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History

Our history courses focus on the late 18th century to the present. Our historians' expertise spans Europe, Britain, Africa, India, America and Australia. We offer many specialist options, which mean that you can develop your expertise in the areas of history that interest you most.
You are taught by academics who publish their work in leading journals and write texts other historians refer to. Members of the history team have won international prizes for their work and communicate their enthusiasm for their subject through their teaching. The history department has earned one of the highest research ratings for history amongst modern UK universities.

Our historians have been consultants to major broadcasters, including the BBC and Channel 4 and strongly believe that studying history remains relevant to understanding the contemporary world.


Search results - 7 results found  

BA (Honours) History

Three years full-time

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If you are interested in understanding and interpreting change in a lively intellectual framework of controversy and debate, history is for you.History is not just about the past. It is a dialogue between the present and the past. Studying history gives you insights into the present day world and how it came into being. You analyse data, construct... More information

Undergraduate

Full-time

UCAS code V100

Subject area

This distance learning course examines the relationship between imperialism and culture from the period of European expansion and colonialism to the post-colonial era. In recent years academic interest in imperialism has moved beyond the traditional focus on economic and political concerns. There has been more interest in cultures of imperialism... More information

Postgraduate

Distance learning

Subject area

If you are interested in understanding and interpreting change in a lively intellectual framework of controversy and debate, history is for you. History is not just about the past. It is a dialogue between the present and the past. Studying history gives you unique insights into the present day world and how it came into being. You analyse data,... More information

Undergraduate

Part-time

Subject area

MPhil/PhD History

Full-time, Part-time

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We offer research opportunities in • economic and business history • colonial history • social and political studies. A research degree in your chosen history subject is a period of intensive, supervised investigative work. It builds on your previous academic or professional experience and allows you to develop an original area of expertise. You... More information

Postgraduate

Full-time, Part-time

Subject area

Related subjects

This course is for people who want to study these two important humanities subjects and explore the links between them.On this course you• study modern history• analyse English literature such as novels, poetry and plays from 1500 to the present day• explore British and European cultural, social and political history• learn how literary texts... More information

Undergraduate

Full-time

UCAS code QV31

Subject area

Related subjects

This course is for people who want to study these two important humanities subjects and explore the links between them.On this course you• study modern history• analyse English literature such as novels, poetry and plays from 1500 to the present day• explore British and European cultural, social and political history• learn how literary texts... More information

Undergraduate

Part-time

Subject area

Related subjects

MA History: the Local and the Global

Full-time, Part-time

This course is no longer running

Postgraduate

Full-time, Part-time

Subject area

Dr Alison Twells

Principal lecturer

I joined Sheffield Hallam in 1998, having previously taught at the universities of Nottingham and Humberside. Before doing a PhD, I trained as a teacher of secondary history and worked for three years at the Development Education Centre (South Yorkshire) where I designed a history resource for Key Stage 3 of the national curriculum.

I teach modules on women’s history and public/community history, and a first year module, making history, which is designed to bridge the transition from school to university. I also teach modules on both MAs: on empire and British culture in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and local and global communities post-1945.

I have research interests in women’s and gender history, local and global history, religious belief and practice, and family and community history. My main research to date has been on the British missionary and philanthropic movements, and on women’s (geographical and denominational) faith journeys in the nineteenth century.

I published a monograph, The Civilising Mission and the English Middle Class, 1792-1850 in 2009. Also in 2009, I inherited the most wonderful collection of diaries from my great aunt, Norah Hodgkinson, covering 70 years of her life, and which have given me no choice but to move into the fields of twentieth-century women’s history and life history writing, and to develop longstanding interests in public, community and family history.

I am a committed teacher who is particularly keen to enable students not only to learn about history but to think and work as historians. I am also very interested in the relationship between history in university and in the wider community, and am currently collaborating on a project looking at the incorporation of public history placements and work-based learning into the undergraduate curriculum.

I have had a variety of learning, teaching and assessment (LTA) roles at Sheffield Hallam and am currently LTA lead for the humanities department.

Externally, I am a member of the history subject centre advisory panel, an external examiner at Manchester Metropolitan University, and a member of editorial board for Women's History Review. I was a consultant for items on slavery, abolition and the 2007 bicentenary on Radio 4 and Radio Sheffield, and returned in that year with writing for schools' history, with the production of Olaudah Equiano Visits Sheffield, a Key Stage 2 history resource pack focusing on Black history/Olaudah Equiano's visit to Sheffield in 1790, developed jointly with Sheffield Museums/Burngreave Voices and the Development Education Centre (South Yorkshire).

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

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