‘Futures for the History Journal: Reflections & Projections’, 6 December 2022

Panel Discussion

17:00 GMT, Tuesday 6 December 2022, Online 

 

Speakers at the event

  • Dr Kate Smith (Co-editor, Transactions of the RHS / University of Birmingham)
  • Dr Harshan Kumarasingham (Co-editor, Transactions of the RHS / University of Edinburgh)
  • Professor Sarah Knott (Indiana University, and former Acting Editor of the American Historical Review)
  • Georgia Priestley (Publisher, History Journals, at Cambridge University Press)
  • Professor Karin Wulf (Director, John Carter Brown Library, Brown University, USA)
  • Professor Emma Griffin (RHS President and University of East Anglia, chair)

 

Watch this event

 

About the event

November 2022 marks the 150th anniversary of publication of Volume One of the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. Transactions is the longest-running English-language academic history journal, predating first publication of the English Historical Review (1886) and the American Historical Review (1895), among other titles.

November 2022 also sees important changes to the current Transactions. This year’s volume will come with a new design and paperback format. It’s also the first in 150 years to include external submissions not previously read to the Society; the first to be edited by historians who are not members of RHS Council; and the first to engage an editorial board.

This event is an opportunity to take stock at a time that’s both an anniversary and a new departure.

Journals have long been, and remain, central to the communication of historical research. As a publishing form, History journals have proved remarkably durable, with developments typically taking place within an established framework of article types and formats. At the same time, the very recent history of History (and other) journals points to quickening and more disruptive change — most notably in terms of online access and publishing models; but also with reference to innovations of form, tone and purpose.

In this panel, UK and US historians associated with leading journals (as editors, publishers, innovators, authors and readers) consider the extent, impact and possible outcomes of these recent changes. At an important time for Transactions, we’ll also explore how far journal publishing fits with current research and pedagogical priorities; and what innovations our panellists — and you — propose as ‘Futures for the History Journal’.

 

About the panellists

  • Kate Smith is Associate Professor of Eighteenth-Century History at the University of Birmingham. In January 2022 she was appointed co-editor of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. With her co-editor Dr Harshan Kumarasingham, Kate is responsible for the journal’s creative development in terms of academic content and format. Kate’s publications include Material Goods, Moving Hands: Perceiving Production in England, 1700-1830 (2014) and The East India Company at Home (co-edited with Margot Finn, 2018). Her current project is a monograph provisionally entitled Losing Possession in the Long Eighteenth Century.
  • Harshan Kumarasingham is Senior Lecturer in British Politics at the University of Edinburgh. With Kate Smith, he is co-editor from 2022 of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, and jointly responsible for this new phase in the journal’s contribution to scholarly debate. Harshan’s research interests include constitutional history and decolonisation. His publications include A Political Legacy of the British Empire. Power and the Parliamentary System in Post-Colonial India and Sri Lanka (2013) and the edited collections Viceregalism. The Crown as Head of State in Political Crises in the Postwar Commonwealth and Liberal Ideals and the Politics of Decolonisation (both 2020).
  • Professor Sarah Knott is Sally M. Reahard Professor of History at Indiana University. She has served as both Associate and Acting Editor of the American Historical Review, the American historical profession’s flagship journal. In 2013, she was elected to the Editorial Board of the UK’s journal Past & Present. Sarah’s most recent publications include Mother. An Unconventional History (Penguin, 2019) and Mothering’s Many Labours (a 2020 special issue of Past & Present, co-edited with Emma Griffin).
  • Georgia Priestley is Publisher, History Journals for Cambridge University Press, with responsibility for a wide range of titles, including Contemporary European History, Historical JournalJournal of Global Studies, Modern Intellectual History and Urban History.
  • Professor Karin Wulf is Beatrice and Julio Mario Santo Domingo Director and Librarian, John Carter Brown Library, and Professor of History at Brown University, Rhode Island. A historian of gender, family and politics in eighteenth-century British America, Karin’s forthcoming book is Lineage: Genealogy and the Power of Connection in Early America with Oxford University Press. Prior to joining Brown in 2021, Karin was Executive Directive of the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, which includes the journal William & Mary Quarterly among its titles. Karin is well-known for her innovations in journal (and wider) publishing, and as a leading commentator on scholarly communications for historians through her regular contributions to The Scholarly Kitchen.
  • Professor Emma Griffin (chair) is President of the Royal Historical Society and Professor of Modern British History at the University of East Anglia. A specialist in nineteenth-century economic and social history, Emma has extensive experience of journal publishing, having served as Editor for the journals History (2012-16) and Historical Journal (2017-21).

 

RHS Lecture and Events: Full Programme for 2022 >

 

Presenting your work

Mary Vincent writes:

Mary Vincent LSA history PhD establishes expertise. The focus is on knowledge, interpreting that knowledge and situating it within a published literature. This is careful, detailed work, referenced with full scholarly apparatus. But none of that knowledge actually matters if it stays locked up inside the researcher’s own head. Presenting your work is about communicating that knowledge, often to different audiences.This is a skill in its own right and, ironically, the scholarly skills learnt over the course of a PhD are poor preparation for it.

Historians in our own field or subfield are in some ways the least intimidating audience. They understand and appreciate the detail and subtle debates you are engaging with and will need far less in the way of context or introduction. But such audiences are rare. Even at an academic conference you are likely to be speaking to people with different specialist interests, whether of period, place or theme.  Making what you are saying accessible and intelligible is key.

Preparing and presenting a seminar paper

There is a lot of advice available on the internet; some of it is extremely detailed and not all of it is good.  UK and US university websites are a reliable source of sensible advice but this can be prescriptive, and not all of it will work for you.  READ MORE

Preparing and presenting a conference paper

Conference papers are shorter than seminar papers—commonly twenty minutes—and run more tightly to time.  You will present as part of a panel, and you should determine the kind of audience you are speaking to—whether specialist or general, historical or interdisciplinary—and be clear as to how long you have to speak. READ MORE

Intervening in academic discussion

Questions after a seminar or conference paper provide an important opportunity to participate in academic debate.  This can be nerve-racking.  Some university cultures have a robust style of questioning, which can lead to a critique, for example from the panel chair, to which you are expected to reply. In others, questions are much longer than the repartee style of question and answer than is common in Britain.  Try to find out as much as you can in advance about what to expect. READ MORE

What happens in a viva?

A PhD viva is a unique opportunity to discuss your research with two experts. They will have read every word of your thesis and all their attention will be on you and your work.  Though any examination is nerve-racking, you should try to enjoy the viva; this detailed, thoughtful consideration of your work doesn’t happen very often. READ MORE

Further information can be found at these useful websites:

 

ECH Publishing: A Book of One’s Own

 

For good reasons, a book of your own – now sometimes called a ‘monograph’, although this really only means a specialist work by a single author (and so technically could apply to a journal article) – is widely seen as the gold standard of historiography. Because history is an evidence-intensive subject, and also substantively extensive – that is, it aspires to both breadth and depth – there are many intellectual projects that can only be achieved at book length. This is why the professional qualification for academic historians – the Ph.D. – is achieved by writing a book-length dissertation, and it’s why hiring and promotion decisions are largely based on the publication of books.

Books are quite like Ph.D. dissertations – they tend to range from 80-120,000 words and often cover a similar stretch of ground. Why then don’t we just publish our Ph.D. dissertations (as is the case in some disciplines and in some countries)? There are a number of reasons for this. First, the tradition has been to consider the Ph.D. dissertation the first draft of a book. It gets examined and critiqued and the author can then go away and develop or transform it.

As we’ve said before, history is slow – the work matures over several iterations, with time to breathe and contemplate in between. It’s hard to teach someone how to write a book; it’s the kind of thing you learn by doing; and this takes time (so be sure to get friends, colleagues, mentors to read successive drafts of chapters, to help you make sure you’re on the right track). Second, the tendency in recent years has been to tightly control the time spent writing the Ph.D. and therefore to limit its scope. If it’s going to be published, it needs to regain the wider horizons that only extra time (and sometimes some extra words) can supply.

Many book versions of Ph.D.s involve extra chapters that take on entirely new extensions of the original conception, or more comparative or methodological reflections. Increasingly, postdoctoral fellowships are designed to give early-career researchers time to convert their dissertation into a book, rather than to launch a new project already. This may mean that there is a gap of 2-6 years (or more) between completion of the Ph.D. and publication of the monograph. It’s impossible to describe the ideal type book. Sometimes they range over centuries and continents. Sometimes they are tightly focused on a micro history, especially one which affords rich sources.

Some historical monographs are more like books in other disciplines – loosely-connected collections of case-studies, where the chapters read like stand-alone articles. Others are dominated by a cohesive thesis which plays itself out systematically through every page of the book. You’ll have your own tastes and ideas, probably honed further by writing the Ph.D.

 

 

Society elects 157 new Fellows, Associate Fellows, Members and Postgraduate Members

At its latest meeting on 3 February 2023, the RHS Council elected 44 Fellows, 32 Associate Fellows, 40 Members and 41 Postgraduate Members, a total of 157 people newly associated with the Society. We welcome them all.

The majority of the new Fellows hold academic appointments at universities, specialising in a very wide range of fields; but also include museum curators, librarians, heads of learned societies, teachers heritage consultants, and independent researchers and writers. The Society is an international community of historians and our latest intake includes Fellows from seven countries: Australia, Canada, Ireland, Norway, Portugal, the UK and United States.

Our latest intake includes a number of historians working outside History departments, in cognate disciplines in higher education (on this occasion, Art History, Library and Literary Studies, Musicology, Philosophy and Theology): a reminder that the Fellowship is open to all whose research provides a scholarly contribution to historical knowledge.

The new Associate Fellows include not only early career historians in higher education but also historians with professional and private research interests drawn from journalism, conservation, libraries and archives, public and community history and the diplomatic service.

The new Members have a similarly wide range of historical interests, and include individuals employed in universities, and as civil servants, teachers, librarians and lawyers – together with independent and community historians. Our new Postgraduate Members are studying for higher degrees in History, or related subjects, at 27 different universities in the UK, Canada, Italy and the United States. All those newly elected to the Fellowship and Membership bring a valuable range of expertise and experience to the Society.

February 2023 sees the admission of our seventh set of Associate Fellows and Postgraduate Members — two membership categories introduced in late 2021. These changes to membership (about which you can read more here) enable more historians to join the fellowship, and facilitate more focused support for RHS members at the start of their careers.

New Fellows and Members are elected at regular intervals through the year. The current application round is open and runs to Monday 10 April 2023, with the next closing date after this being Monday 5 June 2023. Further details on RHS Fellowship and Membership categories (Fellow, Associate Fellow, Member and Postgraduate Member); benefits of membership; deadlines for applications throughout 2023; and how to apply, are available here.

 

New Fellows, elected February 2023

  • Paul Campbell
  • Ian Campbell
  • Debbie Challis
  • Peter Collinge
  • Roxana Coman
  • Joseph Cronin
  • Anthony Crowley
  • Ben Dew
  • Elena Draghici-Vasilescu
  • Jane Draycott
  • Noelle Dückmann Gallagher
  • Jonathan Durrant
  • Laura Eastlake
  • Rob Ellis
  • Stefan Fisher-Høyrem
  • Darren Freebury-Jones
  • Jane Freeland
  • Alison Garden
  • Jamie Gianoutsos
  • Benjamin Guyer
  • Trevor Herbert
  • Laurence Johnson
  • Jennifer Keating
  • Rachel Kiddey
  • Kevin Killeen
  • Liam Lewis
  • David Magalhães
  • Ewen Misha
  • Teresa O’Doherty
  • Elodie Paillard
  • Hugh Pattenden
  • David Reagles
  • Alexander Rose
  • Pamela Scully
  • Neil Tarrant
  • Misha Teramura
  • Alun Thomas
  • Gyorgy Toth
  • Colin Trodd
  • Mark Vickers
  • Tim Welch
  • Philip Wood
  • Eve Worth
  • David Worthington

New Associate Fellows, elected February 2023

  • Tayo Agunbiade
  • Iram Ahmad
  • Artemis Alexiou
  • Krysten Blackstone
  • Nicoletta Bruno
  • Eddie Chaloner
  • Danielle Claybrook
  • Paul Crawford
  • Christian Cuthbert
  • Clayton Davis
  • Scott de Groot
  • Nicolo Ferrari
  • Iker Itoiz Ciaurriz
  • Terry Kilburn
  • Michael Leek
  • Peter Lythe
  • William Mitchell
  • Benjamin Morris
  • Steve Ngo
  • Daniel O’Brien
  • Patrick O’Connor
  • David Olvera Ayes
  • Patrick B. Poland
  • Casey Raeside
  • Rose Roberto
  • Elisabeth Salje
  • Petros  Spanou
  • Harry Spillane
  • Elin Tomos
  • Ben Walsh
  • Nicola Williams
  • Lauren Young

New Members, elected February 2023

  • Ernesto Juan Anaya
  • Loraine Banner
  • Gaverne Bennett
  • Eleanor Braithwaite
  • Jocelyn Cash
  • Felix Cheah
  • Oliver Clark
  • Colin Coates
  • Michela Cocolin
  • Patrick Daigneault
  • Mark Diamond
  • Lindsay Ditkofsky
  • Jennifer Ehrlich
  • Eghosa Ekhator
  • Jack Fairweather
  • Mercy Fowler
  • Tracey Gaitt
  • Kyle Glover
  • Tadhg Goodison
  • Michael Hardman
  • David Harvey
  • Jens Hepper
  • Samantha Hook
  • Rongqi Li
  • Nicolaus Martin
  • Shelley Murphy
  • Martin Pitts
  • Edward Pryke
  • Carol Quentin-Hicks
  • David Rodenko
  • John Sharman
  • Manish Shrivastava
  • Kelly Smith
  • Ines Sousa
  • Isarum Sriyingyong
  • Andrés Urbano
  • Susan Ward
  • Nick Wood
  • Jiarui Wu
  • ChitShing Wu

New Postgraduate Members, elected February 2023

  • Chloe Atkinson
  • Phillip Baranick
  • Sam Brady
  • Emily Chambers
  • Yi-Ying Chao
  • Thomas Collins
  • Helen Corlett
  • David Cowan
  • Calum Cunningham
  • Shaun Cushley
  • Raja Venkata Krishna Dandamudi
  • Camilla de Koning
  • Lewis Driver
  • Howard Francis
  • Lavinia Gambini
  • Dionysios Giatras
  • Hannah Gibbons
  • Jasper Heeks
  • Nausheen Hoosein
  • Rebecca Irvine
  • Nigel Jenkins
  • Scott Keir
  • Graham Kerr
  • Emma Marshall
  • Kay Rawson
  • Autumn Reinhardt-Simpson
  • Rosaria Sgueglia
  • Pritam Singh
  • David Spruce
  • Jois Stansfield
  • Ben Stemper
  • Lily Tekseng
  • Sara Tenneson
  • Tiéphaine Thomason
  • Katharine Waldron
  • Nathan Websdale
  • Rowan Whitcomb
  • Eleanor Whitehead
  • Tadeusz Wojtych
  • Tsz Ho Wong
  • Emma Wordsworth

HEADER IMAGE: Wine Drinking in a Spring Garden, c.1430, Attributed to Iran, possibly Tabriz, opaque watercolor and gold on undyed silk, Metropolitan Museum of art, New York, public domain

 

Coming soon: Levi Roach on the remaking of medieval Europe

 

In the modern 21st century we’ve become increasingly aware of the legacies of empire, and of how these large-scale, ambitious political constructions and projects continue to live on, at least in terms of their after-effects long after their formal structures have dissolved or have been superseded.
I wish to offer a somewhat similar perspective, on developments in a much earlier period in the early to central Middle Ages.

 

Join us at 6pm on Thursday 1 February for the next event the Society’s 2024 programme when Professor Levi Roach (University of Exeter) speaks to the Society on Charting Authority after Empire: Documentary Culture and Political Legitimacy in Post-Carolingian Europe’.

What happens with a former empire breaks apart, giving rise to new kingdoms and dynasties in England, France and Germany? What did these new states draw from the former empire, and what can comparative research tell us about the importance of these legacies? And just how lasting are these early medieval legacies, and where might we see them in 21st century Europe?

Levi’s lecture takes place in-person at Mary Ward House, 5-7 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SN and online. Booking is available for both options. We look forward to welcoming to this exploration of medieval Europe and its legacies.

 

Society elects 308 new Fellows, Associate Fellows, Members and Postgraduate Members

At its latest meeting on 2 December 2022, the RHS Council elected 102 Fellows, 49 Associate Fellows, 64 Members and 93 Postgraduate Members, a total of 308 people newly associated with the Society. We welcome them all.

The majority of the new Fellows hold academic appointments at universities, specialising in a very wide range of fields; but also include curators, teachers, broadcasters, film-makers, heritage consultants, independent researchers and writers. The Society is an international community of historians and our latest intake includes Fellows from 12 countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Israel, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Singapore, the UK and United States.

Our latest intake includes a number of historians working outside History departments, in cognate disciplines in higher education: a reminder that the Fellowship is open to all whose research provides a scholarly contribution to historical knowledge.

The new Associate Fellows include not only early career historians in higher education but also historians with professional and private research interests drawn from broadcasting, archives, museums and teaching.

The new Members have a similarly wide range of historical interests, and include individuals employed in universities, and as archaeologists, archivists, civil servants, conservators and surveyors, lawyers and members of the judiciary, and teachers – together with independent and community historians. Our new Postgraduate Members are studying for higher degrees in History, or related subjects, at 38 different universities in the UK, India and the United States. All those newly elected to the Fellowship and Membership bring a valuable range of expertise and experience to the Society.

December 2022 sees the admission of our sixth set of Associate Fellows and Postgraduate Members — two new membership categories introduced in late 2021. These changes to membership (about which you can read more here) enable more historians to join the fellowship, and facilitate more focused support for RHS members at the start of their careers.

New Fellows and Members are elected at regular intervals through the year. The current application round is open and runs to Friday 13 January 2023, with the next closing date being Monday 10 April 2023. Further details on RHS Fellowship and Membership categories (Fellow, Associate Fellow, Member and Postgraduate Member); benefits of membership (including new benefits added from August 2022); deadlines for applications throughout 2023; and how to apply, are available here.

 

New Fellows, elected December 2022

  • Robin Adams
  • Christin Anderson
  • Robert Mervyn Andrews
  • Anthi Andronikou
  • David Annal
  • Gordon Barrett
  • Paul Bartrop
  • Catherine Bateson
  • Michel Beaulieu
  • Gurminder Bhambra
  • Lindy Brady
  • Ben Bronnert Walker
  • Carys Brown
  • Rhona Brown
  • Anthony Bruce
  • Sara Caputo
  • Jack Meng-Tat Chia
  • Rachel Chin
  • Stephanie Mooers Christelow
  • David Clayton
  • Guillaume Coatalen
  • Marcus Colla
  • Mary Cunningham
  • Gavin Daly
  • Shomik Dasgupta
  • Theodor Dunkelgrün
  • Charles Emmerson
  • Christina Faraday
  • James Fenwick
  • Larrie Ferreiro
  • Richard Finn
  • James Fisher
  • Gabriela Frei
  • Yan Gao
  • John Goodwin
  • Daniel Gosling
  • Andrew James William Gow
  • Martin Halliwell
  • Jessica Hammett
  • Iain Hay
  • Sacha Hepburn
  • Christian Hogsbjerg
  • Aya Homei
  • Hetta Howes
  • Gavin Hughes
  • Peter Jordan
  • Isidoros Katsos
  • Siobhan Keenan
  • Elisabeth Kehoe
  • Ariane Knüsel
  • Umit Kurt
  • Robert Lambert
  • Adrian Leonard
  • Henrietta Lidchi
  • Kate Loveman
  • Deborah Madden
  • Brandon Marsh
  • Simone Marshall
  • Zareer Masani
  • Gordon McKelvie
  • Bronagh McShane
  • Athanasius McVay
  • William Melville
  • Matthew Metcalfe
  • Ian Milligan
  • Stephen Mullen
  • Souvik Naha
  • Thomas Neuhaus
  • Brooke Newman
  • Helen O’Shea
  • Marina Perez de Arcos
  • Andrew Pickering
  • Toby Purser
  • Karen Racine
  • Charles Read
  • Steven Reid
  • Jennifer Richards
  • Huw Richards
  • Euan Roger
  • Anat Rosenberg
  • Hannah Ryley
  • Sophie Scott-Brown
  • Mary Shannon
  • Patricio Simonetto
  • Jonathan Singerton
  • Frederick Smith
  • Michael Spence
  • Howard Spencer
  • Foteini Spingou
  • Anastasia Stouraiti
  • Jennifer Summers
  • Drew Thomas
  • Sharon Thompson
  • Graham Twelftree
  • Vikram Visana
  • John Wall
  • Ryland Wallace
  • Emily Ward
  • Emma Whipday
  • Benedict Wiedemann
  • Roger Willoughby
  • Matthew Wilson
  • Esther Wright
  • Peter Yeandle

New Associate Fellows, elected December 2022

  • Zaib un Nisa Aziz
  • Philip Ball
  • Johan Bergstrom-Allen
  • Sushant Bharti
  • Amie Bolissian Mcrae
  • Kirsty Bolton
  • Lyndsie Bourgon
  • Caitlin Burge
  • John Condren
  • David Crowther
  • Josephine Cummins
  • Fraser Dallachy
  • Helen Esfandiary
  • Nick Evans
  • Aida Fernandez Prieto
  • Joshua Fitzgerald
  • Beth Gaskell
  • Tim Glasby
  • Nikolaos Gourof
  • Jamie Graves
  • Kieran Hazzard
  • Melanie Hollis
  • Stephanie Howard-Smith
  • Sandra Hynes
  • Emmeline Ledgerwood
  • Bruce Lindsay
  • Sophie Mann
  • Kate Marlow
  • Sean McDonagh
  • Moritz Mihatsch
  • Sarah-Louise Miller
  • Julie Miller
  • Szilvia Musasizi
  • David Pendleton
  • Rebecca Pollack
  • Yitong Qiu
  • Wilfred Rhoden
  • Darrell Rivers
  • Olha Romanova
  • Raphael Schäfer
  • Alireza Shams Lahijani
  • Julia Skinner
  • Ariane Smart
  • Callum Smith
  • Joseph Stanley
  • Tabitha Stanmore
  • Robert Tansey
  • Marilla Walker
  • Amy Wilson

New Members, elected December 2022

  • Matthew Abel
  • Mubashir Ak
  • Inara Andre
  • Emma Ash
  • Reka Bajus
  • Susan Ballard
  • Ursula Petula Barzey
  • Tony Biebuyck
  • Oliver Bircham
  • Julie Boden
  • Elaine Bodtmann
  • John Bridgeman
  • Alberto Casado Gómez
  • Fiona Cosson
  • Jim Cowie
  • Joseph Davies
  • Salvatore DiStefano
  • Adam Down
  • Jasper Elwes
  • Gary Fellman
  • Jonas Frey
  • Sushant Ghildyal
  • Rebecca Gorman
  • Julie Goucher
  • Ruth Graham
  • Michael Griffiths
  • David Griggs
  • Andrew Hammond
  • Maxine Harcourt-Kelly
  • David Harris
  • Sara Hashmi
  • Kathrine Hopson
  • Charlotte Hosford
  • Haining Hu
  • Sajjad Kantrikar
  • Jo Levitt
  • Roger Mann
  • Jane McChrystal
  • Jessica Morris
  • Deborah Morrison
  • Patrick Mulvenna
  • Daniel  Patrick
  • Jan Luca Probeck
  • Jeffrey Prosser
  • Sankaralingam Rathina Kumar
  • Joseph Reilly
  • Paul Rodriguez
  • Offir Rokach
  • Simon  Sardeson-Coe
  • Christian Schmeiduch
  • Iqbal Shaukat
  • Benedict Skipper
  • Manda Tamosauskaite
  • Lori Thomas
  • Adam Thomas-Fennelly
  • Jesse Ujagbor
  • Lard van den Berg
  • Serge Van Den Broucke
  • Suganya Vishnu
  • Paul Walton
  • James Whitaker
  • Ian Whitehurst
  • Samuel Wigley
  • Tsz Ho Wong

New Postgraduate Members, elected December 2022

  • Carrissa Anderson
  • Mehmet Akif Aydemir
  • Richard Balas
  • Thomas Banbury
  • Eduardo Benítez-Inglott y Ballesteros
  • Maia Blumberg
  • Matthew Bowen
  • Jake Bransgrove
  • Dominic Bridge
  • Theodora Broyd
  • Elizabeth Burrell
  • Jaime Caballero
  • William Campbell
  • Theodore Christodoulidis
  • Minji Chun
  • Kathryn Comper
  • Holly Cooper
  • Dylan Coulter
  • Darold Cuba
  • Edward Day
  • Elena Doran
  • Spencer Drake
  • Hollie Eaton
  • Nathan Eckersley
  • Teuku Reza Fadeli
  • Helen Flatley
  • Edward Ford
  • Andrew Frow-Jones
  • Amilia Gillies
  • Kimberly Glassman
  • Megan Graham
  • David Grant
  • Lucy Harrison
  • Sarah Hinds
  • Mark Hitchins
  • Fran Holmes
  • Matthew Hurst
  • Rebecca Jaffri
  • Paul Kelly
  • Eva Kemenade
  • Lou Khalfaoui
  • Ian Lacey
  • Harikesh Ladwa
  • Mary-Jannet Leith
  • Michael Lipiner
  • Jessica Lloyd
  • Carrie Long
  • Amy Longmuir
  • Arisa Loomba
  • Deanna Lyn Cook
  • Cameron Maclean
  • Daniel Mazhindu
  • Phoebe McDonnell
  • Catherine Meredith
  • Katherine Milliken
  • James Moffatt
  • Anna Molnar
  • Ben Morris
  • Brett Morritt
  • Victoria Myhand
  • Shankar Nair
  • Ellis Naylor
  • Yacine Ndao
  • Joshua Newmark
  • Tanner Ogle
  • Megan Palmer
  • Odile Liliana Panetta
  • Thomas Parkinson
  • Jen Pearce
  • Aneirin Pendragon
  • Rowan Powell
  • Carl Julius Reim
  • Clément Renault
  • Pilar Requejo de Lamo
  • Joseph Rix
  • Bonnie Robinson
  • Alana Rogers
  • Brian Roper
  • Andrew Sage
  • Samapan Saha
  • Alba Sanz Alvarez
  • Luke Stephenson
  • Kieran Stigant
  • Eleanor Strangways
  • Jonathan Tickle
  • Christopher Toole
  • Rebecca Tyson
  • Alexandra Ward
  • Alexandra Watson Jones
  • Mark Wilson
  • Alex Worsfold
  • Morag Wright
  • Guangxia Xu

 

HEADER IMAGE: Peasant Couples Dancing, 1580–1600, Johann Theodor de Bry, Netherlandish, after Sebald Beham Germany, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, public domain.

 

History in UK Higher Education: A Statement from the Royal Historical Society

13 June 2023

History in UK Higher Education is in a state of unprecedented turbulence and uncertainty.

This turmoil takes several forms. Most conspicuous are those departments facing cuts to courses, dismissal of staff, and closure of History degrees. Currently, the universities of Brighton, East Anglia and Kent are consulting historians about voluntary and compulsory redundancies. UEA’s History department is being reduced from 40 FTE in 2021 to fewer than 30. Kent has already lost 10 FTE historians since 2020: a figure that does not include its current round of compulsory redundancies. At Brighton, all historians are presently at risk of redundancy as the university seeks to cut its 54-strong School of Humanities and Social Sciences by 21 members of staff.  

Situations like this have become only too familiar. Since 2020, History departments or degree programmes have been lost at Sunderland, Kingston and London South Bank. Compulsory redundancy programmes at Goldsmiths, University of London, and Roehampton in 2022 proved hugely demoralising to all involved, and have impaired the teaching and research capacity of those who remain. Elsewhere, whilst compulsory redundancies have been avoided, historians have been exposed to continuous cycles of voluntary severance, with staff leaving either because the prospect of remaining in post is intolerable, or to save the employment of younger colleagues.

Regardless of how historians depart, the result is loss of capacity and an increase in responsibilities for those who remain. Cuts and closures reduce specialist knowledge, and breadth of programmes. They mean a reduction of the research capacity that underpins popular forms of historical engagement. And they negatively impact students. Whether it is overcrowding in highly recruiting departments or loss of provision for those studying at their local institution, the current regime diminishes the range and quality of history teaching across the UK.

We believe these problems to be more pervasive than is generally recognised. In private, the Royal Historical Society holds frequent meetings with historians concerned about impending change: from closure of degree programmes and cuts to courses (sometimes mid-degree); to an end to optionality and the loss of disciplinary identity with the creation of catch-all humanities departments. Since 2021, historians from eleven universities have worked with the Society, while threats to a further nine institutions have been noted.

The profile of ‘at risk’ departments is also changing. Many of the departments we now work with are in universities with long-standing History departments noted for their achievements in recent REF exercises, yet this provides no guarantee of security. Kent and East Anglia headed the REF2021 rankings for History, and both have recently experienced extensive restructure and cuts. If those experiencing cuts and closures include the highest scoring in the REF, what—ultimately—is the purpose of assessment for those on the ground?

None of these problems can be explained by a decline in student numbers or interest in History, which remain strong. Instead we must look to political decisions to explain this troubling situation. UK universities now operate in a market economy. Institutions are placed in direct competition, with income generation via intake the principal measure of success. The lifting of the student cap in 2015 has established an environment of ‘feast and famine’ across the sector.

Cuts and closures are the starkest manifestation of this environment. But marketisation also brings turbulence and uncertainty to historians in ‘winning’ institutions, required at short notice to deal with sharp, and unpredictable, spikes in student numbers. Across the sector, uncertainty is exhausting, all-consuming, and impedes long-term thinking, planning and the delivery of high-quality teaching.

In the coming months, the Royal Historical Society is undertaking a project to assess the full extent of the losses, risks and concerns that now characterise History in UK Higher Education. We also seek to better understand the personal, institutional and disciplinary impact of change on academic staff, researchers, students and community partners. As is clear, the aftershocks of upheaval are long-lasting and have negative effects on the life of a department well after a programme of change has officially ended.

Present-day commentaries regularly propose that History, and the wider humanities, are ‘in crisis’. We do not agree. History as a subject and pursuit remains in good health. But what does appear to be in crisis—now as never before—are the structures that enable and sustain History in UK Higher Education. The implications of this are real and serious, and they require attention.

If you are a historian working in a UK university and would like to bring, in confidence, points to our attention, please get in touch: president@royalhistsoc.org. 

The President, Officers and Council Members of the Royal Historical Society

 

History in UK Higher Education: A Statement from the Royal Historical Society

The President and Council of the Royal Historical Society have today issued a statement on their concerns for History teaching and research in UK Higher Education.

Please see here to read the full statement: ‘History in UK Higher Education. A Statement from the Royal Historical Society’

The statement identifies an environment of ‘unprecedented turbulence and uncertainty’ in the sector, evident in several forms: closure of departments, programmes of voluntary and compulsory redundancy; cuts to courses; and the persistent threat of future actions of this kind. The statement also comments on the changing profile of ‘at risk’ departments. Many of those with whom the Society now works are in established universities with long-standing History departments noted for their achievement in recent REF exercises.

Explanations for the increase of at risk departments rest with political decisions — notably the lifting the student cap in 2015 — and the marketisation of UK Higher Education. The negative effects of these changes are now being felt particularly acutely by History and other humanities disciplines.

In the coming months, the Royal Historical Society is undertaking a project to assess the full extent of the losses, risks and concerns that now characterise History in UK Higher Education. We expect to published this report later this year.


History in UK Higher Education: A Statement from the Royal Historical Society >

If you wish to contact the Society on topics raised in today’s statement, in confidence, please email: president@royalhistsoc.org


The Society’s Toolkit for Historians provides further resources for those at risk of departmental cuts and closures.

 

RHS Events Programme 2024

New events will be added to this programme as the year progresses; please check back for updates which will also be announced via social media


Tuesday 23 January 2024 at 5.30 pm

Clare Anderson (Leicester)
‘Convicts, Creolization and Cosmopolitanism: Aftermaths of Penal Transportation in the British Empire’
Joint RHS-GHIL Lecture, at the German Historical Institute London and Online


Thursday 1 February 2024 at 6.00 pm

Levi Roach (Exeter)
‘Charting Authority after Empire: Documentary Culture and Political Legitimacy in Post-Carolingian Europe’
RHS Lecture, Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Tuesday 20 February 2024 at 6.00 pm

In Conversation with Greg Jenner: ‘Finding the Funny in Public History’
RHS Event, Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Wednesday 6 March 2024, 10.00 am – 5.00 pm

‘Historical Legacies: collecting history, historical collections and community voices’
History and Archives in Practice, 2024
Annual event in association with The National Archives and the Institute of Historical Research. This year in partnership with Cardiff University
Day Conference, at Cardiff University


Wednesday 13 March 2024 at 5.00 pm

Fay Bound Alberti (King’s College London)
‘Why History Matters to Medicine: The Case of Face Transplants’ 
RHS Sponsored Lecture, at the University of York. Part of the Society’s Visit to historians at the universities of York and York St John.


Thursday 25 April 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘History Podcasting: An Introduction and Guide’
with Bob Nicholson (Edge Hill) and Dave Musgrove (BBC History Magazine)
Online Training Event


Tuesday 30 April 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘Doing History in Public 1: Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums’
with Andrew Smith (QMUL), Olwen Purdue (Queen’s University Belfast) and Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank)
Online Conversation Series


Friday 3 May 2024 at 6.00 pm

Julia Laite (Birkbeck)
‘Possible Maps: Ways of Knowing and Unknowing at the Edge of Empire (Newfoundland c. 1763-1829)’
RHS Lecture, Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Thursday 23 May 2024

Corinne Fowler (Leicester)
‘Our Island Stories: Country Walks through Colonial Britain’
RHS Sponsored Lecture, at Brunel University London. Part of the Society’s Visit to historians at Brunel University.


Friday 14 June 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘Getting Published: a Guide to Monograph Publishing for Early Career Historians’
with Meredith Carroll (Manchester University Press), Elizabeth Hurren (New Historical Perspectives), Miri Rubin (Queen Mary University of London) and Jane Winters (V-P for Publications, Royal Historical Society)
Online Training  Event for Early Career Historians


Thursday 20 June 2024 at 10.00 am

‘Doing History in Public 2: Print’
with Andrew Smith (QMUL) and Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank)
Online Conversation Series


Wednesday 3 July 2024 at 6.00 pm

The RHS Prothero Lecture: Peter Frankopan (Oxford)
‘On the Challenges and Purposes of Global History’
At Mary Ward House, London, and Online

followed by the Society’s Summer Party, 2024


Wednesday 17 July 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘AI, History and Historians’
with Helen Hastie (Edinburgh), Matthew L. Jones (Princeton), Anna-Maria Sichani (School of Advanced Study, University of London) and Jane Winters (V-P for Publications, Royal Historical Society)
Online Panel Discussion


Friday 13 September 2024 at 6.00 pm

Caroline Pennock (Sheffield)
‘Catholics or Cannibals? Indigenous Brazilians at the Court of Louis XIII’
RHS Lecture, at Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Wednesday 18 September 2024 at 6.00 pm

‘Doing History in Public 3: Broadcast’
with Andrew Smith (QMUL), Olwen Purdue (Queen’s University Belfast) and Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank)
Online Conversation Series


Tuesday 5 November 2024 at 6.00 pm

The RHS Public History Lecture: Janina Ramirez (Oxford)
‘Writing Women into History
In association with Gresham College, London


Friday 22 November 2024 at 6.00pm

RHS Presidential Address
Preceded by the Society’s Anniversary Meeting (AGM)
Mary Ward House, London, and Online

 

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