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History


Honours

The aim of the Honours program in History, which can also be an option for those students who have majored in Australian Studies, is to provide students with either an apprenticeship as professional historians, or an extended knowledge of Australian social, economic and political life. Honours is an exciting and stimulating intellectual experience. Students carry out original research from archival, printed and or oral sources and construct a reasoned argument on the basis of their evidence to develop a thesis that displays a command of the language and the concepts and theory relevant to the subject in question.

Career

History Honours students face a broad choice of careers on completion of their studies. A proportion go on to postgraduate studies but others use their skills in careers such as teaching, publishing, the public service, journalism, museum work, management and many other areas. In addition, since the 1980s, an increasing number of Honours graduates have been practicing as independent professional historians, writing histories for corporations, local government bodies and organizations.

What is involved?

The Honours program consists of coursework (worth 4 credit points), and a dissertation of between 15,000 and 16,000 words (worth 4 credit points). Full-time students will complete the program in one academic year; part time students normally take two years. Coursework is usually done before the dissertation.

Honours thesis

A thesis is a limited piece of independent research based on both secondary (published) sources and some primary material (e.g. the minutes of Cabinet or the League of Nations, newspapers, collections of documents, oral evidence or quantitative data from official or private sources). The thesis addresses a proposition and presents an argument and conclusion, i.e. your 'thesis'. It is not simply a narration of events or views even though it may well include an important assembling and ordering of such events or views.

Finding a topic

It is important, for your own motivation, that you write on a topic or examine or analyse a problem which interests you. This topic must, however, be viable. This means that the sources it requires must be readily available and not too voluminous to make the task beyond the scope of a dissertation of this length. You should be able to research and write your thesis in six months if you are a full-time student, or one year, if you are part-time.

Your choice of topic must be refined in discussions with the academic staff in your discipline area. The Honours Coordinators will refer you to the member of staff whose interests most closely align with your own.

Further information

Further information including units of study can be found in the Deakin course search.

Contact details

Dr Helen Gardner

Honours Course Adviser

Tel (03) 9251 7027
helen.gardner@deakin.edu.au


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Staff in History and Australian Studies

Dr Helen Gardner

  • History of Anthropology
  • Ethnohistory and cross-cultural history
  • History of Christian Mission
  • History of the Pacific Islands
  • History of race

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9251 7027
helen.gardner@deakin.edu.au

Dr Keith Beattie

  • US history, post 1865
  • The Vietnam War in US history
  • Film history
  • Documentary studies
  • Film and history

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 6008
keith.beattie@deakin.edu.au

Dr Greg Burgess

  • Modern European History
  • Immigration History
  • History of France in the nineteenth and early-twentieth century
  • Age of Revolutions
  • Nationalism
  • Historiography

Campus: Geelong (Waurn Ponds)
Tel (03) 522 72987
greg.burgess@deakin.edu.au

Dr Barry Butcher

  • History of biology / Darwinism
  • Imperial and Colonial Science
  • Australian Science
  • Relationship between science and religion
  • Science and the Media
  • Colonialism and race

Campus: Geelong (Waurn Ponds)
Tel (03) 5227 2510
barry.butcher@deakin.edu.au

Dr Joost Coté

  • Histories of colonialism
  • History of Southeast Asia,
  • History of Indonesia
  • Postcolonialism
  • History of Education and Schooling
  • Oral Histories

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 3941
joost.cote@deakin.edu.au

Dr Michele Langfield

  • Australian immigration and emigration
  • Race relations
  • Multiculturalism
  • Local history

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 3951
michele.langfield@deakin.edu.au

Prof David Lowe

  • History of Australia's foreign and defence policies
  • The Cold War
  • Historical biography
  • History of post-war decolonisation
  • Historiography
  • Political biography

Campus: Geelong (Waurn Ponds)
Tel (03) 5227 2598
david.lowe@deakin.edu.au

Ms Pam Maclean

  • German history
  • Women's history
  • The Holocaust and genocide
  • Australian and Central European Jewish history
  • Historiography

Campus: Geelong (Waurn Ponds)
Tel (03) 5227 2580
maclean@deakin.edu.au

Dr Sarah Paddle

  • 19th century Australian cultural history
  • 19th century British cultural and social history
  • Women's history
  • Australian cultural relations with China

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 3950
sarah.paddle@deakin.edu.au

Dr Chris Waters

  • Twentieth Century World History
  • Cold War History
  • History of the Vietnam War
  • Australian foreign and defence policy
  • Australian and British relations in the twentieth century
  • Australian and Asian relations in the twentieth century
  • Australia and the Cold War

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 3949
cwaters@deakin.edu.au

Staff in Australian Studies

Assoc/Prof Stephen Alomes

  • Nationalism/political ideology
  • Cultural history
  • Popular culture

Campus: Geelong (Waurn Ponds)
Tel (03) 5227 1341
stephen.alomes@deakin.edu.au

Dr Geoffrey Robinson

  • Twentieth century Australian political and economic history
  • Labour History
  • Quantitative methods in history
  • Socialist thought and practice
  • Australian Political thought

Campus: Warnambool
Tel (03) 5563 3512
geoffr@deakin.edu.au

Assoc/Prof Donald Gibb (Honorary Fellow)

  • Australian local and regional history
  • Australian environmental history

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 3943
don.gibb@deakin.edu.au

Assoc/Prof Renate Howe (Honorary Fellow)

  • Urban studies
  • Comparative women's history in Britain, USA and Australian in the 19th and 20th centuries
  • Social policy
  • Urban history

Campus: Geelong
Tel (03) 5227 2594
renate.howe@deakin.edu.au

Dr Michele Langfield

  • Australian immigration and emigration
  • Race relations
  • Multiculturalism
  • Ethnicity, Identity
  • Oral History

Campus: Burwood
Tel (03) 9244 3951
michele.langfield@deakin.edu.au

Prof David Walker

  • Late 19th and 20th century Australian cultural history
  • Australian perceptions of Asia
  • Australian publishing history

Campus: Geelong (Waurn Ponds)
Tel (03) 5227 1364
david.walker@deakin.edu.au

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Career

What is involved?

Honours thesis

Finding a topic

Further information

Contact details

Staff


'In the first three weeks, my supervisor asked if I wanted to do post-grad, I laughed as I didn't think I would survive the year. However, my ambitions changed through the year and I am now doing postgraduate study because I love the environment and combining research and teaching is deeply satisfying.'

Stephanie Slade