MA Global History

One of Britain’s leading centres for the postgraduate study of global, international and imperial histories, the Department of History brings together internationally recognised expertise in the histories of South, East and Southeast Asia, Africa and the Americas. The MA in Global History draws on this expertise to provide a deeper understanding of the forces shaping world history, enabling you to explore connections, comparisons and exchanges across broad geographical and chronological terrain, while also considering relationships between the global, regional and local.

Our MA courses are designed to help you carry out specialist research under expert supervision in a friendly and supportive environment.

The core module develops your understanding of key historiographical and methodological approaches and your skills in using relevant sources, while the Dissertation provides you the opportunity to further develop your skills and apply your knowledge in an independent research project. This is supported by the Research Presentation module which develops your skills in presenting research to a non-specialist audience.

Our range of option modules allow you to focus on the particular skills and knowledge that are most important to you. You can choose from a wide range of modules focussing on particular historical themes, supporting specific history research training and public history modules. All of this helps you build a broad range of transferable skills that will be desirable to future employers both inside and outside of academia.

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Modules

  • The World in Connection: Themes in Global History
  • Research Presentation for Historians
  • Dissertation in History
  • Autobiography, Identity and the Self in Muslim South Asia
  • Before Facebook: Social Networks in History
  • Biopolitics: Medicine, Meaning and Power
  • Black Power: Race, Gender, and Liberation in the United States and Beyond
  • Burying the White Gods: Indigenous peoples in the early modern colonial world
  • Cold War Histories
  • Debating Cultural Imperialism in the Nineteenth-Century British Empire
  • Food and Drink
  • Human Rights in Modern History
  • International Order in the Twentieth Century
  • Microhistory and the History of Everyday Life
  • Migration in the Ancient World
  • Oral History
  • Presenting the Past: Making History Public
  • Public History and Policy: Theory and Practice
  • Race and Racism in Historical Perspective
  • Research Skills for Historians
  • The Animal Turn: human and non-human animals in history
  • The Japanese Empire in East Asia, 1895-1945
  • The U.S. Civil War in Global Context
  • The Global Cold War
  • The United States in Vietnam, 1945-1975
  • Under Attack: The Home Front during the Cold War
  • Wikipedia and Medieval History
  • Women and Power
  • Women and Slavery in the Antebellum American South
  • Work Placement
  • Worlds of Labour: Working Class Lives in Colonial South Asia
  • Digital Cultural Heritage: Theory and Practice
  • Heritage, Place and Community
  • Heritage, History and Identity
  • Introduction to Cultural Data
  • Introduction to Digital Culture
  • American Nightmares: Socio-political Discourses in American Gothic Literature
  • New African Literatures
  • 'Tales of the City' - The Living Space in Contemporary American Fiction
  • Use our magical AI system, to check your admission chances for this course.
    £21,400 Per Year

    International student tuition fee

    1 Year

    Duration

    Sep 2025

    Start Month

    Aug 2025

    Application Deadline

    Upcoming Intakes

    • September 2025
    • September 2026

    Mode of Study

    • Full Time