University undergraduates studying in the Monica Partridge building. Friday November 5th 2021.

History and Philosophy BA

University Park Campus, Nottingham, UK

Course overview

Explore human history and thought from its most ancient periods to the present day. You’ll gain a deep understanding of the relationship between historical context and philosophical thought. 

Across each subject, you can explore the moral, social, political, religious, and scientific developments that have made human life possible, and which continue to challenge humanity today. Our geographical scope is wide and diverse, from Britain and Europe to Asia, North America and Africa. 

You will gain the skills, understanding, and knowledge to describe and make sense of these ideas and events, and to argue for your own interpretations of them. These are the transferable skills needed for a wide range of exciting careers. 

Indicative modules

Mandatory

Year 1

Introduction to Practical Philosophy

Mandatory

Year 1

Introduction to Theoretical Philosophy

Mandatory

Year 1

Discovering History

Optional

Year 1

Gender, Justice, and Society

Optional

Year 1

Metaphysics, Science, and Language

Optional

Year 1

Philosophy of Religions

Optional

Year 1

Exploring the Medieval World, c. 500-1500

Optional

Year 1

Exploring the Early Modern World, c. 1500-1800

Optional

Year 1

Exploring the Modern World c. 1800-2000

Optional

Year 1

Becoming a Historian 1

Optional

Year 1

Becoming a Historian 2

Optional

Year 1

Introduction to Philosophical Traditions

Optional

Year 1

Being Human A

Optional

Year 1

Being Human B

Optional

Year 1

Writing and Being: Academic, Activist, Professional, Creative and Personal (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Exploring Sustainability (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Data, Culture and Society (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Arts Engaged in Health (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Data, Culture and Society (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Digital Projects: Data and Text (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Digital Projects: Sound and Vision (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Disease and Society (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Exploring Digital Arts (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Exploring Sustainability (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Sustainability Action (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

The Critical Citizen: Modes of Thinking in Contemporary Society (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 1

Writing and Being: Academic, Activist, Professional, Creative and Personal (Engaged Arts)

Mandatory

Year 2

Philosophy of History

Mandatory

Year 2

Interpreting History

Optional

Year 2

Early Medieval England in the Age of Bede

Optional

Year 2

Being, Becoming and Reality

Optional

Year 2

Comparative Colonial Encounters 1600-1900

Optional

Year 2

Health and Society in the 19th and 20th Centuries

Optional

Year 2

A ‘Holiday from History’? Ideas in Britain since 1992

Optional

Year 2

Knowledge and Justification

Optional

Year 2

Medieval Lives

Optional

Year 2

Philosophy of Art

Optional

Year 2

Social Philosophy

Optional

Year 2

Afro-Futures of the Black Past

Optional

Year 2

Topics in Asian Philosophy

Optional

Year 2

Applying Contemporary Philosophical Research B

Optional

Year 2

Mind and Consciousness

Optional

Year 2

Applied Ethics

Optional

Year 2

Meaning, Truth and Existence

Optional

Year 2

Formal and Philosophical Logic

Optional

Year 2

Freedom and Obligation A

Optional

Year 2

Moral Philosophy

Optional

Year 2

Africana Philosophies and Religions

Optional

Year 2

Environmental Humanities: Nature and People on a Changing Planet since 1850

Optional

Year 2

European Fascisms, 1900-1945

Optional

Year 2

Exploring European Philosophy, Ancient and Modern

Optional

Year 2

Imagining 'Britain': Decolonising Tolkien et al

Optional

Year 2

Freedom and Obligation B

Optional

Year 2

Aesthetics

Optional

Year 2

Rule and Resistance in Colonial India

Optional

Year 2

Soviet State and Society

Optional

Year 2

The Past in the Present 1

Optional

Year 2

The Past in the Present 2

Optional

Year 2

The Heartland: Ukraine and the Russian Imperial Project 1569-1785

Optional

Year 2

The Second World War and Social Change in Britain, 1939-1951: Went The Day Well?

Optional

Year 2

The Stranger Next Door: Jews and Christians in the Middle Ages

Optional

Year 2

The Victorians: Life, Thought and Culture

Optional

Year 2

The Russian Empire 1855-1917

Optional

Year 2

A Protestant Nation? Politics, Religion and Society in England, 1558-1640

Optional

Year 2

Exile and Homeland: Jewish Culture, Thought and Politics in Modern Europe and Palestine, 1890-1950

Optional

Year 2

The Tokugawa World c. 1600-1868

Optional

Year 2

Conquerors, Caliphs, and Converts

Optional

Year 2

A Tale of Seven Kingdoms: Anglo-Saxon and Viking-Age England from Bede to Alfred the Great

Optional

Year 2

Employing the Arts

Optional

Year 2

Arts Work Placement Module

Optional

Year 2

Applying the Digital Humanities (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Arts Work Placement Module (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Community Engagement and Social Impact (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Decolonisation and Justice (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Employing the Arts (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Issues in the Health Humanities (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Living and Working in a Multi-Lingual World (Engaged Arts)

Optional

Year 2

Made in Nottingham (Engaged Arts)

Mandatory

Year 3

History Special Subject

Optional

Year 3

History Dissertation

Optional

Year 3

Philosophy Independent Project Module

Optional

Year 3

Empires 1

Optional

Year 3

Ideas and Ideologies 1

Optional

Year 3

Buddhist Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Communicating Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Environmental Ethics

Optional

Year 3

Knowledge, Ignorance and Democracy

Optional

Year 3

Philosophy and Mortality

Optional

Year 3

Dirty Talk

Optional

Year 3

Mind, Psychology and Mental Health

Optional

Year 3

Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence

Optional

Year 3

Authenticity and Existentialism

Optional

Year 3

Everyday Life and Culture 1

Optional

Year 3

Peace and Conflict 2

Optional

Year 3

Peace and Conflict 1

Optional

Year 3

Crisis, Revolution and Rupture 1

Optional

Year 3

Crisis, Revolution and Rupture 2

Optional

Year 3

Empires 2

Optional

Year 3

Ideas and Ideologies 2

Optional

Year 3

Voices from the Margins 1

Optional

Year 3

Voices from the Margins 2

Optional

Year 3

Philosophy of Criminal Law

Optional

Year 3

Everyday Life and Culture 2

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Topics in Modern Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Topics in Moral Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Topics in Political Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Mind, World, and Knowledge in Ancient Greek Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Topics in Metaethics

Optional

Year 3

Elegance and Simplicity in Science

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Topics in Political Philosophy

Optional

Year 3

Philosophy of Life and Living

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About modules

The above is a sample of the typical modules we offer, but is not intended to be construed or relied on as a definitive list of what might be available in any given year. This content was last updated on Tuesday 6 May 2025. Due to timetabling availability, there may be restrictions on some module combinations.

You will be taught via a mixture of large-group lectures and smaller, interactive seminars. You will also be taught through tutorials and supervisions. These are one-to-one meetings or discussions with an academic tutor.

All students are assigned a personal tutor at the start of each academic year. Your personal tutor oversees your academic development and personal welfare.

In the year one, your personal tutor will teach your weekly seminars on our 'Learning History' module. In year three, your personal tutor will teach your weekly special subject seminars. As a result, our students often develop highly supportive and collaborative relationships with their personal tutor.

Peer mentoring

All new undergraduate students are allocated a peer mentor, to help you settle into life at Nottingham. Find out more about the support on offer.

Teaching quality

94% of our class of 2020 graduated with a 1st or 2:1 degree classification. Source: UoN student outcomes data, Annual Monitoring (QDS) Analyses 2020.

Tutor's contributions to high quality teaching and learning are recognised through our annual Lord Dearing Awards. View the full list of recipients.

Teaching methods

  • Lectures
  • Seminars
  • Tutorials
  • Supervision

Your assessments will vary according to the topic studied. The majority of assessment is by essays and, for some modules, exams. However, other forms of assessment may include:

  • individual or group presentations
  • student-led seminars
  • interpretation of documents, sources or images
  • poster presentations
  • reviews and reflections on the process of study, including weekly reading summaries
  • in-class tests and quizzes
  • independently-researched dissertation

Assessment methods

  • Examinations
  • Essay
  • Presentation
  • Reflective review
  • In-class test
  • Dissertation

 

You’ll have at least the following hours of timetabled contact a week through lectures, seminars and workshops, tutorials and supervisions.

  • Year one: minimum of 11 hours
  • Year two: minimum of 9 hours
  • Final year: minimum of 7 hours

Your tutors will also be available outside these times to discuss issues and develop your understanding.


We reduce your contact hours as you work your way through the course. As you progress, we expect you to assume greater responsibility for your studies and work more independently. Your tutors will all be qualified academics, many of whom are internationally recognised in their fields.


Outside of your contact hours, the rest of the time is yours to carry out independent work and self-directed study. This may mean time spent in the library, doing preparation work for seminars, reading books and journal articles from the reading list, and researching or writing your assignments. This may also involve working with other students on group tasks.


As a guide, 20 credits (a typical module) is approximately 200 hours of work (combined teaching and self-directed study).

As a history and philosophy graduate, you will have gained key skills including:

  • problem-solving and analysis
  • planning and researching written work
  • objective and critical thinking
  • communication, both oral and written
  • presenting ideas and information, including collaboratively
  • analytical reasoning
  • persuasive argumentation
  • constructive criticism and discussion
  • presenting and persuading

Read our history and philosophy graduate profiles for more about the range of skills you will gain as well as the careers our students move into.

 

Average starting salary and career progression

78.8% of undergraduates from the Faculty of Arts secured graduate level employment or further study within 15 months of graduation. The average annual starting salary for these graduates was £23,974.

HESA Graduate Outcomes (2017 to 2021 cohorts). The Graduate Outcomes % is calculated using The Guardian University Guide methodology. The average annual salary is based on graduates working full-time within the UK.

Studying for a degree at the University of Nottingham will provide you with the type of skills and experiences that will prove invaluable in any career, whichever direction you decide to take.


Throughout your time with us, our Careers and Employability Service can work with you to improve your employability skills even further; assisting with job or course applications, searching for appropriate work experience placements and hosting events to bring you closer to a wide range of prospective employers.

Have a look at our careers page for an overview of all the employability support and opportunities that we provide to current students.


The University of Nottingham is consistently named as one of the most targeted universities by Britain’s leading graduate employers (Ranked in the top ten in The Graduate Market in 2013-2020, High Fliers Research).

 

University undergraduate student studying in Nightingale Hall accommodation's library, University Park

Course data

Open Day June 2022