Course Description
The MLitt in Transnational, Global and Spatial History is a taught postgraduate programme run by the Institute for Transnational and Spatial History (ITSH) in the School of History.
Highlights
- This programme provides a unique introduction to the emerging field of spatial history, including the study of representations of space, landscapes, mental maps, spatial practices and topographies of memory.
- This programme promotes new transnational perspectives and ways of seeing the past through an explicit appreciation of scale in space and time.
- Students will explore approaches to the history of cities as hubs, transfers and travel, the circulation of ideas and the migration of peoples.
- Students will explore a range of approaches to the study of global trade, the development of networks, comparative history and cross-cultural encounters.
- Students will gain proficiency in powerful tools for mapping, geographic analysis and the study of social networks as well as skills in the use of non-textual sources and overcoming the challenges of translation and multi-lingual archives
Entry Requirements
A 2.1 Honours undergraduate degree in a subject-related area. If you studied your first degree outside the UK, see the international entry requirements.
The qualifications listed are indicative minimum requirements for entry. Some academic Schools will ask applicants to achieve significantly higher marks than the minimum. Obtaining the listed entry requirements will not guarantee you a place, as the University considers all aspects of every application including, where applicable, the writing sample, personal statement, and supporting documents.
Application requirements
- CV or résumé. This should include your personal details with a history of your education and employment to date.
- a personal statement
- a sample of your own, single-authored academic written work (2,000 words)
- two original signed academic references
- academic transcripts and degree certificates
Fees
For fees and funding options, please visit website to find out more
Student Destinations
History postgraduates go on to pursue careers in a range of sectors including:
- journalism
- publishing
- think tanks
- government
- law
- teaching
The Careers Centre offers one-to-one advice to all students as well as a programme of events to assist students in building their employability skills.
Module Details
Compulsory
- Global Times - Plural Spaces (1 and 2): offers a strong foundation in the major approaches to comparative and transnational history as well as the emerging field of spatial history.
Students take two additional modules.
The recommended modules are:
- Skills in Digital History: Maps and Text: leads to the acquisition and development of skills in the digital humanities and skills required for using specific historical sources. (Semester 1)
- Directed Reading in Transnational History: designed to encourage the development of skills of historical analysis through concentrated study of a topic chosen by the student prior to the dissertation. (Semester 2)
Optional
Upon request, a student may replace one or both of the recommended modules with alternative option. Most optional modules are offered in Semester 1.
Here is a sample of alternative optional modules that may be offered:
- Building Britain: The Construction and Deconstruction of Britishness since 1707: explores the concept of 'Britishness' and its construction and deconstruction, from 1707 to 2000.
- Disease and Environment (c.1500-c.2000): examines the manner in which sickness and death have shaped human history, both biologically and culturally, over the past 500 years.
- Environmental History: Nature and the Western World (1800-2000): studies environmental history over the past two centuries in an international context.
- Global Capitalism: Origins and Development from a Political
- Economy Perspective: explores some of the most fundamental economic phenomena that have shaped the modern world.
- Perceptions of Central and Eastern Europe: examines perceptions of Central and Eastern Europe which have undergone significant transformation since the emergence of modern nationalism in the mid-19th century.
- Themes in American History: examines a selection of the most important issues in the history of North America, from its foundations as European colonies onwards.
- Themes in Middle Eastern and Iranian History: looks at a variety of theoretical and disciplinary approaches, including Orientalism, as well as exploring questions of nationalism, statehood and identity.
Optional modules are subject to change each year and require a minimum number of participants to be offered; some may only allow limited numbers of students (see the University’s position on curriculum development).
Dissertation
Student dissertations will be supervised by members of the teaching staff who will advise on the choice of subject and provide guidance throughout the research process. The completed dissertation of no more than 15,000 words must be submitted by a date specified in August.
If students choose not to complete the dissertation requirement for the MLitt, there is an exit award available that allows suitably qualified candidates to receive a Postgraduate Diploma. By choosing an exit award, you will finish your degree at the end of the second semester of study and receive a PGDip instead of an MLitt.
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