Handbook home
Researching the Past (ARTS90008)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 6.25On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
| Availability | Semester 1 - On Campus |
|---|---|
| Fees | Look up fees |
The subject, conducted as six fortnightly seminars, introduces commencing graduate students to various tools and traditions of reading, writing, researching and thinking about the past. The subject will touch on a range of key methodological approaches in historiography over the past half century. Its intention is to focus students' attention on issues to do with researching and communicating knowledge of the past and on discussion of the broader role and claims of historical scholarship. We will consider changing modes of historical writing and publication, as well as the place of the PhD itself in historical training.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who successfully complete this subject should be able to:
- Demonstrate knowledge of a range of key methodological approaches in historiography over the past half century
- Critically evaluate the range of contemporary scholarship in their discipline or interdisciplinary area
- Reflect on, critically evaluate and synthesise the contemporary research literatures relevant to their thesis topic
- Formulate and present the research proposal for their confirmation
- Articulate the range of problems, concepts and theories relevant to their thesis and field of study.
Generic skills
Students who successfully complete this subject should be able to:
- Contextualise research within an international corpus of specialist knowledge
- Evaluate and synthesize research-based and scholarly literature
- Demonstrate an advanced understanding of key disciplinary and multi-disciplinary norms and perspectives relevant to the field
- Analyse critically within and across a changing disciplinary environment
- Disseminate the results of research and scholarship by oral and written communication
- Cooperate with and respect the contributions of fellow researchers and scholars.
Last updated: 25 November 2025