Last modified: 28 Jun 2018 10:27
History is not simply a dry, academic study of the past; it shapes a host of contemporary political, economic and cultural attitudes and is a central underpinning to the tourist and heritage industries - now one of the largest sectors of employment among mature western economies. This course is designed to give a critical understanding of the theoretical and practical links (as well as clear distinctions) between the practice of 'academic' History and 'public' History. This is done by having students assess how heritage and tourist businesses project a particular version of the past.
Study Type | Undergraduate | Level | 4 |
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Term | Second Term | Credit Points | 30 credits (15 ECTS credits) |
Campus | None. | Sustained Study | No |
Co-ordinators |
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Information on contact teaching time is available from the course guide.
Comparative seminar/lecture report (1,500 words) = 20% Workplacement report (2,000 words) = 30% OR Reviewing 'public' History (2,000 words) = 30% Practising 'public' History (3,000 words) = 50% Resit: Resit as first attempt - 100% exam Comparative seminar/lecture report (1,500 words) = 20% Workplacement report (2,000 words) = 30% OR Reviewing 'public' History (2,000 words) = 30% Practising 'public' History (3,000 words) = 50%
Students will submit a one page outline of their intended workplace activities or, alternatively, their intended analyses of how a public organisation/institution practices and presents History. The outline should indicate how the workplace report or critique of the institution's practice of History links directly to the aims and objectives of the course. Feedback on issues of clarity of methodology, appropriate scope, realistic, achievable aims, sufficiently critical analysis, or any obvious omissions, will be returned with comments and suggestions by the teaching team. The same process of outline submission, feedback and comments will also occur in relation to the practising 'public' History element of assessment.
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