
Anne Shakespeare’s feminine voice (Part 1)
While it is difficult to pin Anne Shakespeare down to a specific (20th-21st century) feminine movement, what is obvious is that Anne is a humanist.

Anne Shakespeare and the Turning Point
The death of Hamnet (Anne Shakespeare's son) must have affected Anne perhaps more than it did William, because it was Anne who had been at home during his lifetime while William had spent most of it in London.

Anne Shakespeare's Feminism is humanism
Anne Shakespeare's feminism has its roots in Renaissance humanism, that was at its most fundamental level, concerned with what it means to be human.

Anne Shakespeare: Another Digression
Last blog I started to talk about my next book which is going to look at Anne Shakespeare's core beliefs (as I see them) of love, nature, free will, and humanism (and religious beliefs). These are all filtered through Anne's feminine voice. And why not? Here we have the (possibly) greatest female writer of all time writing under the guise of her husband, William Shakespeare in order to immortalise him.