![]() TOTAL entry content must not be more than three minutes in length, including any sound effects, music, images, film clips, title or credit rolls. ![]() Subject matter must address the Shakespeare authorship question in an innovative and original way that supports reasonable doubt about who wrote the works of Shakespeare and encourages its discussion. No purchase is necessary. This Contest is void where prohibited by law. Members of the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Board of Trustees, Outreach Committee, or Video Contest Subcommittee, persons who have received any form of compensation, including grants, from the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship since January 1, 2022, and the parents, spouses, siblings, and children of any of the aforementioned persons are ineligible to enter. Persons who submitted entries to previous years’ “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Video Contests are eligible to enter this year’s contest, provided that their submitted videos are, in the opinion of the judges, substantially different from their previous entries. dollars will be presented or mailed to winners promptly. Winners will be notified by email and announced at the Annual Conference in Ashland, OR, September 22–25, 2022. The contest is open for submissions on March 22, 2022.ĭEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS Jat 11:59 P.M., EASTERN TIME.įinalists will be announced on Augand their videos will be available for public viewing and online voting on the SOF website from Augto September 20, 2022. You may consult any source, online or off, it’s up to you - whatever you need to do to make an entertaining video about “Who Wrote Shakespeare?” Contest finalists in previous years may be viewed here. In that menu you can also see a selection of Authorship Videos and past SOF Conference Videos (posted on the SOF YouTube channel as well). From there you can check out “A Dozen Reasons to Doubt,” ten key points supporting the Oxfordian theory, seven FAQs, and a hilarious video about Mark Twain’s book Is Shakespeare Dead? You can also check out links to various articles under “Exploring Authorship” in the “Discover Shakespeare” menu on the home page. Vote by September 20!ĭon’t know much about the authorship question? Visit the Authorship 101 page on the SOF website home page. This year’s annual contest will award three $1,000 prizes – one each to the top videos of the three topic categories.ĭeadline for submissions was July 22, 2022. Influences obscured in the written and visual language of the First Folio, such as coded-references to events and individuals past and present, content abstracted from rare works, Roman triumphal forms, Masonic allusions, heraldic symbols, cloistered letters, the masthead designs, and the curious portrait of the author. The promoters, colleagues, friends, grand possessors, collectors, writers of encomiums and dedications, dedicatees, secretaries and editors of the author’s work. Represented by the machinery and mechanics of the 17 th century book trade in service to the English realm such as paper-makers, designers, engravers, type-setters, printers, and book-marketers. ![]() To honor the 400 th Anniversary of The First Folio’s creation, all of our members, and those who have yet to officially join our organization, are invited to focus their video lenses on any subject from one of the three following topic areas concerning the active, influential, and sometimes obscure communities behind the publication and imagery of the most important work in the English language. The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship is a working community that not only advocates for the Earl of Oxford as true author, but promotes continued appreciation, as well as in-depth study of Shakespeare’s plays. “Creating the First Folio: Foreground, Background, Underground” Brief Chronicles & Other Past Journals Expand.454 leaves, the first 9 preliminary matter, the Comedies 152, the Historiesġ32, Troylus and Cressida 15, the Tragedies 146. New South Wales View This Copy Owned By: State Library of New South Wales Copy Comments: Portrait in second state signed Martin Droeshout, London sculpsit. Bluestein, who then donated the Folioĭirectly to Brandeis. Rains Galleries to Thomas & Eron (a New York bookseller) for $3,800, and in Decemberġ961 Inman's Book Shop, NYC, sold it to Allan I. Richardson of Lowell, Massachusetts, in 1894. ![]() Aspley, 1623 Printer: Isaac Jaggard and Edward Blount Contents PageĬopies of this Book Brandeis University View This Copy Owned By: Brandeis University Copy Comments: The copy of the First Folio owned by Brandeis University was acquired by Georgeį. Published: London: William Jaggard, Edward Blount, L. London, printed by Isaac Jaggard and Edwardīlount, 1623. William Shakespeares Comedies, histories & tragedies, publishedĪccording to the true originall copies. View Book Book Name: First Folio Full Title: Mr. Shakespeare and the Classical Tradition. ![]()
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