History (Local) MA
Facts about History (Local)
| Qualification | MA |
|---|---|
| Duration | Full time: 1 year Part time: 2 years |
| Attendance | To be confirmed |
| Assessment | The main form of assessment is the dissertation. Course work will be assessed through essays, written assignments and presentations. |
| Course structure | |
Choose Kingston's History (Local) MA
Students studying for the History (Local) MA will be attached to the Faculty's Centre for Local History Studies. You will be able to draw on its resources and the guidance of its staff when undertaking your own local-based research projects.
The Centre was established in 1997 as a major research centre and to act as a focus for members of the local community wishing to develop their interests in local history. Research projects include the Kingston Local History Project and the Great Ormond Street Hospital Project, both of which have developed unique historical databases as a means of studying past communities.
We now also specialise in the history of healthcare and gender history.
What will you study?
The course content is designed to provide you with the academic framework you need to develop your own research interests. You will gain the research skills relevant to the study and practice of history in general and local history in particular. In particular, you will learn how historical data is compiled, analysed and assessed. You also look at how ICT can be of value to the historian.
For the dissertation you can focus your own research on either individual localities/communities or the individual themes that have shaped those localities over the past two centuries.
Many of the staff in the history department are research active. This ensures they are in touch with the latest thinking and bring best practice to your studies.
Course structure
Please note that this is an indicative list of modules and is not intended as a definitive list.
Core modules
- Archives, Records and the Historian
- Great Historical Debates
- History Dissertation
- Introduction to your History Specialism
- Literature Review
- Research Skills and Methods in Social Sciences
- The Digital Historian
Optional modules
- Britain's Role in the World since 1900
- British Society since the 1960s
- Contemporary European Protest Movements
- Fascism and the Post War Extreme Right
- Special Topic, Gender and Power: Britain and France 1500-1800
- The Politics of Mass Murder
- Themes in 20th Century USA History
- US Foreign Policy in an Age of Terror
- Women in Britain and America, 1840-1950
- Europe in the Contemporary World
- Postgraduate History Worklink
- Gender and Politics
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Related courses
Related to this course:
- History (Early Modern) MA
- History (European) MA
- History (International) MA
- History (Modern British) MA
- History (Modern) MA
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Mike Baker: "The MA has not only improved my research skills, but has also given me a lot of pleasure"
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