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2019/20 Undergraduate Programme Catalogue

BA English and History

Programme code:BA-ENGL&HISTUCAS code:QV31
Duration:3 Years Method of Attendance: Full Time
Programme manager:Dr Will Jackson Contact address:w.jackson@leeds.ac.uk

Total credits: 365

Entry requirements:

- AAA at A-level, including Grade A in English and History. General Studies is not accepted.
- International Baccalaureate: 36 points overall, including a minimum of 17 at the Higher Level and a minimum of 6 in History and English at Higher Level.

School/Unit responsible for the parenting of students and programme:

School of History

Examination board through which the programme will be considered:

Joint Honours

Relevant QAA Subject Benchmark Groups:

Programme specification:

The programme will:
- enable students to work across more than one discipline by providing the flexibility to study three disciplines at level one;
- allow the study of two disciplines to the same depth as any single honours student but with less breadth in each discipline;
- provide a basis for further advanced study in either of the disciplines or in a cognate interdisciplinary area.

General
- The distinctiveness, appeal and strength of University of Leeds joint honours programmes lie in the unusual combination of depth, breadth and flexibility which they offer, as well as in the exceptional range of degree combinations available.
- They permit students to study two disciplines, in depth and to degree level while acquiring a broader range of skills than is typically possible within a single honours degree.
- They are emphatically joint honours programmes, rather than integrated programmes: students can therefore make the links they choose from the wide choice of optional modules available within each discipline. Within certain parameters, they thus effectively make connections and devise pathways according to their own preferences, rather than being faced with a prescribed combination of modules chosen for them by others.
- The students must acquire the flexibility of mind and variety of learning techniques needed to switch between the two disciplines.
- A further element of distinctiveness is the flexibility of the programme structure, which allows joint honours students to change direction more easily, and more radically, than single honours students.
- Many of these programmes also allow the opportunity to undertake a work placement, field work or study abroad.


Year1 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Students must study 125 credits in total.
These 125 credits will comprise any compulsory modules stated as well as a mix of Optional and/or Discovery modules as required by the rules of the programme.

Compulsory modules:

Candidates will be required to study the following compulsory modules:

ENGL1000Studying and Researching English5 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1350Foundations of English Studies20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST1055Historiography and Historical Skills20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST1300Primary Sources for the Historian: An Introduction to Documentary study20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Optional modules:

Candidates may study the following module as part of their remaining 40 credits.

ENGL1250Prose: Reading and Interpretation20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Candidates are required to study ONE of the following core modules:

ENGL1261Poetry: Reading and Interpretation20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL1282Drama: Reading and Interpretation20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Candidates may wish to choose from the History modules below to fill their remaining credits:

HIST1045Empire and Aftermath: The Mediterranean World from the Second to the Eighth Centuries20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST1060Faith, Knowledge and Power, 1500-175020 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST1090Medieval and Renaissance Europe20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST1210The Modern World20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Level 1 students may not take level 2 or 3 modules for their Discovery modules.

Discovery modules:

Candidates may choose to study up to 40 credits of discovery modules in a third subject or pursue additional modules in the two named subjects.


Year2 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Students must study 120 credits in total.
These 120 credits will comprise any compulsory modules stated as well as a mix of Optional and/or Discovery modules as required by the rules of the programme.

Over levels 2 and 3 combined students must pass:

- English: a minimum of 80 credits (at least 40 credits must be at level 3)
- History: a minimum of 100 credits (at least 60 credits must be at level 3)

The remaining credits can be used for elective modules or further modules in the named subjects.

In order to be eligible for an honours degree, students must meet the normal Rules for Award by passing all modules which are designated to be passed for award or progression and by passing the required number of credits at each level as specified in the Curricular Regulations (at least 200 credits at level 2 or above, of which at least 100 should be at level 3). Students must pass at least 100 credits at level 2 and all core modules to proceed to the next level of the programme.

Optional modules:

CORE MODULES

Candidates are required to study at least TWO of the following core modules. In addition candidates can also opt to study one or two further core modules (up to 40 credits) or choose 40 credits from the list of option/discovery modules below.

ENGL2025Medieval Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2027Eighteenth Century Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2028Literature of the Romantic Period20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2029Renaissance Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3289Victorian Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3290American Words, American Worlds, 1900-Present20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

OPTION MODULES

Candidates may study further credits from the following list of option/discovery modules, in accordance with the credit rules. Candidates may choose to study additional Level 2 core modules in lieu of option/discovery modules at Level 2.

ENGL2023Power of Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2024Language in Society20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2041Textual Healing: An Introduction to Scholarly Editing and Publishing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2201Writing Nature: Creative and Critical Practices20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2202Imaginary Friends: the consolations and consequences of story20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL2203Medieval Poetry: Translation and Creative Rewriting20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL2204Shakespeare and Global Cinema20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2206African American Narrative: Eight Major Works20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2207Dialect and Heritage20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL2209Where the Wild Things Are: Animals in Children’s Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2284ExtraOrdinary Bodies: Physical Disability in Contemporary Literature and Film20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2345Imagining Revolution: Literature of the English Civil Wars20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32110Students into Schools20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32111Gender, Culture and Politics: Readings of Jane Austen20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32113The Wild: Literature and the Environment20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32114Forming Victorian Fiction20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32120Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32143Disposable Lives?20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32146Queens, Vikings, poets and dragons: Old English and early medieval Britain20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32147Contemporary Postcolonial Texts20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32148American Danger20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32150Planes, Trains and Automobiles: US Narratives of Air, Rail, Road and Water20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32153Refugee Narratives20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32154Prose Fiction Stylistics and the Mind20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32155Crime Fiction Stylistics: Crossing Languages, Cultures, Media20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32156Quiet Rebels and Unquiet Minds: writing to contemporary anxiety20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32158Aesthetic Movements of the Nineteenth Century20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32163Milton20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32167Language of the Media20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32169Contemporary South African Writing20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3227Surrealism and the French Stage20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3231The Poetry of Wordsworth20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3233Forensic Approaches to Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32460Writing America20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3266Folklore and Mythology20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32660Creative Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3268Transformations20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32761Language Style and Attitudes20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32763Children, Talk and Learning20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3286Fictions of Fallen Women, 1850-192220 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3293Victoria's Secrets: Secrecy in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3294The Politics of Language20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32980African Literature20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32993Romantic Lyric Poetry20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32997Keywords: The Words We Use and The Ways We Use Them20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32998Writing and Gender in Seventeenth-Century England20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32999Tragedy: Classical to Neo-Classical20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Please note that ENGL32110 is mutually exclusive with HIST2540.

Candidates will be required to study one module from Group A and one from Group B. These MUST be taken in different semesters.

GROUP A

Candidates are required to study 20 credits from the list below:

HIST2005Rule and Reform under Charlemagne and his Successors, 768-98720 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2006Small Change and Big Changes: Money and Power in Europe, 284-100020 creditsNot running in 201920
HIST2030The Crusades and the Crusader States in the 12th Century20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2031The Crusades and Medieval Christendom20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2065The Tudors: Princes, Politics, and Piety, 1485-160320 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2073Most Christian Kings: France, 1515-171520 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2080Voices of the People: Speech, Language and Oral Culture in Early Modern Europe20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2110The Cult of Saints in Medieval Europe c.400-c.150020 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2112Jewish Communities in Medieval Europe20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2115Charles the Great to Alfred the Great: Franks, Anglo-Saxons and Vikings in the Ninth Century20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2117Conquerors and Conquered: England, 1000-113520 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2135Britain and the Industrial Revolution20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2170Patient Voices: Medicine and Healthcare in the Middle Ages20 creditsNot running in 201920
HIST2220The Body, Disease and Society in Europe, 1500-175020 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2305Mughals, Merchants and Mercenaries: 'Company Raj' in India 1600-185720 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2308Life and Death in British India, 1690-187120 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2433The Global Caribbean, 1756-184820 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
MEDV2085Medieval Narratives in the Modern World: Nationalism, Terrorism, Popular Culture20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)


GROUP B

Candidates are required to study 20 credits from the list below:

HIST2077Colonial Encounters: France and its Empire, 1830-194520 creditsNot running in 201920
HIST2079The Republic in Crisis: Conflict and Identity in France since 187020 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2100Victorian England: Old England and Industrial Society 1837-186520 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2101Victorian England: Aristocracy and Democracy, 1865-190120 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2140Imperial Germany 1871-191820 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST229020th Century Britain: The Burdens of Conflict 1900-194520 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST229120th Century Britain: Progress and Uncertainty 1945-199020 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2301The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union, 1921-199320 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2309Communist Eastern Europe, 1945-8920 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2310Russia under the Romanovs, 1812-191720 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2320The Lucky Country? The Social History of Australia in the Twentieth Century20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2353America and the Sixties20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2420Nationalism, Colonialism and 'Religious Violence' in India, 1857-194720 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2430The History of Africa since 190020 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2432Lost Colonists: Failure and the Family in Southern Africa, 1880-193920 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2435The Popular Caribbean: A History20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2442Black Politics from Emancipation to Obama20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2645The Rise of Modern Japan: From the Meiji Restoration to the Present Day20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2653American Business History20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2654Global Business History20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2658Mao Zedong and Modern China, 1949-Present20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

The following modules offer you the chance to explore the diversity of approaches to the study of the past. Some of the modules give you the chance to research and practise History in collaboration with others, both within and outside the University.

These modules are excellent preparation for the final year dissertation.

FOAR2000Research Placement20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2505Archive Intelligence: Unlocking the Archive20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2540History Students in Schools20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2557Thinking about History20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2560History on the High Street20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2565Histories of Black Britain20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

Students may not take level 3 modules at level 2. In History, the level of a module is identified by the first number of the module code. In the School of English, module codes starting ENGL2--- or ENGL32--- are suitable for level 2. Other Schools may vary - please contact them for details.

Level 2 students may study up to 20 credits of level 1 Discovery modules. Grades awarded for these modules will count as normal towards your final mark, but the credits will not be counted as level 2 credits in final classification.

Discovery modules:

Candidates may choose to study up to 60 credits of discovery modules over levels 2 and 3 or pursue additional modules in the two named subjects.


Year3 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Students must study 120 credits in total.
These 120 credits will comprise any compulsory modules stated as well as a mix of Optional and/or Discovery modules as required by the rules of the programme.

Over levels 2 and 3 combined students must pass:

- English: a minimum of 80 credits (at least 40 credits must be at level 3)
- History: a minimum of 100 credits (at least 60 credits must be at level 3)

The remaining credits can be used for elective modules or further modules in the named subjects.

In order to be eligible for an honours degree, students must meet the normal Rules for Award by passing all modules which are designated to be passed for award or progression and by passing the required number of credits at each level as specified in the Curricular Regulations (at least 200 credits at level 2 or above, of which at least 100 should be at level 3). Students must pass at least 100 credits at level 3 and all core modules to proceed to gain the degree.

Optional modules:

CORE MODULES

Candidates must have a minimum of 40 credits in English at Level 3. Candidates are required to study at least ONE of the following core modules and can also opt to study up to three further core module if they wish to:

ENGL3024Modern Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3025Postcolonial Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3026Contemporary Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3027Shakespeare20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

OPTION MODULES
Candidates must take a minimum of 40 credits in English at Level 3. 20 of these credits must be taken from the list of core modules above. Candidates may study further credits from the following list of option modules, in accordance with the credit rules. NB Candidates may only choose a level 2 core English module (modules beginning ENGL2XXX) from the list below if all of their remaining final year credits (100) are at level 3, i.e. SUBJ3XXX.

ENGL2023Power of Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2024Language in Society20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2025Medieval Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2027Eighteenth Century Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2028Literature of the Romantic Period20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2029Renaissance Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3208Arthurian Legend: Chivalry and Violence20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32111Gender, Culture and Politics: Readings of Jane Austen20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32113The Wild: Literature and the Environment20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32114Forming Victorian Fiction20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32120Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32143Disposable Lives?20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32146Queens, Vikings, poets and dragons: Old English and early medieval Britain20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32147Contemporary Postcolonial Texts20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32148American Danger20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32150Planes, Trains and Automobiles: US Narratives of Air, Rail, Road and Water20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32153Refugee Narratives20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32154Prose Fiction Stylistics and the Mind20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32155Crime Fiction Stylistics: Crossing Languages, Cultures, Media20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32156Quiet Rebels and Unquiet Minds: writing to contemporary anxiety20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32158Aesthetic Movements of the Nineteenth Century20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32163Milton20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32167Language of the Media20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32169Contemporary South African Writing20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3227Surrealism and the French Stage20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3231The Poetry of Wordsworth20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3233Forensic Approaches to Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32460Writing America20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3266Folklore and Mythology20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32660Creative Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3268Transformations20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32761Language Style and Attitudes20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32763Children, Talk and Learning20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3286Fictions of Fallen Women, 1850-192220 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3289Victorian Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3290American Words, American Worlds, 1900-Present20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3293Victoria's Secrets: Secrecy in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3294The Politics of Language20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32980African Literature20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL32993Romantic Lyric Poetry20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32997Keywords: The Words We Use and The Ways We Use Them20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32998Writing and Gender in Seventeenth-Century England20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32999Tragedy: Classical to Neo-Classical20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3314Imagining Posthuman Futures20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3321Angry Young Men and Women: Literature of the Mid-Twentieth Century20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3339Lost in Fiction: The Metafictional Novel from "Don Quixote" to "House of Leaves"20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3342Millennial Fictions20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3365Theatricalities: Beckett, Pinter, Kane20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3386Telling Lives: Reading and Writing Family Memoir20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3394Bowie, Reading, Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3395T.S. Eliot20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3396Fictions of the End: Apocalypse and After20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3398Medical Humanities: Representing Illness, Disability, and Care20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3401Women Writing the 1960s20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3402Home Bodies: Domestic Animals in Contemporary Literature20 creditsNot running in 201920
ENGL3410Modernist Sexualities20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3439States of Mind: Disability, Cognitive Impairment and Mental Health in Contemporary Culture20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3680Postcolonial London20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3999Literature of the 1890s20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Candidates will be required to take one of the following final year projects:

ENGL3041Final Year Project40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3500History Dissertation40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

Candidates will be required to study 40 credits from the following Special Subject modules:

HIST3001Conquest, Convivencia and Conflict: Christian and Muslim Spain, 711-121240 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3220Martin Luther King and the Civil Rights Movement40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3235Dividing India: The Road to Democracy in South Asia, 1939-195240 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3260Tradition and Modernity in Colonial Africa: Uganda's Kingdoms 1862-196440 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3270The Third Reich, 1933-194540 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3302Ordinary People: The Everyday Lives of Men, Women and Children in Britain, c. 1920s-50s40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3315Citizens of the World: British Merchants in the Long Eighteenth Century40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3330Europe in an Age of Total Warfare40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3362American Consumer Society in Historical Perspective40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3382The Cultural History of Venice, 1509-179740 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3390The Soviet Sixties: Politics and Society in the USSR, 1953-196840 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3391De Tocqueville and the Democratic Regime40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3395The Troubles: The Northern Ireland Conflict, 1968-Present40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3590White Africans: Intimacy, Race and Power40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3650Stalin and Stalinism40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3665France and Algeria from 1830 to the Present40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3687The Later Elizabethan Age: Politics and Empire40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3695The Korean War40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3740Alliance Without Backbone: Germany, its Allies and Satellites Before and During World War Two40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3745Secret Service: The World of British Intelligence40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3746War on Tribe or War on Terror? Historicizing Afghanistan and Pakistan40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3785Europe on the Move: Refugees and Resettlement, 1919-5940 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST3888The Global Vietnam War40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

The following modules, where programme / module combinations allow, offer you the chance to explore the diversity of approaches to the study of the past. Some of the modules give you the chance to research and practise History in collaboration with others, both within and outside the University. Students are permitted to take a maximum of 20 credits below their year of study at level 3, where programme / module combinations allow.

FOAR2000Research Placement20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2505Archive Intelligence: Unlocking the Archive20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2540History Students in Schools20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2557Thinking about History20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST2560History on the High Street20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST2565Histories of Black Britain20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

Candidates will be required to study up to 20 credits from the following modules, depending on the choice of final year project. (Students are required to study 60 credits of History at level 3.)

HIST3450American History, American Historians20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3453The Body in Australian History, 1788-200720 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3455Consumer Society in Historical Perspective20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3493War, Regicide and Republic: England, 1642-166020 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3510Pastors and Prelates: Bishops in England, France and Germany, 950-110020 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3515The Baltic Crusades: The Conquest and Conversion of North-Eastern Europe, 1180-141020 creditsNot running in 201920
HIST3689Order and Disorder in Early Modern France: Understanding the French Wars of Religion20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3723Apartheid in South Africa: Origins, Impact and Legacy20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3728The Breaking of Contemporary Britain: Challenges from the Post-War Period20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3732Men and Masculinity in Britain, c.1860-1960: War, Work and Home20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3734Missionaries, Abolitionists and Colonial Philanthropists: Evangelical Attitudes to Empire, 1765-186520 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3735Crime and Punishment in Colonial Southern Asia20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3738The Hungry Empire: Indian Commodities That Built Britain's Global Empire, c.1750s-193020 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3880'Parasites' and 'Cockroaches': Ethnic Cleansing and Genocide in the Modern World20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
HIST3887Changing Enemies: Germany Occupied and Divided, 1945-5520 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3900The Soviet Union in World Politics, 1917-199120 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
HIST3999Doomed to Failure? European Great Power Politics from Bismarck to the Outbreak of World War I20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
MEDV3411Medieval Women Mystics: Visionaries, Saints and Heretics20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Level 3 students may study up to 20 credits of level 2 Discovery modules. Level 3 students may not study level 1 Discovery modules unless they are Skills Discovery modules (skd).

Discovery modules:

Candidates may choose to study up to 60 credits of discovery modules over levels 2 and 3, or pursue additional modules in the two named subjects, where programme / module combinations allow.

Last updated: 04/09/2019

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