scholars, who accept the historical attribution to Shakespeare of Stratford.[7]

Early reviewers were less than kind. The reviewer for The Outlook dismissed the book after reading but a few chapters, writing that it appeared "to have all the paraphernalia of scholarship but little of its critical spirit" with "sweeping suppositions" based on little evidence.[8]

In The Times Literary Supplement review, A. W. Pollard praised the author for his honesty in admitting to his ignorance of Early Modern poetry and drama, to which he attributes Looney's methods and conclusions. He calls the book "a sad waste of print and paper" and writes that Looney's arguments for Oxford are much more strained and incredulous than those for Shakespeare, and also points out some glaring lapses of logic. About Looney's declaration that The Tempest was not written by the same author as the rest of the Shakespearean canon, he writes:

Having begun, on the usual "Baconian" lines, by insisting that "there was subterfuge in the manner of publishing the First Folio edition"—which implies, if it implies anything, that the publishers were aware of the true authorship—he ends by maintaining that the play to which they assigned the place of honour was by someone else. To be suspicious about gnats and swallow camels seems the inevitable beginning and end of all these identifications of Shakespeare; but Mr. Looney exemplifies the process with a frankness all his own.[9]

In a review of Looney's Poems of Edward de Vere Seventeenth Earl of Oxford (1921) in the introduction to his edition of The Paradise of Dainty Devices (1927), Hyder Edwards Rollins says that Looney reveals little familiarity with poetical miscellanies or Elizabethan publishing conditions. He writes that "The verbal parallels between Oxford's Paradise poems and Shakespeare's works which Mr. Looney painstakingly amasses are, on the whole, mere commonplaces, often straight-out proverbs, that could be vastly increased in bulk by a person familiar with Elizabethan poetry. They prove nothing except that Shakespeare and Oxford, like all other Elizabethans, indulged in the use of fashionable commonplaces and figures."[10]

According to Steven May, who produced the standard edition of Edward de Vere's poetry, "[t]he motifs and stylistic traits that Looney and his followers have claimed through the years to be unique to the verse of both the Earl of Oxford and Shakespeare are in fact commonplaces of Elizabethan poetry employed by many other contemporary writers. The Oxfordians have failed to establish any meaningful connection between Oxford's verse and Shakespeare's. Stripped of this argument, the Earl is no more likely to have written Shakespeare's works than any other Elizabethan poet."[11]

By contrast, Oxfordians Warren Hope and Kim Holston, in recounting Looney's methodology, say that "[h]aving found someone who met all the conditions he had originally established, Looney devotes a chapter to a comparison of Oxford's verse with the early work of Shakespeare, a tour de force of literary and historical analysis which in some ways anticipates the procedures of the 'new criticism.'"[12] David Chandler notes that Looney’s psychological method of discovering the true author was more congruent to the traditions of Romantic criticism as exemplified by Edward Dowden's attempt to discover the personality of the author by gleaning clues from the works in his Shakspere (1875).

Oxfordianism, from the start, assumed something similar.… In the cultural situation of the early twentieth century, Looney is quite understandable. He took the case against the Stratford man, put forward by the Baconians and widely accepted, and combined its conclusions with the post-Dowden desire to read the plays as representing an intimate, credible, psycho-drama.

He goes on to say that Oxfordism's principles—late expressions of the prevailing critical fashions of their times—were outdated by changing critical scholarship, and that Oxfordians must find some other way to relate to contemporary scholarship if they expect the theory to be taken seriously outside of Oxfordian circles.

Oxfordianism's premises were soon challenged by the emergence of "impersonal" and formalist criticisms. … Looney's theoretical assumptions were … becoming obsolete in 1920, and the following half century saw a more and more determined turn away from biographical criticism …. [Oxfordians'] work, indeed, seems to have paid no attention to changes in the academic approach to Shakespeare (and other English literature) since 1920. … By contrast, a reiterated claim of Oxfordian literature has been that the case is already, unarguably, complete. … this is akin to the claims made for religious texts…. Reading Oxfordian scholarship one often encounters a slippery area in which it is unclear whether Oxford's authorship of the plays is being argued for, or simply assumed.

... Looney's conclusions cannot be proved true, and believing them requires some degree of "faith." Put more simply, Looney made an argument, however much some might like to believe that he merely announced a discovery. … That argument needs to be updated, if it is to stimulate serious academic interest … The biographical approach to literature now needs to be theoretically justified before many of the claims for De Vere's authorship of the plays are pressed further. Oxfordians have so far shown an unfortunate reluctance to question how much they work with post-"Romantic" assumptions about authorship. … they need to show that such ideas enjoyed a currency in the late sixteenth century before devoting much attention to the specific case for alleged relationship between De Vere and the Shakespearean corpus. If this is not possible … then at least a much broader case needs to be constructed for the autobiographical nature of dramatic writing at that time.[13]

Publications

  • Looney, J. Thomas. "Shakespeare" identified in Edward De Vere, the seventeenth earl of Oxford. London: C. Palmer, New York: Frederick A. Stokes Co. (1920)
  • Looney, J. Thomas, ed. The poems of Edward De Vere, seventeenth earl of Oxford. London: C. Palmer (1921)

References

  1. ^ Burgess Rolls 1862–1874, South Shields, Joseph Lackland, 1874.
  2. ^ a b c d Shapiro, James (2010) Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare? UK edition: Faber and Faber ISBN 978-0-571-23576-6 (US edition: Simon & Schuster ISBN 978-1-4165-4162-2), pp. 189–206.
  3. ^ Shapiro, James (4 November 2011). "Shakespeare – a fraud? Anonymous is ridiculous". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 April 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  5. ^ Schoenbaum, S. (1991), Shakespeare's Lives, 2nd ed., Clarendon, p. 430.
  6. ^ Paul, Christopher. "A new letter by J. T. Looney brought to light", Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter, 43: 3, pp. 8–9.
  7. ^ Niederkorn, William S. "The Shakespeare Code, and Other Fanciful Ideas from the Traditional Camp", New York Times, 30 August 2005: "The traditional theory that Shakespeare was Shakespeare has the passive to active acceptance of the vast majority of English professors and scholars, but it also has had its skeptics, including major authors, independent scholars, lawyers, Supreme Court justices, academics and even prominent Shakespearean actors. Those who see a likelihood that someone other than Shakespeare wrote the plays and poems attributed to him have grown from a handful to a thriving community with its own publications, organizations, lively online discussion groups and annual conferences."
  8. ^ "The New Books", The Outlook, 4 August 1920, p. 615.
  9. ^ Pollard, A.W. "Another 'Identification' of Shakespeare". The Times Literary Supplement. 4 March 1920, p. 129.
  10. ^ Rollins, Hyder Edwards, ed. The Paradise of Dainty Devices: 1576–1606 (1927) Cambridge: Harvard University Press, pp. lix–lx.
  11. ^ May, Steven W. "The Seventeenth Earl of Oxford as poet and playwright", in "Symposium: Who wrote Shakespeare? An evidentiary puzzle", Tennessee Law Review, Fall (2004) 221.
  12. ^ Hope, Warren; Kim, Holston (2009) [1992], "7", The Shakespeare Controversy: An Analysis of the Authorship Theories (2nd ed.), McFarland, p. 79, ISBN 9780786439171
  13. ^ Chandler, David. . Archived from the original on 6 May 2006. Retrieved 11 September 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) in Elizabethan Review (1991).

Bibliography

  • Jonathan Bate, "The genius of Shakespeare", Oxford University Press US, 1998, ISBN 0-19-512823-0, p. 68
  • William F. and Elizabeth S. Friedman, "The Shakspearean Ciphers Examined", Cambridge University Press, 1957, p. 7
  • Russ McDonald, "Shakespeare: an anthology of criticism and theory, 1945–2000", Wiley-Blackwell, 2004, ISBN 0-631-23488-8, pp. 4–8
  • Samuel Schoenbaum, "Shakespeare's lives", Clarendon Press, 1970, pp. 597–598
  • Richard F. Whalen, "Shakespeare – who was he?: the Oxford challenge to the Bard of Avon", Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994, ISBN 0-275-94850-1, pp. 68–69
  • Bill Bryson, Shakespeare: The World as Stage, Atlas Books, an imprint of Harper Collins Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-06-074022-1, pp. 188–191

External links

  • Toronto Star review of Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?
  • Works by or about J. Thomas Looney at Internet Archive
  • Works by J. Thomas Looney at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

thomas, looney, john, thomas, looney, luni, august, 1870, january, 1944, english, school, teacher, notable, having, originated, oxfordian, theory, which, claims, that, edward, vere, 17th, earl, oxford, 1550, 1604, true, author, shakespeare, plays, looney, arou. John Thomas Looney luni 14 August 1870 17 January 1944 was an English school teacher who is notable for having originated the Oxfordian theory which claims that Edward de Vere 17th Earl of Oxford 1550 1604 was the true author of Shakespeare s plays J Thomas LooneyLooney at around the time he wrote Shakespeare IdentifiedBornJohn Thomas Looney 1870 08 14 14 August 1870South Shields EnglandDied17 January 1944 1944 01 17 aged 73 Swadlincote EnglandNationalityEnglishOccupation s Comtean schoolteacher writerYears active1899 1944Notable workShakespeare IdentifiedLooney came from a Methodist religious background but later converted to the rationalistic Religion of Humanity becoming a leader of its church in Tyneside After the failure of the local church Looney turned to the Shakespeare authorship question publishing in 1920 his theory that de Vere was the author of most of the poems and plays published in Shakespeare s name He later argued that de Vere had also written works published under the names of other poets Contents 1 Life 2 Theory 3 Reception and assessments 4 Publications 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksLife Edit A carte de visite photograph of Looney as a young man c 1890 Looney was born in South Shields to John Thomas and Annie Looney His father had a shoe making shop at 91 West Holborn in the centre of the town 1 Both his parents were Methodists His family came from the Isle of Man and claimed descent from the Earls of Derby 2 He grew up in a strong evangelical environment and determined to become a minister at the age of 16 While studying at the Chester Diocesan College he lost his faith He later embraced the theories of the positivist philosopher Auguste Comte becoming a proponent of the Comtean Religion of Humanity and a leader in the short lived Church of Humanity an independent British branch of the religion in which he pioneered outdoor preaching The Church of Humanity gave special prominence to Shakespeare naming a month after him in the Positivist calendar and placing a bust of him in its place of worship 3 Looney worked as a school teacher in Gateshead He is listed in Ward s Directory for 1899 1900 as a teacher living at 119 Rodsley Avenue Gateshead He later resided at 15 Laburnum Gardens Low Fell After the failure of the Comtean church Looney devoted himself to research into the authorship of Shakespeare s plays He developed his theory during World War I 4 depositing his claim to priority in a sealed document at the British Museum in 1918 In 1920 he published his work whose short title is Shakespeare Identified through Cecil Palmer in London Looney who resisted his publisher s suggestion that he use a pseudonym 5 argued that the real author of Shakespeare s plays was Edward de Vere Earl of Oxford who fitted Looney s deductions that Shakespeare was among much else a nobleman of Lancastrian sympathies with a fondness for Italy and a leaning towards Catholicism Looney believed his argument followed the systematic methods prescribed by Positivism 2 In 1922 he joined with George Greenwood to establish The Shakespeare Fellowship the organisation which subsequently carried forward public discussion of the authorship question up to the 1940s Looney acquired a number of followers and supporters most notably Sigmund Freud who read Looney s book in 1923 Even at the end of his life in 1939 Freud repeats his view in the final revision of An Outline of Psychoanalysis Two of his followers Percy Allen and B M Ward developed the Prince Tudor theory which claimed that Oxford and Queen Elizabeth I were lovers and had a son together Looney was strongly opposed to the theory writing that it was extravagant amp improbable and likely to bring the whole cause into ridicule 2 6 Looney was a member of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne after 1911 and paid handsome tribute to the library its unique system of operation he said ensured an ease and rapidity of work which would be impossible in any other institution in the country Looney presented the Lit and Phil with his edition of Edward de Vere s poems in December 1927 He died at Swadlincote near Burton on Trent where he lodged after being forced to abandon his home in Gateshead because of the heavy German bombing of the area He was survived by his daughters Evelyn and Gladys Evelyn had a son who was given the middle name of De Vere Theory Edit Looney s Shakespeare Identified 1920 began the modern Oxfordian movement and made Oxford the most popular anti Stratfordian candidate Looney s book begins by outlining many of the familiar anti Stratfordian arguments about Shakespeare of Stratford s supposedly poor education and unpoetic personality He also criticises the methods adopted by many previous anti Stratfordians especially the Baconian tendency to search for ciphers Looney considers it unlikely that an author who wished to conceal his identity would leave such messages He then goes on to identify the influence of Frank Harris s book The Man Shakespeare which uses the plays to find evidence of Shakespeare s beliefs and interests Looney states that it is possible to use this method to identify the type of person who must have written the works He considered that lower class characters were portrayed as buffoons and that the author had no sympathy for the middle classes He was however dedicated to old fashioned feudal ideals of nobility and service He also believed in a highly structured dutiful and ordered society For Looney the plays expressed a distinct political vision that combined elements of feudalism and modern scepticism towards traditional religion He also believed that events and characters in the plays must correspond to the life of the author Studying the biographies of Elizabethan aristocrats he became convinced that Edward de Vere s career and personal experience could be mapped onto the action of the plays Since de Vere died in 1604 many years before a number of Shakespeare s works appeared Looney argued that there is an abrupt change in publication history and in the style of plays apparently written after 1604 Unusually Looney argued that The Tempest was not the work of Oxford Shakespeare but of another author It had been mistakenly added to the canon He argued that its style and the dreary negativism it promoted were inconsistent with Shakespeare s essentially positivist soul and so could not have been written by Oxford He also suggested that the evidence of other writers hands in late plays such as Pericles Prince of Tyre implied that the author had died leaving them unfinished Such works were completed and published by others as were the sonnets the dedication page of which implied to Looney that the author was deceased Looney expanded his views in later publications especially his 1921 edition of de Vere s poetry Looney suggested that de Vere was also responsible for some of the literary works published under the names of Arthur Golding Anthony Munday and John Lyly 2 Reception and assessments EditLooney s book started a whole new avenue of speculation and has many followers today In general alternative authorship theories are dismissed by all but a few English professors and Shakespeare scholars who accept the historical attribution to Shakespeare of Stratford 7 Early reviewers were less than kind The reviewer for The Outlook dismissed the book after reading but a few chapters writing that it appeared to have all the paraphernalia of scholarship but little of its critical spirit with sweeping suppositions based on little evidence 8 In The Times Literary Supplement review A W Pollard praised the author for his honesty in admitting to his ignorance of Early Modern poetry and drama to which he attributes Looney s methods and conclusions He calls the book a sad waste of print and paper and writes that Looney s arguments for Oxford are much more strained and incredulous than those for Shakespeare and also points out some glaring lapses of logic About Looney s declaration that The Tempest was not written by the same author as the rest of the Shakespearean canon he writes Having begun on the usual Baconian lines by insisting that there was subterfuge in the manner of publishing the First Folio edition which implies if it implies anything that the publishers were aware of the true authorship he ends by maintaining that the play to which they assigned the place of honour was by someone else To be suspicious about gnats and swallow camels seems the inevitable beginning and end of all these identifications of Shakespeare but Mr Looney exemplifies the process with a frankness all his own 9 In a review of Looney s Poems of Edward de Vere Seventeenth Earl of Oxford 1921 in the introduction to his edition of The Paradise of Dainty Devices 1927 Hyder Edwards Rollins says that Looney reveals little familiarity with poetical miscellanies or Elizabethan publishing conditions He writes that The verbal parallels between Oxford s Paradise poems and Shakespeare s works which Mr Looney painstakingly amasses are on the whole mere commonplaces often straight out proverbs that could be vastly increased in bulk by a person familiar with Elizabethan poetry They prove nothing except that Shakespeare and Oxford like all other Elizabethans indulged in the use of fashionable commonplaces and figures 10 According to Steven May who produced the standard edition of Edward de Vere s poetry t he motifs and stylistic traits that Looney and his followers have claimed through the years to be unique to the verse of both the Earl of Oxford and Shakespeare are in fact commonplaces of Elizabethan poetry employed by many other contemporary writers The Oxfordians have failed to establish any meaningful connection between Oxford s verse and Shakespeare s Stripped of this argument the Earl is no more likely to have written Shakespeare s works than any other Elizabethan poet 11 By contrast Oxfordians Warren Hope and Kim Holston in recounting Looney s methodology say that h aving found someone who met all the conditions he had originally established Looney devotes a chapter to a comparison of Oxford s verse with the early work of Shakespeare a tour de force of literary and historical analysis which in some ways anticipates the procedures of the new criticism 12 David Chandler notes that Looney s psychological method of discovering the true author was more congruent to the traditions of Romantic criticism as exemplified by Edward Dowden s attempt to discover the personality of the author by gleaning clues from the works in his Shakspere 1875 Oxfordianism from the start assumed something similar In the cultural situation of the early twentieth century Looney is quite understandable He took the case against the Stratford man put forward by the Baconians and widely accepted and combined its conclusions with the post Dowden desire to read the plays as representing an intimate credible psycho drama He goes on to say that Oxfordism s principles late expressions of the prevailing critical fashions of their times were outdated by changing critical scholarship and that Oxfordians must find some other way to relate to contemporary scholarship if they expect the theory to be taken seriously outside of Oxfordian circles Oxfordianism s premises were soon challenged by the emergence of impersonal and formalist criticisms Looney s theoretical assumptions were becoming obsolete in 1920 and the following half century saw a more and more determined turn away from biographical criticism Oxfordians work indeed seems to have paid no attention to changes in the academic approach to Shakespeare and other English literature since 1920 By contrast a reiterated claim of Oxfordian literature has been that the case is already unarguably complete this is akin to the claims made for religious texts Reading Oxfordian scholarship one often encounters a slippery area in which it is unclear whether Oxford s authorship of the plays is being argued for or simply assumed Looney s conclusions cannot be proved true and believing them requires some degree of faith Put more simply Looney made an argument however much some might like to believe that he merely announced a discovery That argument needs to be updated if it is to stimulate serious academic interest The biographical approach to literature now needs to be theoretically justified before many of the claims for De Vere s authorship of the plays are pressed further Oxfordians have so far shown an unfortunate reluctance to question how much they work with post Romantic assumptions about authorship they need to show that such ideas enjoyed a currency in the late sixteenth century before devoting much attention to the specific case for alleged relationship between De Vere and the Shakespearean corpus If this is not possible then at least a much broader case needs to be constructed for the autobiographical nature of dramatic writing at that time 13 Publications EditLooney J Thomas Shakespeare identified in Edward De Vere the seventeenth earl of Oxford London C Palmer New York Frederick A Stokes Co 1920 Looney J Thomas ed The poems of Edward De Vere seventeenth earl of Oxford London C Palmer 1921 References Edit Burgess Rolls 1862 1874 South Shields Joseph Lackland 1874 a b c d Shapiro James 2010 Contested Will Who Wrote Shakespeare UK edition Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 23576 6 US edition Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 4162 2 pp 189 206 Shapiro James 4 November 2011 Shakespeare a fraud Anonymous is ridiculous The Guardian Retrieved 11 November 2011 Debate over Shakespeare s plays explored by Northumbria University lecturer David Whetstone the Journal Archived from the original on 25 April 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2018 Schoenbaum S 1991 Shakespeare s Lives 2nd ed Clarendon p 430 Paul Christopher A new letter by J T Looney brought to light Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter 43 3 pp 8 9 Niederkorn William S The Shakespeare Code and Other Fanciful Ideas from the Traditional Camp New York Times 30 August 2005 The traditional theory that Shakespeare was Shakespeare has the passive to active acceptance of the vast majority of English professors and scholars but it also has had its skeptics including major authors independent scholars lawyers Supreme Court justices academics and even prominent Shakespearean actors Those who see a likelihood that someone other than Shakespeare wrote the plays and poems attributed to him have grown from a handful to a thriving community with its own publications organizations lively online discussion groups and annual conferences The New Books The Outlook 4 August 1920 p 615 Pollard A W Another Identification of Shakespeare The Times Literary Supplement 4 March 1920 p 129 Rollins Hyder Edwards ed The Paradise of Dainty Devices 1576 1606 1927 Cambridge Harvard University Press pp lix lx May Steven W The Seventeenth Earl of Oxford as poet and playwright in Symposium Who wrote Shakespeare An evidentiary puzzle Tennessee Law Review Fall 2004 221 Hope Warren Kim Holston 2009 1992 7 The Shakespeare Controversy An Analysis of the Authorship Theories 2nd ed McFarland p 79 ISBN 9780786439171 Chandler David Historicizing Difference Anti Stratfordians and the Academy Archived from the original on 6 May 2006 Retrieved 11 September 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link in Elizabethan Review 1991 Bibliography EditJonathan Bate The genius of Shakespeare Oxford University Press US 1998 ISBN 0 19 512823 0 p 68 William F and Elizabeth S Friedman The Shakspearean Ciphers Examined Cambridge University Press 1957 p 7 Russ McDonald Shakespeare an anthology of criticism and theory 1945 2000 Wiley Blackwell 2004 ISBN 0 631 23488 8 pp 4 8 Samuel Schoenbaum Shakespeare s lives Clarendon Press 1970 pp 597 598 Richard F Whalen Shakespeare who was he the Oxford challenge to the Bard of Avon Greenwood Publishing Group 1994 ISBN 0 275 94850 1 pp 68 69 Bill Bryson Shakespeare The World as Stage Atlas Books an imprint of Harper Collins Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 06 074022 1 pp 188 191External links EditToronto Star review of Contested Will Who Wrote Shakespeare Works by or about J Thomas Looney at Internet Archive Works by J Thomas Looney at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J Thomas Looney amp oldid 1137149652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.