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MA/PgDip/PgCert History: Imperialism and Culture

Distance learning

Location • City Campus
Subject area • History


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Core modules

• theories of imperialism • research methods/dissertation

Optional modules

• the empire at home: Britain 1770–1850 • Marlowe, Shakespeare and the British empire • the power of the powerless: Czech responses to Soviet imperialism • Nazism, war and genocide, 1939–1945 • orientalism and postcolonialism • industrialisation, imperialism and globalisation • nazism, war and genocide, 1939-45 • power of the powerless

Module descriptions

Theories of imperialism
You explore the relationship between capitalism and imperialism beginning with the debate between radicals and imperialists in Britain in the 1870s. You move on to consider • J. A. Hobson's work on financial imperialism • the classical Marxist imperialism theories of Hilferding and Lenin • their chief contemporary critic, J. A. Schumpeter.

You then examine some post–1945 developments and consider the work of Robinson and Gallagher on free trade imperialism and Cain and Hopkins' concept of gentlemanly capitalism.

Research methods/dissertation
You look at the theoretical and practical issues involved in historical research and writing. This helps you when • selecting your topic • undertaking preliminary feasibility studies • writing a critical historiography • preparing a research proposal.

We introduce you to different types of historical writing.

Your dissertation is an independent 15,000-word research project, supervised by a member of staff with expertise in the field.

The empire at home: Britain, 1770-1850
You examine the significance of empire in British culture in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. You look at the popular interest in, and the new ways of interpreting, other cultures in the eighteenth century.

You explore the origins, development and wider culture of the popular antislavery movement, in which black and white men and women of the middle and lower classes took part. You look at changing ideas of race and cultural difference relating to class, gender and ethnicity in British society.

The power of the powerless: Czech responses to Soviet imperialism
You examine the political and cultural history of Czechoslovakia 1945–1989. You focus on the responses of the communist elite, the intellectuals and other social groupings to Soviet-style socialism.

Key themes include
• the nature of Soviet imperialism in Czechoslovakia
• national roads to socialism versus Stalinist totalitarianism
• the challenge to Soviet rule in 1968
• the normalisation process under Husak and the emerging dissident movement
• the origins of the collapse of real existing socialism in 1989

Shakespeare, Marlowe and the British empire
You examine how artistic and aesthetic works may encode political issues. You study how Marlowe and Shakespeare were used to perpetuate imperialism.

We introduce you to contemporary debates on the roles of subversion and containment in Renaissance drama.

Orientalism and postcolonialism
You look at how orientalism and postcolonial studies have contributed to imperial history.

You explore the meeting of European and non-European cultures and how it developed from the first colonial contacts of the 16th century. You analyse the relationship between culture and colonialism by examining theoretical perspectives, including the work of Edward Said.

Themes include • culture and European expansion in South Asia • orientalism and the enlightenment • orientalism and post-colonial theory.

Nazism, war and genocide, 1939–1945
You examine the relationship between Nazi imperialism and war and genocide in German-occupied Europe, 1939–1945.

You address Holocaust controversies as well as Nazi population policies. You focus on high politics and the history of everyday life on the home front and in the occupied territories

Popular culture, nation and empire, 1780-1945
You examine the complex interrelationship between national identity, imperialism, and popular culture in Britain between the 1870s and the Second World War.

The module is concerned not with the empire 'out there', as a global project, but with its impact ‘at home’: its influence on domestic politics and culture, and its role in constructing and reconstructing ideas of ‘Britishness’. You address how British identity was defined and redefined in a period of political, social and cultural change, often discussed in terms of class and class relations, but in which changing cultures of nationhood, race and gender have more recently come to be seen as central.

Find out more about studying MA/PgDip/PgCert History: Imperialism and Culture

 

Attendance

Distance learning – typically three years

Starts September, January and May

How to apply

Complete the application form available at www.shu.ac.uk/study/form

Fees – home and EU students

2013/14 academic year

Full-time – typically £4,590
Part-time – typically £1,530 a stage for PgCert, PgDip and MA stages

The course fee may be subject to annual inflationary increase. For further information on fees and funding see www.shu.ac.uk/funding

Fees – international students

2013/14 academic year

Typically £7,200 for the course

2014/15 academic year

Typically £7,380 for the course

The course fee may be subject to annual inflationary increase. For further information on fees, scholarships and bursaries see www.shu.ac.uk/international/fees

Assessment

Coursework only – two essays per module plus a 15,000 word dissertation

We return coursework with comments within three weeks of the work being submitted.

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Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus, Howard Street, Sheffield S1 1WB, UK

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