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Haverford College
Department of History
History 400: Senior Thesis Seminar
Hall Room 201, Tuesday 7:30-10 PM
History 400 is a two-semester seminar designed to guide senior majors
through the research, drafting and revising of a substantial, original
piece of writing. As such, this seminar offers seniors the opportunity
to practice the craft of historical writing through independent research.
Over the fall semester, you will complete a series of assignments that
guide you through the conceptualization, research, and initial writing
of your thesis. For the final assignment, you will write a 10-12 page
prospectus of your thesis with a bibliography of primary and secondary
sources. During the spring semester, you will finish your research and
write the thesis.
A couple of caveats/pointers:
Historical research does not proceed in a linear fashion from picking
a topic, to devising a thesis, taking notes, drafting and revision. Rather,
the research process regularly loops back. You will continue to revise
and refine your argument throughout the year and sometimes, you may find
yourself lost in the details, uncertain of how to fit all the disparate
pieces together. The best strategy for navigating through this crooked
path is to write as you go along. This technique is essential for managing
your evidence and preparing yourself to write. You should keep a research
journal so that you can record questions, ideas, new versions of your
argument and the ways that new evidence fits into the larger whole. In
addition to your research log, work out your argument and half-digested
ideas on your friends and/or fellow history majors. And if you find yourself
momentarily stuck, take a step back and take stock of what you know at
that point and more importantly, what it is you are arguing. If all else
fails, take a walk or get some sleep and return to the project with a
fresh mind. Above all else though, keep working through your ideas in
written form at every step of the research process. Remember that the
thesis is a process as much as it is a product – that is part of
the learning experience. Your initial ideals will evolve in response to
the evidence you identify and the problems it poses.
All class meetings are mandatory. Also, please provide only hard copies
of all assignments to your advisor. DO NOT send any assignment as an attachment
unless told to do so by your advisor.
Your grade will be determined according to the following breakdown:
Document 2 (Thesis proposal): 10%
Document 3 (State of the field essay): 15%
Document 4 (Analysis of evidence): 15%
Oral Presentation: 10%
Document 5 (Thesis prospectus): 40%
Class participation: 10%
Texts Required:
A copy of an up-to-date style guide for correct historical notation and
bibliography formats is a requisite for this course. We expect you to
provide accurate citations in correct form. If you do not have one of
the following, you should purchase either Kate L. Turabian, A Manual
for Writers or The Chicago Manual of Style (6th edition). Turabian
has been ordered for this course and is available at the bookstore.
Course Outline:
August 30: Introduction to the Seminar.
September 13: Class Meeting. Discussion of Document 1 and preliminary
findings.
Please submit 2 COPIES of Document 1 by 5:00 PM on September 12: one should
be sent to the reference librarians (mschaus@haverford.edu and jgulick@haverford.edu)
and one submitted to Professor Graham in Hall 212 – there will be
a box outside my office). Complete and attach the advising form (distributed
in the first class) to the copy submitted to Hall 212.
DOCUMENT 1:
Assignment Description: Please write a 3-5 page description of your thesis
topic including the specific questions you want to address and the historical
problem these questions engage. Additionally, your description should
identify important secondary literature and potential primary sources.
As you begin to conceptualize your argument for the first time, try to
complete the following statements:
I am writing about ________________(specific question/case study) because
I am trying to demonstrate who/how/why __________________(your indirect
question and so your historical problem) in order to explain how/why_______________
(broader historical significance).
[Note: it is all right if you are not certain of the answers to the above
at this point, that will come as long as you keep posing the questions
as you move through your research]
Please complete the advising form indicating three (ranked) choices of
thesis advisors [Note: We cannot guarantee your selections but will do
our best to accommodate everyone]. I will email you as soon as the department
decides on the assignments of advisors, and I will pass on your thesis
description to your advisor.
September 20: PLEASE NOTE THAT CLASS MEETS AT 7:30 PM IN SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
AT MAGILL LIBRARY. Thinking about evidence. James Gulick, Margaret Schaus,
Diana Peterson and Ann Upton discuss how to find and evaluate evidence,
identify local collections of interest, review archive etiquette. Review
of the different types of evidence available for historical research including
literature, newspapers, images, legal records. Class then breaks into
smaller advising groups where students present their topics and indicate
the potential sources they intend to consult.
September 21-October 4: Use this time to meet with one of the reference
librarians as well as read the relevant secondary literature. In tandem
with secondary reading, track down and review a discrete set of primary
materials, make an inventory of what information they provide [i.e. you
MUST quickly read through/review your primary sources. Read collection
descriptions where available, and we suggest that you read at least a
few files or a box and browse through the remaining materials in a collection,
pausing when you come to distinctly new kinds of documents].
Revise and refine your working thesis and the chapter outline as you work
through your secondary and primary sources. Some steps to take as part
of this refining process: write an evaluation in your research journal
of your secondary literature. What elements have they stressed and what
aspects have been neglected or underplayed? Are there strong disagreements,
radically different approaches, consensus? How would you situate your
research and argument within this literature? Next conduct an evaluation
of your primary sources—what kinds of information will they yield,
what stories do they tell, what are their biases or limitations as sources?
Consider exactly what evidence you will need to prove your working thesis—will
your primary sources supply this or do you need to reframe your topic
and thesis accordingly, search for other primary sources?
October 4: Class Meeting in small advising groups (location determined
by your advisor). Oral reports of Document 2. Please prepare ahead of
time a brief statement of your thesis and its historical significance,
the primary source base you will be using and how it will support your
claim. If you have doubts or concerns, share these too. Please Note: This
exercise is intended for you to test out and so revise your main points
in Document 2. Therefore, read the assignment below and prepare a brief
oral version of it for this class meeting. Students will be expected to
question their colleagues and provide constructive criticism during this
session.
October 7th: Document 2 due. One (printed) copy to your advisor.
DOCUMENT 2:
Assignment Description: A 5-8 pp. thesis proposal that should include
the following, but not necessarily in this order:
1. A description of the historical problem you are addressing (remember:
your problem should not be vague or general but specific enough so that
it engages particular events/ideas/people/moment in time. It should also
raise larger methodological or historiographical issues but these will
derive from your specific focus.
2. A clear statement of your thesis (keep it to no more than 3-4 sentences).
3. A historiographical review of relevant literature that situates how
you will add or revise or extend our understanding of the given historical
problem. The point here is not to be exhaustive but strategic. Show yourself
to be a fair and critical reader who knows the scholarly treatment of
your topic and can delineate what contribution your study will offer.
4. A description of your primary sources that explains how and why these
sources will support your argument.
5. A bibliography of secondary sources and primary sources
FALL BREAK OCTOBER 7-17
October 18: Class Meeting. Debriefing of Document 2—Where do you
need to go from here? Students present their evidence and identify strengths
and weaknesses. This is the time to ask questions about reading, note-taking,
research strategies, problems, and progress.
October 25: Small group meetings with advisor. Document 3 due.
DOCUMENT 3:
Assignment Description: Please submit an essay (6-10 pp.) summarizing
the state of the field concerning your topic. What are the main arguments
and interpretations? What is at stake in these arguments? How do you see
your own work aligning or diverging with that of other scholars? This
document will eventually be incorporated (in revised form) into your thesis.
Please include a bibliography of the secondary literature.
November 7-14: Mandatory individual meetings with your advisor.
November 22: Small group meetings with advisor. Document 4 due.
DOCUMENT 4 :
Assignment Description: Please submit a 5-page paper offering a close
analysis of a single piece of your evidence. This analysis should provide
a model of what you will do in your thesis. Explain what the evidence
tells, what it cannot tell you, how you will supplement it with other
evidence, why it is interesting or pertinent to your thesis.
November 28, 29, 30th: Oral presentations of your thesis topics. Please
sign up for a date (sheets posted outside my office, Hall 212) and prepare
a 3-5 minute presentation of your topic, your evidence, and your argument.
December 9th: Document 5 due.
DOCUMENT 5:
Assignment Description: Please submit a 10-12 page overview of your thesis
to your advisor. This prospectus should include an outline of your argument,
the evidence you will use for each part of your argument, and your progress
to date. Be as specific as possible in describing the chapters and what
you intend to achieve in each one. Please include a updated bibliography
of both primary and secondary sources, indicating what you have read and
what remains to be read.
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