Medieval Romance and its Knowledge Economy: From Sorceresses to Scholars

Authors

Megan Leitch
University of Groningen
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5815-4385

Synopsis

In her inaugural lecture at the University of Groningen, Prof. Dr. Megan Leitch will show how late-medieval England developed romances, or tales of knights, quests, dragons and princesses, into proto-feminist narratives that deployed magic to question the politics of access to knowledge and power. Just as we work and study in knowledge economy – an economy in which education, innovation and intellectual skills are forms of human capital – so too were these medieval romances shaped by a knowledge economy: one in which knights would not achieve their goals, whether martial or marital, without the help of various knowledgeable and wise interlocutors such as merchants, sorceresses, and female servants, or handmaidens. These stories explore how women’s magic results from book-learning despite the fact that women were not allowed to attend university, using the fantastical to imagine a better future in which marginalised voices drive change and modern universities champion inclusivity and academic freedom

Design and layout: LINE UP boek en media bv | Riëtte van Zwol, Mirjam Kroondijk
Illustration cover: Alexander confronting a tribe of women, Talbot Shrewsbury book, f. 16v. British Library, Royal MS 15 E VI
Photo’s: Details of stained glass window academy building University of
Groningen, artist: Johan Dijkstra. Original photo by: Ronn Boef, CC-BY-SA-4.0

Published by University of Groningen Press
Broerstraat 4
9712 CP Groningen
https://ugp.rug.nl/

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Author Biography

Megan Leitch, University of Groningen

Megan G. Leitch is Professor and Chair of Medieval English Literature and Culture at the University of
Groningen. Before arriving in Groningen in 2024, she was Reader in English Literature at Cardiff  University in Wales, where she worked for twelve years. She holds a BA (Hons) from the University of  British Columbia (Canada), and an MPhil and PhD (2012) from the University of Cambridge. Her research  on later medieval English literature and the medieval romance genre in particular is concerned with  questions of embodiment and intertextuality. Her published monographs, edited volumes and articles  connect cultural studies with the history of the book via literature’s intersections with medicine and  science, law, and gender studies and the history of the emotions. She has been a Leverhulme Fellow; a  Visiting Fellow at St Catherine’s College, University of Oxford; Co-Editor of the journal Arthurian  Literature; and President of the International Arthurian Society British Branch.

cover inaugural lecture Megan Leitch

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Published

February 20, 2026

Keywords:

Faculteit der Letteren, Faculty of Arts, Oratie, Inaugurele Rede, Inaugural Lecture, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, University of Groningen, Megan Leitch, 2026