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BA History
About this course
History is the discipline through which we seek to understand the human past: how societies have organised themselves, how political power has been won and lost, how people have experienced economic change, how cultures have developed and interacted, and how the present has been shaped by forces that earlier generations set in motion. As a discipline, history is as much about the present as the past, because understanding where we are requires knowing how we got here, and the critical skills that historians develop, including the ability to evaluate evidence, question received accounts, and construct rigorous arguments, are fundamental to clear thinking in any domain. At the University of Essex, this three-year full-time programme offers the opportunity to explore the past across a wide range of periods, regions, and themes, as the current description accurately reflects. You will examine political change, social movements, cultural developments, and global events, developing the analytical, research, and communication skills that are among the most transferable a university education can provide. Essex has research strengths that span the political history of modern Europe, the history of the USA, gender history, the history of colonialism and empire, and the history of ideas, and you will encounter a range of historiographical approaches that equip you to think about how historical knowledge is produced and contested. Throughout the programme, you will work with primary sources, developing the critical faculties to assess their reliability, limitations, and significance, and with secondary literature, evaluating how historians have interpreted the evidence and where their interpretations differ. Written communication is central: the ability to construct clear, well-evidenced historical arguments is a skill that historians spend their entire education refining. History graduates work in education, journalism, the civil service, law, heritage and museums, publishing, policy research, archiving, and a very wide range of professional roles where analytical rigour and communication skill are valued. Postgraduate study in history, heritage, archival studies, or related disciplines is a well-established progression for those drawn to research or specialist careers.
Syllabus & Modules
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