Excited to learn more? For a taster of what you can expect to study on our History and Politics degree, take a sneak preview of some of the modules you may have the opportunity to study below.
Semester 1
Compulsory
Academic Foundations in International Relations, Politics and History
This module has three main aims:
- introduces students to academic integrity;
- allows students to development their academic skills for successful study in Politics, International Relations, Philosophy and/or History
- allows students to develop, recognise and better articulate their skills, attributes and self-awareness.
The Contemporary World Arena (10 credits)
The aims of the module are to explore various aspects of the contemporary world arena, and to consider the importance of different actors and issues and to identify links between theory and practice in the world arena.
The Atlantic World: The Americas, Europe and Africa since the 15th Century
This module introduces students to the concept of the 'Atlantic World', surveys the early modern history of Africa, the Americas and Western Europe, and explores the key historical themes of this period including race, religion and empire.
Optional
Power, Politics & Ideology in Modern Europe (20 credit)
This module provides an introduction to modern European history from c.1750 until European integration and the major ideological families that have defined, and continue to shape, European political, cultural, and intellectual life. It encourages students to evaluate the impact of the 'dual revolution' on the emergence of the key political ideologies - including liberalism, conservatism, Marxism, and feminism - and to assess the relevance of these ideologies to contemporary politics.
Power, Politics & Ideology in Modern Europe (10 credit)
This module provides an introduction to modern European history from c.1750 to European integration and the major ideological families that have defined, and continue to shape, European political, cultural, and intellectual life. It encourages students to evaluate the impact of the 'dual revolution' on the emergence of the key political ideologies - including liberalism, conservatism, Marxism, and feminism - and to assess the relevance of these ideologies to contemporary politics.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Semester 2
Compulsory
International Political Theory
This module aims to introduce students to a selection of theories, concepts and theorists of International Politics. Students will learn to critically evaluate the strengths, weaknesses and limits of each approach.
What is History?
This module establishes a foundation about the nature of History as a subject area.
Politics and Government (20 credits)
This module introduces students to key concepts and theories used in the study of advanced democracies. Taking the United Kingdom as its starting point, it provides an overview of key historical and contemporary debates and draws on quantitative and qualitative research traditions in Comparative Politics.
Optional
The Making and Unmaking of the World Order (20 credit)
This module introduces students to the main currents of world history and to the shifting structure of the international order in the modern period. It aims to cover both the mainstream narratives and those critical of Eurocentrism, thereby stimulating an appreciation in cultural diversity.
The Making and Unmaking of the World Order (10 credit)
This module introduces students to the main currents of world history and to the shifting structure of the international order in the modern period. It aims to cover both the mainstream narratives and those critical of Eurocentrism, thereby stimulating an appreciation of cultural diversity.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Semester 1
Compulsory
Theories and Methods in Political Research
The aims of this module are to introduce students to the dominant approaches and their research methods in politics.
Nation and Empire: Sources of British History
This module serves two purposes. The first purpose is to place twentieth-century British history within a global context, surveying both its domestic social, cultural, economic and political development and its transformation from an imperial to a post-imperial nation. The second purpose is to introduce students to the different types of sources available to study the recent past and the techniques required to analyse them.
Optional
History of Political Thought (20 Credit)
The aim of this module is to examine some of the main thinkers in the history of political thought.
History of Political Thought (10 credit)
The aim of this module is to examine the development of the political thought by looking at key concepts, thinkers and movements in the history of ideas.
Modern China in a Global Perspective
This course provides an overview of modern Chinese history, focusing on China's entanglement with the world at large. It will be shown how modern China in cultural, social and economic terms was shaped by external influences and in return made its imprint on the wider world. The module thus provides insights into the development of a rising global power through studying its recent past, while at the same addressing issues of cultural difference.
African States and Nations: Before and After Colonialism, 1850-1990
This module introduces students to nineteenth and twentieth century African history, and explores the development of African states and nations in the pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial periods. We will address why it has often been difficult for Africans to form successful nation-states and the impact of colonial legacies. The module will situate Africa in the wider global context, but will focus primarily on African experiences and how African peoples have shaped their continent's history.
Politics of Development
This module aims to introduce the students to the study of development and to examine the problem of global socio-economic inequality and its relation to politics.
Your Future Career: Preparing for the World of Work
What do you know? What are skills? Where are they going to take you? This module will help you to answer those questions by building on transferrable skills and encouraging you to reflect on your learning. In addition, you’ll learn about the UK job market, and how to negotiate a range of recruitment tasks including decoding job specifications, writing an application, interviews, psychometric tests and the use of AI. Combine these with your degree and graduate with confidence.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Semester 2
Compulsory
Research Design
The aim of this module is to develop skills in research design, involving selecting of topic and viable research questions, appropriate research methodologies for the research questions selected, sourcing research data and learning how to complete a coherent research proposal.
Optional
The American Century: US Politics and Society in the 20th Century
The aims of this module are to:
- Introduce students to the main institutions of the US government and how they function within the US political system
- Examine the politics and foreign policy of the United States through an analysis of its 20th century history
- Explore how US cultural, social and intellectual history influenced US politics in the 20th century.
The American Century: US Politics and Society in the 20th Century (10 credits)
The aims of this module are to:
- Introduce students to the main institutions of the US government and how they function within the US political system
- Examine the politics and foreign policy of the United States through an analysis of its 20th century history
- Explore how US cultural, social and intellectual history influenced US politics in the 20th century.
From Rebellion to Partition: British India, 1857-1947
The aim of this course is to introduce students to the history of British India from mid-19th c. to the end of colonial period in 1947. The course begins with an introductory overview of colonial history through which to study the Indian sub-continent and goes on to examine major landmarks of this period. It looks at the colonial state's interactions with Indian polity, society and culture to show how imperial subjects came into being, before becoming independent citizens in 1947.
Modern Germany: Recovery from Ruin, 1945-present (20 credit)
Germany's total defeat in the Second World War and the exposure of the mass murder by Germans of Jews, Slavs, disabled people and other minorities made 1945 the start of a new period in Germany and European history. More than 70 years later, Germany has become one of the world's stablest democracies and most successful economies. The Federal Republic is an important member of the world's leading military alliance and principal international organizations. This course examines the remarkable transformations in German politics, economics, society and international relations which have taken place since 1945 and assesses their impact on the Germans. It also examines Germany's role in Europe and the world.
Victorian Values Reconsidered
This module introduces students to debates in the social, political and cultural history of Victorian Britain, with particular emphases on histories of childhood, democratisation, poverty, sex and sexuality, crime and deviance, religion, and race. The course also explores representations of the Victorians since 1901, addressing key historiographical questions about why and how the reputation of the period and its people has undergone constant revision.
Political Simulation
The aim of this module is to introduce students to practical politics through the use of role play exercises.
The Politics of Star Wars
The aim of this module is to introduce students to various aspects of politics and history as depicted within and emanating from the Star Wars films. Students will consider how these depictions can be used as a lens to understand key political concepts and their relationship to contemporary issues, topic and events.
Capitalism, Democracy and the State
This module offers an introduction to the field of Comparative Political Economy, with a focus on how capitalism and democracy interact and influence one another. It provides an overview of key themes in this research tradition and introduces students to core concepts and debates.
Gender and Global Politics
The aim of this module is to take an intersectional perspective to explore how gender relates to politics, both domestic and international. It explores some of the different ways that sex, gender and feminism have been theorized and framed. As well as how gender shapes and impacts upon phenomena in domestic and global politics such as political representation and leadership; rights and citizenship; sexual violence; reproductive justice; social justice and resistance; conflict and terrorism.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Semesters 1 & 2
Compulsory
Dissertation
The aim of the module is to enable students to undertake an extensive piece of research on a topic of their choice in the field of their degree title, and to further develop their skills in research techniques and methods.
Semester 1
Optional
Sex, Death and Decadence: Culture and Politics in the Age of Anxiety
The 'fin de siècle' - stretching from the 1880s to the outbreak for the First World War - was defined by the clash between the old and the new. On the one hand, it was an era of scientific, technological, and philosophical innovation that inspired hope for the future as it pointed to humanity's apparently boundless creativity and mastery of the natural world. Yet, on the other, it was a time of febrile anxiety, in which premonitions of degeneration and decay captured the imagination and equally informed political and philosophical life.
'Sex, Death, and Decadence' examines the ways in which this optimism and anxiety shaped the political, cultural, and intellectual life of turn-of-the-century Europe. By engaging with a diverse range of primary materials, students will explore the ways in which, among others, debates over sex, symbols of death and decay, and fear over declining moral and racial standards, demarcate a specific moment in European history. This was a moment in which faith in rationality and progress seemed at once unquestionable, but also worryingly vulnerable.
Jim Crow, Bootleggers and Okies: American Culture 1865-1940
This module offers students an opportunity to explore how American culture responded to questions raised by the modernisation of the United States between the end of the Civil War and the beginnings of World War 2.
The Soviet Security State, 1917-present
This module examines the role played by the Soviet and post-Soviet security and intelligence agencies in the history of the Soviet regime and its satellites from the Russian Revolution of 1917 to the present day. The history of Communism is a key part of the history of the twentieth century; the Soviet Union's security and intelligence agencies played a key role in the history of Communism. The twentieth century was the most calamitously bloody century in mankind's history; the Soviet Union's security services, and those set up in their image, bear of a large share of the responsibility for that.
The Asia-Pacific in Global Politics
This Module explores the various vectors of international politics in the Asia-Pacific; and locates this dynamic region within the larger framework of global politics. Students are expected to demonstrate an appreciation of the web of interactions in the Asia-Pacific at the end of the module. Topics include political geography, diplomatic relations, international political economy, and identity politics in East Asia.
Contemporary Political Philosophy
The aims of this module are to:
- Outline and discuss important themes in contemporary political philosophy by encouraging reflection on a number of common basic assumptions and intuitions about the nature of politics, the responsibilities of social and political institutions and the principles upon which ideas about politics are founded.
- Encourage you to tackle some of the most profound and enduring questions facing citizens and policy makers in liberal democratic states and to evaluate the various ways in which different philosophical traditions have approached these issues.
Emerging Threats in the 21st Century
The aim of this module is to develop an understanding of new and emerging security threats in the 21st Century. It explores some of the different ways these threats are understood, how they are being responded to and their implications for the politics of security.
Environmental Thought
This module examines the ethical (including moral, social, and political) dimensions of environmental thought, broadly construed to encompass a range of questions about human relationships with plants, animals, ecosystems, the climate, and the wider nonhuman world. Ethico-political frameworks explored might include ecologism, animal rights, biocentrism, and similar. Practical normative questions explored might include the ethics of diets and food systems; the political inclusion of animals; the question of who is responsible for putting right environmental harm; species conservation; green militarization; and green democracy.
The Politics of Terrorism
This module introduces students to the nature, causes, types, and threat of terrorism, and the ways in which this threat is countered.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Semester 2
Optional
After Empire: South Asia since 1945
This course examines the emergence, evolution and contemporary existence of South Asia (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal) since 1945. It explores the moments of incorporation, trajectories of development and marginal spaces, apart from the mainstream of South Asia today.
Special Relationship? Anglo-American Relations since 1900
This module examines the history and politics of Anglo-American relations, from c.1900 to the present.
Feminist Philosophy
This module aims to a) give students a sound grounding in leading strands of feminist philosophy; and b) to allow students to be able to position themselves within these debates. It will do this by focusing on texts and debates: students will read texts in preparation for the class sessions, and will be encouraged to critique, compare, contrast, engage and position themselves in relation to the writings under consideration.
No Gods! No Masters! Anarchism Past and Present
The aim of the module is to explore anarchism in the history of ideas and contemporary politics, using a student-designed open syllabus and by completing a project, tailored to individual interests.
International Conflict Management
The course aims to introduce the students to international conflict management and to foster critical thinking about international interventions aimed at stopping violent conflicts.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
The information above is intended as an example only, featuring module details for the current year of study. Modules are reviewed on an annual basis and may be subject to future changes – revised details will be published through Programme Specifications ahead of each academic year. Please also see Terms and Conditions of Study for more information.