Where can a passion for history take me?

by Remarkable_Ad_3376

I'm currently searching for a degree of some kind to do in university. I know that I want to pursue history in any way I can.
If I where to do a arts degree of history it seems it only leads to teacher, archaeologist or working in a museum and out of those the museum appeals to me the most.

As far as I know a dual degree of arts and something would allow me the most options in the future.

Even pursuits outside of University and extended learning would be appealing to me however I'm unsure if there are any outside of the ones I have previously stated and politics.

Naturally some of you would be historians which is a avenue I have not put much thought into as I don't really know how to become a historian or who they are outside of evaluations of reliability

GP_uniquenamefail

It would be useful to know what country your are in as the experiences of studying and practicing history do differ. For myself I can only speak of the UK/English experience. My reason for attending university was primarily the study of my passion, history. Attending as what the UK classify as a "mature" student, which is starting as older than most students would be when graduating (graduation at 21 for most students, I started at the age of 24 after spending 8 years working graft in warehouses and factories). I now hold a Doctorate in early modern military history, an MRes in medieval crusade history, and my base degree was a dual honours in History and International Relations.

There are several points I would make to you.

Firstly, almost no one works at a job directly connected to the subject that they study at university. Many graduate employers don't care much beyond the quality of your final grade and, more importantly, the skills and experiences which your degree has given you. For instance, a history degree is about analysing sources, presenting well-founded and evidenced arguments, a familiarity with reports (essays), good writing style, an enquiring mind, and a solid understanding of cause and effect. This is applicable in a huge range of jobs that have nothing to do with history. I for instance am shortly starting a new role as a qualitative analyst for an independent regulator—it's the skills and experiences I have through my education that they are interested in—and that includes elements above and beyond my modules.

Secondly, nominally in the UK each module is supposed to be around 10 weeks of a total of 20 hours class time in a topic with an essay or an exam at the end. This sounds a lot, but that's really half a working week spread out over 2.5 months which is nothing. You are supposed to study for 8-10 hours a week independently for each of your modules, but as a student, as a seminar tutor, and as a lecturer, almost no student did that—you could instantly tell the few that did (spoiler: they did the best work and got the best grades and were not always the naturally smartest in the class). You will find putting your full effort into your university subject, being excited to pick up the books and search for the journal articles to do your reading is so, so, so much easier if you are passionate about your subject rather than one you pick because you think there are more obvious jobs out there. That passion bleads out into WANTING to read more, study more, find out more rather than doing the bare minimum especially amidst ALL of the... non-academic distractions available to university students.

Thirdly, if you enjoy history and you are passionate for it then that doesn't have to start or end with university. If you find yourself after university in a graduate role with nothing to do with the degree subject you studied previously you can still "scratch that itch" of history in other ways. Read extensively, enjoy contributing to historical online communities, join a local historical association which meets occasionally to discuss and understand local history more, join a historical journal, craft a hobby that is heavily-historically focused, etc.

As stated, although I have a doctorate I hold no academic "historian" job role, but I am under contract to write my first historical book, I am engaged and passionate about history on multiple levels, and, in my own particular topic, am a world expert in my little niche field. Am I a historian because I don't "work" history? That is up to you, but I would strongly recommend that for the investment in time (and debt) you will accrue while studying at university that you choose something you are passionate about, that you will enjoy, that you will happily invest your time in and that, at the end, will provide you with marketable skills and employability rather than anything else.

ThatHabsburgMapGuy

Just to extend this a bit, there are a ton of history-adjacent careers which combine an interest in history with the practical skills of other disciplines. Art History can combine with chemistry for art conservation, with law for digital art copyright law, project management for cultural heritage management, craftwork for a training in traditional joinery, or maybe underwater archaeology if you like fieldwork and scuba diving. For history, you might also study biology to become an evolutionary anthropologist, martial arts to become a HEMA instructor, climate science to do environmental history, or distillation to produce commercial gin according to 16th century Dutch recipes. This doesn't even mention going into law or journalism, which I understand take lots of History BAs. Feel free to chime in with additional life-paths, dear readers.

I would say that there are lots of very interesting options, and the difficulty is just figuring out how to monetize your passion / find a niche that works for you.

arcadiangoddess

Hi there I am also Australian and a currently studying Historian! My advice love would be to a do a dual degree in something that also interests you and gives you some more options in further education or career wise. Personally I am double majoring in Archeology and Anthropology and doing an 8 unit minor in history. This opens opportunities for me to work in Museums, Laboratories, Heritage conservation and even in the scientific field. Choosing options like international relations, visual arts and maybe a heritage or language major would benefit you greatly