Business & Finance6 mins ago
why history?
For all of you history buffs, why would someone read history at university? I'm asking because I'm currently considering this. Thanks very much!
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No best answer has yet been selected by sobusyargh. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.First, a big asumption: that you're about to go to unversity as an undergraduate at 18/19 years of age.
Why history? For the same reason you would take any degree, I suggest. If you have no interest in history, don't do it. A degree is meant to demonstrate a capacity for analysis and synthesis of information, promote inquiry (original research) and assists an individual to learn to think for her/himself. That applies for biology or psychology or mathematics, just as much as for history.
When you come to look for employment at the end of your three/four years, most potential employers are much more interested in the class of the degree rather than the subject, unless they are highly specialised - e.g. if you want to be an actuary then a maths and stats degree will be better than one in history.
Whatever you read, though, do it with enthusiasm and give it your best shot. Good luck.
It's interesting that the title to this Topic is History and Myths... when one of the primary reasons to study history, either informally or as a vocation, is to be able, as much as possible, to seperate the two. I found, early on, that I brought a lot of assumptions to the field, which later, based on the very best evidence, I found not to be exactly true. Short story of my own experience... during a genealogical research of my own family, I was interested in a persistent legend of a Great-Uncle who had supposedly been hung as a horse thief during the Civil War, here in the U.S. The factual evidence proved, however, he was shot for being on the Union (northern) side in an area that was highly sympathetic to the Southern cause. It was a real insight to find that his immediate descendants would rather have him remembered as being a horse thief than a Yankee. Same kind of revelations occur regularly when the subject is approached with an open mind.
An alternate view, however to Artemis' is that "American" history is quite short in that we, as a nation are only 229 years old, while, for example the known history of the British Isles is at least 2500 years or so old. Additionally, I would offer that to isolate one area for historical study is to lessen a thorough understanding of its place in the grand scene...
It depends on the history you are studying.
It could lead to a good career as a teacher or in archaeological studies. Even a TV career (Dan Cruickshank?)
Or may even lead to a very good career in the sense that historians are consulted by governments when negotiations are carried out to ascertain and understand the history of a nation and culture.
I find I have a greater interest in history now than I ever did at school, which may well have been because of the partocular histpry that was on my curriculum.
Do be prepared for all the naysayers to knock your decision though - its extremely fashionable to criticise the core subjects, but most of these people are incapable of performing the functions which you refine on the course to a similar level.