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Re: Nabokov an anti-Stratfordian?/VN sighting (fwd)
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From: Neil Spence <nspence@pyrimage.com>
It may interest those following this discussion to learn that VN appears
on the Shakespeare-Oxford Society's website's "Honor Role of Skeptics",
in a special category of his own, segregated from the true doubters. The
entry on VN includes a quote from the "His name is protean" passage in
BS.
The "Honor Role of Skeptics" can be found at
http://www.shakespeare-oxford.com/skeptic.htm.
Neil Spence
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Galya Diment [SMTP:galya@u.washington.edu]
> Sent: Wednesday, February 25, 1998 2:23 PM
> To: NABOKV-L@UCSBVM.ucsb.edu
> Subject: Elizabethan Playwrights
>
> Without getting too much into the authorship controversy, wasn't it
> quite
> common for Elizabethan playwrights to belong to "lower" social
> classes?
> Marlowe, whose authorship, as far as I know, has not been disputed,
> was,
> after all, a son of a cobbler.
>
> As for "nonentities," I do not think this assessment is fair to Roman
> Jakobson.
>
> Galya Diment
It may interest those following this discussion to learn that VN appears
on the Shakespeare-Oxford Society's website's "Honor Role of Skeptics",
in a special category of his own, segregated from the true doubters. The
entry on VN includes a quote from the "His name is protean" passage in
BS.
The "Honor Role of Skeptics" can be found at
http://www.shakespeare-oxford.com/skeptic.htm.
Neil Spence
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Galya Diment [SMTP:galya@u.washington.edu]
> Sent: Wednesday, February 25, 1998 2:23 PM
> To: NABOKV-L@UCSBVM.ucsb.edu
> Subject: Elizabethan Playwrights
>
> Without getting too much into the authorship controversy, wasn't it
> quite
> common for Elizabethan playwrights to belong to "lower" social
> classes?
> Marlowe, whose authorship, as far as I know, has not been disputed,
> was,
> after all, a son of a cobbler.
>
> As for "nonentities," I do not think this assessment is fair to Roman
> Jakobson.
>
> Galya Diment