Public Histories (MA)
Master
In London
Description
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Type
Master
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Location
London
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Duration
1 Year
Public history is concerned with the practice of history outside of academia in all its myriad forms and public historians come in all shapes and sizes: they are consultants, museum professionals, archivists, preservationists and curators, cultural resource managers, policy specialists and community activists, among many other roles. What they share is a commitment to making history relevant, beneficial, informative and instructive within the public sphere. The practice and significance of ‘public history’ has grown significantly in recent years, as historians become more aware of audiences beyond the academy, of the role of history in politics, of the need for their research and analysis to have an impact in the real world, and of the growing public and media interest in popular history and heritage.
Our MA Public Histories will introduce you to key aspects and issues of the practice of public history. It will provide you with the necessary theoretical and practical skills to undertake critical assessments of public history projects and interventions - as well as to create your own. Its focus on public history in practice will provide you with a wide range of examples of different types and methods of public history, from museums and material culture, to public history in the media, to the role of history in policy making. This programme aims to give you a sense of the wide range of public history, the variety of roles played by historians in public, and the importance and impact of public history in politics, culture, and society.
The programme provides relevant training for careers in media, education, museums and heritage, publishing, and policy, and it also provides rigorous training in the historical discipline suitable to prepare you for further personal or professional research, or research at MPhil/PhD level.
Facilities
Location
Start date
Start date
About this course
Graduates can pursue careers in research and archiving, education, the heritage industry, publication and the media, the charity sector and journalism. Possible professions include historian, higher education lecturer, or archivist. This degree provides a range of transferable skills, which may be useful in becoming a journalist, heritage manager, politician’s assistant, academic librarian, or museum/gallery curator.
The usual requirement is a second-class honours degree (2:2) or above in a humanities subject, as well as references. We may request writing samples or ask you to attend an interview, if you don't meet the entry criteria but have non-traditional educational or professional qualifications/experience.
Reviews
Subjects
- Art
- Conflict
- Politics
- Archaeology
- Classics
- University
- Public
- Private
- Tourism
- Media
- History Politics
Course programme
You study two compulsory modules and two option modules from a diverse range of topics.
Not all modules are available every year.
COMPULSORY MODULES- Mastering Historical Research: Birkbeck Approaches
- Public Histories in Practice
- Athens: Material Culture Approaches to the Classical City
- Creating a Public. Museums and their audiences
- Cultural History of War in Britain and America between the First World War and the Conflict in Vietnam
- Curating Difficult Histories: Museums, Exhibitions, Art Activism
- Out of Ashes: Europe, 1945 to the 1960s
- Queer Histories/Queer Cultures
- The Politics of the Past: Heritage in a Changing World
- Research Dissertation
Additional information
Part-time home students: £4410 pa
Full-time home students: £8820 pa
Part-time international students: £8010 pa
Full-time international students: £16020 pa
Public Histories (MA)