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elinen

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Posts posted by elinen

  1. As a UK PhD student I would like to add some information/comments here.

    First of all, a PhD in history at schools like Cambridge/Oxford/LSE/UCL/Kings usually takes four years to complete, not three. Although some schools only offer three years of funding, it is generally expected that completing your project, particularly if you do an international or transnational history project, will take you around four years. There is extra funding available, and you also make extra money with teaching. If you study in London, there a a lot of teaching opportunities and some pay quite well.

     

    Regarding the job market, I have to agree that a UK PhD is not ideal if you want  to enter the US job market full time. However, I do know quite a lot of people that did get a position in the US. There is of course more to the world than the US and there a loads of opportunities and postdocs in the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, the Scandinavian countries, et cetera. Having said that, the job market in general is of course quite shitty.

     

    Finally, about archives and networks. My topic is very international so I frequently travel to the US for conferences and archives. It's of course more expensive and it takes up more time, but there is extra funding available for these kind of trips too. Most scholars travel a lot so I don't think your network would suffer substantially from doing a PhD in the UK.

     

    I hope this helps!

     

     

     

     

  2. It really depends on what you want to focus  on. In Cold War historiography, sources from the Soviet bloc are increasingly used so it is a new and exciting direction. However, if you're interested in US foreign policy in the Cold War, other languages might be more helpful, for example Spanish/Portugese if you're interested in US-Latin American Cold War relations.

  3. 17 minutes ago, Malthusian said:

    Thank you for your prompt reply!

    Indeed, I'm less interested in the quantitative aspect of Economic History (taking a far more historical approach rather than quantitative, e.g. viewing the development of economies from an holistic approach rather than purely economic) and hence why I'm concerned that many PhDs in the topic tend to come from a purely Economics background.

    I appreciate your information about the LSE. Was this at graduate level, by the way?

    On this page, you can find the CVs of students who are doing their PhD in Economic History at the LSE. They all seem to have history backgrounds so that would be good news for you!  http://www.lse.ac.uk/economicHistory/study/PhDProgramme/PhD-Job-Market.aspx 

    Yes, it was at graduate level (mostly about Latin American development). 

  4. I did a couple courses in Economic History at the LSE and it was quite helpful, but I don't think it is necessary perse. I didn't learn any specific new skills. Especially if you already have connections with people who could potentially supervise you I don't think it's worth the money. 

    The only thing I am wondering about, is that you might need to have quantitative research skills (statistics et cetera). However, they didn't teach those as part of the economic history courses I took (it was mostly studying the economic arguments, rather than the specific theoretical research behind it). But I'm sure your potential supervisors can tell you more about this.

  5. 15 hours ago, serenade said:

    Ah, nice to hear. Not sure if either of you are working in the early modern era, but even if not, any general advice would be appreciated. Regarding language skills, obviously learning Dutch is a given, as would be learning French, I assume. My questions are fairly broad and highly relative to specific periods and regions within the LC, but (1) How would you compare learning Dutch (from scratch) in terms of difficulty as compared to say, German or French?; (2) I know this depends on era and topic, but are most of the primary sources you read for the Low Countries in Dutch? Or French? (the latter, I assume, the language of the courts and administration and the former the language at the popular level?); (3) For any working in the pre-modern Low Countries, how difficult is reading handwritten late medieval/early modern Dutch paleography in comparison to modern Dutch?; (4) Finally, again, I know this is relative, but what language is most secondary scholarship on the LC published in? English? Dutch? French? 

    (1) Dutch is my native language so I don't know how difficult it is to learn, it's quite similar to German so If you speak German it wouldn't be too hard

    (2) the sources (20th century) I use are all in Dutch (some stuff in French/English). I think from the 15th century on most material is in Dutch (as telkanaru said)

    (3) I'm not sure how difficult this is since I'm mostly doing 20th century history 

    (4) the Low Countries Historical Journal is in Dutch and English, the languages most Dutch academics use and speak. Generally speaking, I think most secondary scholarship on the Low Countries is published in Dutch/English, but German/French material can be useful as well 

     

     

     

  6. It's quite difficult to get funding for your PhD in the UK but most schools offer 2/3 funded places per year. Also, look at the ESRC http://www.esrc.ac.uk/funding/funding-opportunities/research-grants/. I know at least a couple of history students who got their project funded through the ESRC (some international). I wouldn't recommend doing a PhD in the UK without funding, but I know some who do, and tuition fee is not that high (4,000 pound per year) so it can be doable if you find a good job on the side (preferably at the university you want to do your PhD at) 

  7.  

    On 12 February 2016 at 6:51 AM, fortsibut said:

    On a sort of related note, any of you have any ideas about some kind of archival software that can label files with different tags?  I've been working on a project where I have access to a document scanner, and I've been scanning to PDF files.  Navigating through file folders and trying to keep everything straight is a real hassle though, and it'd be so much nicer if there was software with an interface that let you throw tags on each file like "Africa," "Missions," "Gender," "(person's name)," etc. and use it to pull up those docs as well.  (I guess similar to what you can do in Gmail with emails)  My google-fu has been failing me, though.  Right now I try to keep things organized on Google Drive, but there's a space cap and it's still not really idea.

    I'd appreciate any advice you have.  I've had a solid undergrad education from a history and language perspective, but I haven't had access to archival courses or information.  Thanks!

    I'm using DevonThink. It works well (labelling files et cetera) but it isn't free. Some universities offer deals though. 

  8. You can either focus on Germany and Japan specialists or look for professors who specialize in the themes you're interested in (memory politics, making histories et cetera). I'm not sure which one is more important for you? And would you want to study in the US? (I know more about Europe ;) )

  9. I just got the most scary email ever. 

     

    'On your application form you declared that you have a criminal conviction and, as stated in the instructions, institutions to which you apply may require further details of the conviction(s) and the nature of the offence(s). I am now writing to request these details.'

     

    I am such an idiot. Who makes a mistake on an application form like that?! (I do not have a criminal conviction).. I just emailed and called them to them them I'm innocent :P I hope this won't have a negative impact on my application..

  10. I loved graduate school. I did my master in London and it was great. A lot of reading, class discussions and heated debates about imperialism and empire. don't worry about not being able to read everything, just make sure you know where the author positions him/herself in the historiographical debate.

  11. I haven't heard anything yet.. I applied to the UK and the US and this a very stressful period! I'm not sure if the forum helps or is just making me more nervous but I can't resist checking it (and the results page) every five minutes haha

  12. Hi! I also applied to Yale. Interested in the Cold War, transnational history, European-Latin American connections, solidarity movements.

     

    I'm not sure how the interview process works, I'm from Europe so I doubt they will call me for an interview..

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