Laura AsheFRHistS[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]
Ashe's early research focused on the multilingual literary environment of England after the Norman Conquest.[8] 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.[9]
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).[9]
Ashe has served as an editor of the journal New Medieval Literatures, published by Boydell & Brewer, since 2016.[10]
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.[20]
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.[21]
Ashe, Laura (2016), Richard II: a brittle glory, Penguin Monarchs, Allen Lane, an imprint of Penguin Books, ISBN978-0141979892
Ashe, Laura (2015), Early Fiction in England: from Geoffrey of Monmouth to Chaucer, Penguin Classics, Penguin Books, ISBN978-0141392875
Ashe, Laura; Patterson, Ian (2014), War and Literature, Essays and Studies, v. 67, Boydell & Brewer Ltd, ISBN978-1843843818
Ashe, Laura (2011), Fiction and History in England, 1066-1200, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature, 68, Cambridge University Press, ISBN978-0521174367
Ashe, Laura; Djordjević, Ivana; Weiss, Judith (2010), The Exploitations of Medieval Romance, Studies in Medieval Romance, Cambridge University Press, ISBN978-1846157882
^"Recognition of Distinction 2018"(pdf). Oxford University Gazette. 149 (5315). University of Oxford: 14. 27 September 2018. Retrieved 30 September 2018.