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Writing History: People, Places and Times

PostgraduateSWI-PWR700042024

Course information for 2024 intake View information for 2025 course intake

Take your readers back in time as you learn about the process of researching, producing and publishing historical writing.Discuss creating fictionalised characters based on real people. Consider local, family and social approaches to history.

Enrolments for this course are closed, but you may have other options to start studying now. Book a consultation to learn more.

Study method
100% online
Assessments
100% online
Entry requirements
Part of a degree
Duration
13 weeks
Start dates
27 May 2024,
View 2025 dates

Loan available
FEE-HELP available

Writing History: People, Places and Times

About this subject

  • After successfully completing this subject, students will be able to:

    1. Identify and critically evaluate the debates, methodologies, and techniques used to write, creatively interpret, and document historical events in a variety of forms and genres
    2. Demonstrate the different writing skills and techniques required to create critically informed pieces of writing that engage with the debates, issues and varying elements of history
    3. Conceptualise, plan, research, and produce a piece of writing that engages with, creatively illustrates, or interprets an aspect of history.

Entry requirements

Part of a degree

To enrol in this subject you must be accepted into one of the following degrees:

Core

  • SWI-WRI-GDI-2024 - Graduate Diploma of Writing
  • SWI-WRI-MAS-2024 - Master of Writing

Elective

  • OUA-PSU-GCE-2024 - Postgraduate Single Subjects

Equivalent subjects

You should not enrol in this subject if you have successfully completed any of the following subject(s) because they are considered academically equivalent:

  • SWI-LPW602 (Not currently available)

Additional requirements

No additional requirements

Study load

0.125 EFTSL
This is in the range of 10 to 12 hours of study each week.

Equivalent full time study load (EFTSL) is one way to calculate your study load. One (1.0) EFTSL is equivalent to a full-time study load for one year.

Find out more information on Commonwealth Loans to understand what this means to your eligibility for financial support.

Related degrees

Once you’ve completed this subject it can be credited towards one of the following courses

Swinburne University logo

Graduate Diploma of Writing

PostgraduateSWI-WRI-GDI

Swinburne University logo

Master of Writing

PostgraduateSWI-WRI-MAS

Open Universities Australia - Logo

Postgraduate Single Subjects

PostgraduateOUA-PSU-GCE

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