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British historian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Laura Ashe FRHistS[1] is a British historian of English medieval literature, history and culture (c. 1000–1550). She lectures in English and is a Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.[2][3]
Laura Ashe | |
---|---|
Occupation(s) | Literary scholar and academic |
Title | Professor of English Literature |
Academic background | |
Education | Leeds Girls' High School |
Alma mater | Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge Harvard University |
Academic work | |
Discipline | English studies, History |
Sub-discipline | Medieval studies, Renaissance studies |
Institutions | Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge Queen Mary University of London Worcester College, Oxford |
Ashe was educated at Leeds Girls' High School. She went on to read English at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. She spent the year after her graduation as a Kennedy Scholar at Harvard University.[4]
During her graduate studies she was appointed to a junior research fellowship at Gonville and Caius College.[5]
Prior to joining Worcester College in 2008, Ashe spent two years lecturing at Queen Mary University of London.[6]
In 2009 Ashe won a Philip Leverhulme Prize, for the international impact of her research. She was awarded the Title of Distinction of Professor of English Literature by the University of Oxford in September 2018.[7]
Ashe's early research focused on the multilingual literary environment of England after the Norman Conquest. Her first monograph, Fiction and History in England, 1066-1200 (2007), explored how romances and chronicles written in English, French and Latin bolstered ideologies of national identity and imperialism during England's first colonial forays into Ireland.[8]
More recent projects include a biography of Richard II (2016), a study of English literary history between 1000 and 1350 (2017), and an examination of the work of Geoffrey Chaucer in relation to the themes of subjectivity, recognition and ethical agency (2025).[8]
Ashe has served as an editor of the journal New Medieval Literatures, published by Boydell & Brewer, since 2016.[9]
In 2015 Ashe was the presenter for BBC Radio 3's A Cultural History of the Plague.[10] Since 2013 she has appeared as an expert panelist on BBC Radio 4's In Our Time series on more than ten occasions, discussing subjects such as the twelfth century renaissance,[11] Beowulf,[12] chivalry,[13] Le Morte d'Arthur,[14] purgatory,[15] Thomas Becket,[16] Thomas Wyatt,[17] and Gawain and the Green Knight.[18]
She contributed to Art that Made Us, an eight-part BBC Two TV series in 2022 presenting an alternate history of Britain through art and literature.[19]
Ashe appeared as an interviewee in the mockumentary series Cunk on Britain (2018) and Cunk on Earth (2022), discussing various aspects of medieval history and culture.[20]
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