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Posted

As a specialist in early modern German social history, I sometimes wonder how my subdisciplines are fairing in the history field right now. What would you say are some particularly "hot" specialties in history right now? How about some particularly "not hot" specialties?

I've heard from some folks that history of mass incarceration is a burgeoning subject, while general American history is kind of oversaturated and dry right now. What are other people hearing?

Posted

Gender and race in the history of medicine/science/technology have become very popular approaches, though there are some rumblings that the reductivist approach to gender is in trouble (just from talking to more senior scholars). Sociological approaches remain popular, though that's been the case since the mid-1980s.

Questions about knowledge-making and circulation have, once again, become important. Pablo Gomez's The Experiential Caribbean, while not re-opening the debate, has made a very significant impact.

It may be easier to speak about what's not popular: American political history is a vanishingly small field, as are traditional approaches to diplomatic history. Labor history is in real trouble, and intellectual history, which was very popular in the mid-20th century has fallen off.

 

Posted

Global history and commodity histories (making a reemergence) have been gaining traction in the past decade. Studies of the Brezhnev era (ranging all scopes) are starting to be published because of archive access. Communist China is slowly starting to open its archive access, too. In general, there will be a lot of histories about the "East" and "South" published over the coming decade because of archive access and younger historians challenging older assumptions, which were partially based on American and Western archives. 

Posted

China is actually closing and restricting a lot of archives, ever since Xi Jinping came to power. I've heard that even Qing archives are being restricted, mainly as a reaction against the New Qing History.

Posted
2 hours ago, lordtiandao said:

China is actually closing and restricting a lot of archives, ever since Xi Jinping came to power. I've heard that even Qing archives are being restricted, mainly as a reaction against the New Qing History.

That is the exact opposite of what I have heard. My professor gained access to the Chinese archives and is doing a research visit this summer. Another professor from my program returned from a visit to the Chinese archives 3 months ago. Both of them said that the archives were becoming more open for histories before the Cultural Revolution. After and during the revolution is a different story and will be an issue until "regime-change."

Posted

It's not so much that US history isn't a growth field as it is US history PhDs overproduce for the market by a factor of 4:1.

I'd say environmental history is really big right now, as well as transnational/Atlantic World history and east Asian history. Digital history is becoming more of a Hilfswissenshaft than a discipline in its own right (rightly so, IMO), and the general resurgence in quant seems to be dying back down a bit. 

Posted
8 hours ago, Tigla said:

That is the exact opposite of what I have heard. My professor gained access to the Chinese archives and is doing a research visit this summer. Another professor from my program returned from a visit to the Chinese archives 3 months ago. Both of them said that the archives were becoming more open for histories before the Cultural Revolution. After and during the revolution is a different story and will be an issue until "regime-change."

That would be great if it's true. I haven't had to do archival research yet, but I envision I will in the future.

Posted
6 hours ago, telkanuru said:

. Digital history is becoming more of a Hilfswissenshaft than a discipline in its own right (rightly so, IMO), and the general resurgence in quant seems to be dying back down a bit. 

The quantitative resurgence has been quashed in Wisconsin. Students can't use statistics in lieu of language requirements any longer.

As for digital history, I agree with you. A historian of technology has said that there's renewed skepticism about the usefulness of digital humanities.

Posted
12 minutes ago, psstein said:

The quantitative resurgence has been quashed in Wisconsin. Students can't use statistics in lieu of language requirements any longer.

As for digital history, I agree with you. A historian of technology has said that there's renewed skepticism about the usefulness of digital humanities.

I don't get digital history. I also don't really do quantitative methods.  I've done it for two classes- I used sabermetrics for my baseball history paper (of course) and I took a quantitative methods of political science course and applied Hofstede's Masculinity Index to worldwide parliamentary elections from 1900-2012. The poli sci class didn't help too much because the prof that taught it was a qualitative political scientist and had failed quant methods herself three times in undergrad.  She got so frustrated with SPSS (which I do like) that she just told us that when we became real political scientists to just "hire a statistician" and forget about it. 

Posted

Transnational, global, most definitely.  Empires, different types of migrations, environmental.  The "Global South", East Asia, Middle East are all desirable.  Just read H-Net Job Guide and you'll see a pattern.  Interestingly enough, I sometimes feel like Early Modern European history is still in fair demand (because one can teach global history before 18th century).

Posted
3 hours ago, TMP said:

Interestingly enough, I sometimes feel like Early Modern European history is still in fair demand (because one can teach global history before 18th century).

I think it's more of a growth field than is often thought, but more because of global implications.

At the AHA, there was a session called "Writing Global History in Early Modern Europe."

Posted

Material culture seems to be growing as well. In general, there seems to be a trend of looking beyond texts: to material culture, the natural environment, and the built environment as well. 

Posted
1 hour ago, psstein said:

I think it's more of a growth field than is often thought, but more because of global implications.

At the AHA, there was a session called "Writing Global History in Early Modern Europe."

That makes me feel a little better. I love EME and would likely concentrate on the Mediterranean- so, Europe, Middle East, North Africa.

Posted
On 1/11/2018 at 8:33 PM, TheHessianHistorian said:

As a specialist in early modern German social history, I sometimes wonder how my subdisciplines are fairing in the history field right now. What would you say are some particularly "hot" specialties in history right now? How about some particularly "not hot" specialties?

I've heard from some folks that history of mass incarceration is a burgeoning subject, while general American history is kind of oversaturated and dry right now. What are other people hearing?

Atlanticist programs are really big right now. 

Posted
On 1/13/2018 at 9:14 PM, khigh said:

That makes me feel a little better. I love EME and would likely concentrate on the Mediterranean- so, Europe, Middle East, North Africa.

As with everything in academia, it depends how you position it. Braudel's Annales school may be ripe for a comeback.

Posted
1 hour ago, psstein said:

As with everything in academia, it depends how you position it. Braudel's Annales school may be ripe for a comeback.

Love Braudel. I read his history of the Mediterranean more often than I probably should (along with Hegel’s Philosophy of History). 

Posted
1 hour ago, psstein said:

As with everything in academia, it depends how you position it. Braudel's Annales school may be ripe for a comeback.

"Having said all this, I cannot help but note that this prescription conforms broadly to the vision of layers of time developed by Fernand Braudel and the Annales School. He spoke of structures, enduring features – changing glacially if at all, that constrained human action and of events, mere events, that were as numerous as they were fleeting, and powerless to change anything of importance. But in between these two extremes of historical time he located something called conjuncture. Here events and structures came together in fateful ways. Just what happened in this middle range of historical time, where combinations and sequences of action reset what we might call “the course of events” was only sketched out, and this mysterious category of time was often the butt of jokes by less visionary, more down-to-earth historians. Then historians had few allies among the social scientists. Today there are a good number – a critical mass? ‒ of historical social scientists seeking an historicized understanding of this realm where agency and structure confront each other, and, if I am right, a new era in which historians will seek to offer coherent explanations of change in the past."

The great historian Jan de Vries, on "the return from the return to narrative." 

Posted

I was about to say, I don't know if Braudel ever went away. Mentalité has certainly gone the way of the dodo though, and good riddance. 

Posted

World history (even when you look at job listings for U.S. historians, many of them specify U.S. and the World. This ties into the continued popularity of transnational and global histories). Public history seems to still be quite popular and also an excellent degree if you're willing to apply for non-academic jobs. Political history has had a slight surge. I think intelligence history is very exciting, but it may end up being absorbed by a more established field like political or diplomatic. I was told that certain kinds of institutional history are becoming popular as well, but I don't know much about that. 

Hard to say if fields in decline (like economic and diplomatic) will continue their decline or have a resurgence, especially 4-6 years from now when most of us will be on the job market.

This article is interesting: https://www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/december-2015/the-rise-and-decline-of-history-specializations-over-the-past-40-years

Especially this part imo "Among the topical fields, specialists in environmental history and the history of sexuality have the youngest demographic profile, as almost 70 percent of the employed faculty members in those fields earned their highest degrees since 1994 (as compared to 47 percent of all listed faculty in the Directory). Conversely, only about 30 percent of the employed faculty specializing in diplomatic, economic, and intellectual history earned their degrees after 1994.

Among the geographic specialties, European and US history have the oldest demographic profiles, as 41 and 46 percent, respectively, of the specialists in each field earned their highest degrees after 1989 (and more than 13 percent earned their degrees before 1970). In contrast, more than 55 percent of the faculty working in the histories of African, Asian, Latin American, and the Middle East and Islamic world earned their degrees since 1989 (and less than 10 percent in every field earned their degrees before 1970)."

Does this mean that new PhDs in environmental history and the history of sexuality will have a difficult time finding a job because most of the current profs in those fields are nowhere near retiring, or will new positions keep opening up? What does this mean for diplomatic/economic/intellectual historians, Europeanists and Americanists--will these older profs retiring open up jobs, or will those tenure streams close (probably a mix of both, not enough to address the oversaturation of the job market for sure).

Posted (edited)
On 1/18/2018 at 2:53 PM, ashiepoo72 said:

Does this mean that new PhDs in environmental history and the history of sexuality will have a difficult time finding a job because most of the current profs in those fields are nowhere near retiring, or will new positions keep opening up? What does this mean for diplomatic/economic/intellectual historians, Europeanists and Americanists--will these older profs retiring open up jobs, or will those tenure streams close (probably a mix of both, not enough to address the oversaturation of the job market for sure).

Speaking from my personal experience communicating with POIs at graduate programs around the country, a LOT of major Early Modern Germanists are retiring this year and they have almost all said that their universities intend to replace them with similar specialists in about 2 years. David Sabean at UCLA, Merry Wiesner-Hanks at UW-Milwaukee, Thomas Robisheaux at Duke, Geoffrey Parker at OSU, Isabell Hull at Cornell, and Frederick Marquart at Syracuse all independently told me this about their respective universities. I imagine the next 2 years would be an excellent time to be an Early Modern Germanist looking for a tenure-track job. Not sure how the field will look in several years when I'm finishing up... 

Edited by TheHessianHistorian
Posted
5 hours ago, TheHessianHistorian said:

I imagine the next 2 years would be an excellent time to be an Early Modern Germanist looking for a tenure-track job.

Only if the university or department decides to replace them.

Posted
4 minutes ago, telkanuru said:

Only if the university or department decides to replace them.

Yes, the professors I named were all retiring professors who said that there was a plan to replace them with a similar specialist.

Posted
9 hours ago, TheHessianHistorian said:

Yes, the professors I named were all retiring professors who said that there was a plan to replace them with a similar specialist.

I'm sure, but if you've ever been involved in the hiring process, you'll know that what you plan and what takes place ain't ever exactly been similar, there. And time frames are always long. I suspect one or two of those jobs might just be available when you go on the market, if you start your PhD next year!

Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, telkanuru said:

I'm sure, but if you've ever been involved in the hiring process, you'll know that what you plan and what takes place ain't ever exactly been similar, there. And time frames are always long. I suspect one or two of those jobs might just be available when you go on the market, if you start your PhD next year!

Case in point without specifying the field: We petitioned to have a TT line to replace a retired professor in geographical field X, time period Y and speciality in Z and the College kept rejecting that proposal.  Only did we end up with two professors, both in X and Y but with one specializing in A and the other in B.  Those new hires came to us via spousal hire and a newly established endowed chair in X and Y.  Now we are fighting to get a hiring line in field of O and period of P.... how the position will eventually materialize will be a mystery.

Sadly, universities/colleges tend to disregard positions we deem important and they are geared towards student interests and ongoing international affairs, not of our own self-interest.... for whatever unknown reasons.  Especially in public universities that generally face budget cuts every year.  The battles for hires differ from one year to another depending on many factors that occur between application cycles.

Edited by TMP

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