- Mark Anderson (writer)
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This article is about the American author. For other uses, see Mark Anderson (disambiguation).
Mark Anderson (born August 13, 1967) is a journalist and author based in western Massachusetts. He has written for Harper's, The Boston Globe, Wired, Science, and the Rolling Stone and is a regular contributor to New Scientist and Wired News.[1]
Anderson is a proponent of the Oxfordian theory that the Elizabethan court poet-playwright Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford wrote the works conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare. His book, "Shakespeare" By Another Name (Gotham Books, 2005), is the first Oxfordian literary biography — connecting de Vere's life and times to Shakespeare's plays and poems.
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Shakespeare authorship question (History) A series on alternate-authorship theories for the works of William Shakespeare Theories Candidates Supporters - Joseph C. Hart
- Delia Bacon
- Orville Ward Owen
- James Wilde, 1st Baron Penzance
- George Greenwood
- Mark Twain
- Abel Lefranc
- J. Thomas Looney
- Alden Brooks
- Charlton Greenwood Ogburn
- Calvin Hoffman
- Charlton Ogburn
- Roger Stritmatter
- Mark Anderson
- Roland Emmerich
- John Orloff
- Bertram Fields
Categories:- Oxfordian theory of Shakespearean authorship
- 1967 births
- Living people
- American biographers
- People from Northampton, Massachusetts
- American non-fiction writer stubs
- American journalist, 1960s birth stubs
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