About History at USW
At the University of South Wales, we specialise in Welsh, British, European, American and International History since about 1500. Most of our staff and students are based at Treforest: we also have final-year students based at Caerleon, and two groups studying for Foundation Degrees at Aberdare and Ebbw Vale.
In 2015, 98% of our graduates declared themselves satisfied with the overall quality of our BA (Hons) History Degree programmes.Read this blog for the our latest thoughts and news, and contact us with any queries.
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Latest Research News
- The Legacy of the 1917 February in Contemporary Russia and the wider world January 4, 2017USW is hosting a lecture by Dr Matthew Rendle (University of Exeter) to mark the centenary of the February Revolution of 1917 in Russia. Venue: The Old Debating Chamber of the National Assembly for Wales, Cardiff Bay Time: 6.30pm, on 7 February 2017 The centenary of the Russian Revolution marks a major opportunity for reflection […]
- Between Scylla and Charybdis December 9, 2016USW historian Norry LaPorte has recently published ‘Between Scylla and Charybdis: END and its Attempt to Overcome the Bipolar World Order in the 1980s’ in the Australian journal Labour History (issue 111, 2016). “European Nuclear Disarmament [END]”, says LaPorte, “had a vision of a humanistic socialism from below that would be capable of breaking up […]
- Praying and Campaigning December 9, 2016Maria Nita, a research assistant with History at USW, has published her first book. Praying and Campaigning with Environmental Christians: Green Religion and the Climate Movement. An ethnographic study of environmental Christian networks involved in the climate and transition towns movements, the book examines the ways in which green Christians engage with their communities and […]
- Psychological Trauma and the Legacies of the First World War December 8, 2016USW historian Fiona Reid features in a new collection of essays on Psychological Trauma and the Legacies of the First World War, edited by Jason Crouthammel and Peter Leese. Fiona’s essay ‘Losing Face: Trauma and Maxillofacial Injury in the First World War’ reports on her on-going research on medicine during and after World War One. […]
- The Legacy of the 1917 February in Contemporary Russia and the wider world January 4, 2017
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Tag Archives: jane finucane
Sachsenhausen 1: the ‘Geometry of Total Terror’
History Student Fieldtrip to Germany, July 2011 The gateway to Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp. Photo: Pete Driscoll As we walked through the gates of the former concentation camp Sachsenhausen on the outskirts of Berlin, under the obscene slogan `Through Work, Freedom’ … Continue reading
Berlin Notes: Weimar Cinema comes home
History Student Fieldtrip to Germany, July 2011 Sony Center, Potsdamer Platz, Home to the German Cinematheque. Photograph: Caitlin Freitag. Twenty years ago, the Potsdamer Platz was Europe’s biggest building site. While the Berlin Wall was in place, the square was … Continue reading
History through a Lens – German Film
History Student Fieldtrip to Germany, July 2011 Visit to the Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum für Film und Fernsehen (German Cinematheque – Museum for Film and Television) Along with history, film has always been one of my greatest passions. One of … Continue reading
Shifting Perspectives: Berlin’s Jewish Museum
History Student Fieldtrip to Germany, July 2011 Axes of Jewish Experience. Photo: Pete Driscoll. The axes of experience at the beginning of Daniel Libeskind’s controversial annex to the Jewish Museum in Berlin disorientate the visitor. They are below ground and … Continue reading
Aufarbeitung – a new word for history
History Student Fieldtrip to Germany, July 2011 Visiting the Foundation for the ‘Aufarbeitung’ of the SED Dictatorship With Dr Ulrich Maehlert (far right): Gary Brady, Pete Driscoll, Huw Edwards, Ceri Carter, Linda Graham, Dave Pennell, Jonathan Durrant, Kirsty Pullin, Norry … Continue reading
Student Trip to Germany
The History Division has won funding from the German Academic Exchange Services (DAAD) to bring a group of second-year students on an educational tour of Germany this summer. Fifteen students will visit Berlin, Munich and Nuertingen to learn more about … Continue reading
Re-reading the Past
Saving Cardiff’s Rare Books Collection For decades, Cardiff Council Library hid a treasure – a collection of 18,000 rare books purchased and donated in the nineteenth century for the benefit of the people of the city. During the twentieth century, … Continue reading
Posted in History: Comment
Tagged book history, cardiff, Early Modern History, heritage, jane finucane, wales, welsh history
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Siege of Vienna
Remembering the Siege of Vienna
Posted in History: Comment
Tagged Early Modern History, jane finucane, memory, public history
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Schools Event – AS-Level History Conference
Succeeding at History AS-Level, 2nd April 2009 Over forty students and teachers from schools in South Wales attended Glamorgan’s AS-Level History Conference on 2nd April. The conference was designed to support school pupils in their exam preparation while offering them … Continue reading
Posted in History: Events
Tagged Brian Ireland, gareth williams, jane finucane, norry laporte, schools
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Making History in Berlin
Dave, Kirsty and Katie follow the traces of the Berlin Wall How do we remember and discuss the past? It’s a complicated question for any society, and nowhere more than in Germany. Germans are already preparing for the extraordinary ‘constellation … Continue reading →