MA 20th-Century British History by Research
This London-based programme enables students to examine Britain’s history in the 20th century, focusing on the period from 1914 to 1990.
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About the Course
Master’s in Twentieth-Century British History
°Õ³ó¾±²õÌýLondon-based programme enables students to examine Britain’s history in the twentieth century, focusing on the period from the death of Queen Victoria to Margaret Thatcher’s resignation in 1990. It is led by Simon Heffer, Professor of Modern British History in the University and a leading authority on the period.
The course includes a series of seminars (see below), given by a range of eminent guest speakers, to supplement students’ private research. These will provide a broad chronological survey of the period and an introduction to major themes in the political and social history of 20th century Britain, and are intended to stimulate ideas for research by students. All the seminars (apart from Dr Harris’s, which will be online) are to be held at in the elegant surroundings of the Reform Club, 104 Pall Mall, London SW1, at 6.30 pm on the given dates. Supervisory meetings will be held at the University’s offices at 51 Gower Street, Bloomsbury (near the British Museum) or by video link.
The programme’s main focus is on politics and society, but also discusses cultural history and historiography. Guest speakers will include the contemporary historians Sir David Cannadine,ÌýVernon Bogdanor,ÌýDavid Kynaston, Dominic Sandbrook, Jane Ridley,Ìýand Michael Bentley.
Assessment is via a dissertation of approximately 25,000 words on a topic of the student’s choosing, which is completed under the guidance of a supervisor and submitted at the end of the academic year.
2024/25 Seminar Programme
The academic year begins in September and Professor Heffer, as Course Director, will be available to all students before the seminar programme gets under way to discuss dissertation topics and independent research. A full bibliography will be issued to all students in September so that the autumn can also be used for essential background reading.
Seminars and Dinners 2024-25
Each guest speaker seminar begins at 6.30pm and is followed by a dinner. The cost of all post-seminar dinners is included in the tuition fees.
All the seminars (apart from Dr Harris’s, which will be online) are to be held at the Reform Club, 104 Pall Mall, London SW1. You can view the location on . The nearest Tube Stations are Piccadilly Circus and Charing Cross.
26 September: Professor Jane Ridley on the Edwardians
3 October: Professor Simon Heffer on the Great War
17 October: Dr Geraint Thomas on the Roaring Twenties
31 October: Professor David Dilks on the Great Depression and Appeasement
14 November: Professor Dan Todman on politics and society in the Second World War
28 November: Professor Sir Vernon Bogdanor on the Post-War decade
12 December: Dr David Kynaston on ‘Never had it so good’.
9 January (provisional date): Professor Sir David Cannadine on the end of the British empire
23 January: Dr Dominic Sandbrook on the Wilson and Heath years
13 February (Online, 7pm): Dr Robin Harris on Thatcherism
6 March: Professor Michael Bentley on the historiography of the British 20th Century
Seminar Subjects
The Edwardians
A divided society of rapid change.
When King Edward VII ascended the Throne in January 1901 Britain still had a claim to be the world’s leading power, with the largest empire on earth, serviced by the world’s greatest Navy and a formidable regular Army. Yet the United Kingdom before the Great War experienced excessive tensions, and this seminar will focus on four great causes: militant women’s suffragism; chronic industrial unrest; demands for Irish Home Rule; and the House of Lords triggering the worst constitutional crisis in living memory. Immense social mobility and opportunity characterised the age of ‘swagger’, Pomp and Circumstance and H G Wells’s finely observed social novels.
The Politics of the Great War and the coup d’état of 1916.
This seminar discusses the political considerations that led to Britain’s declaration of war on Germany in August 1914, and how the Liberal tradition gave way to a politics suited to total war. It will examine the formation of the Asquith and Lloyd George coalitions, the relationship between politicians and generals and conflicts about the conduct of the war. It will also look at the war’s role in breaking down of opposition to women’s suffrage, and of the establishment of a new style of politician largely divorced from the landed interest.
‘The Impact of Labour’, the breaking of the Coalition and the first Baldwin administration.
This seminar will look at the debate about economic and social policy in the decade between Versailles and the Wall Street Crash, highlighting the process that led to Churchill putting Britain back on the Gold Standard and the causes of the General Strike. It will discuss why the Conservative party sabotaged the Lloyd George coalition after its failure to keep its extravagant election promises from 1918. It will discuss the first Labour government and the role of women, newly-enfranchised but many unable to have the lives their mothers took for granted because of the death and maiming of nearly two million men during the war.
‘The Hungry Thirties?’
The slump, National Government and the Politics of Appeasement.
After Ramsay MacDonald’s ‘betrayal’ of his party in 1931 by entering into a coalition government because of the national emergency, society witnessed the growth of fascism in Britain. The country’s split into ‘two nations’, and politicians and opinion-formers supported appeasement of Nazi Germany after 1933 – with resistance, centred upon Churchill, to that policy. It will examine also the contrasting roles of King George V and Edward VIII, and the effect the abdication had on social stability and national unity. The seminar will focus on how well much of Britain fared during the slump thanks to innovation and diversification – and a level of rearmament that is under-appreciated.
Churchill’s Dictatorship.
How far did Churchill model his style of war leadership on that of Lloyd George, in creating a quasi-dictatorship to mobilise the national war effort? How fit was Britain for war, both in terms of its manpower and industrial base? How effective was propaganda, especially using media that had not existed or been widely exploited in 1914 – the radio and the cinema? How did the war change attitudes to women, who for the first time joined the services in large numbers? How far did the heavy centralisation of the state change the mindset of the public and alter its expectations for peace? And what caused the Labour landslide of 1945?
Rebuilding Britian
The Attlee Administration and the Building of the Post-War Consensus.
This seminar will discuss the Attlee government’s social reforms – the creation of the NHS and a wider welfare state, the modernisation of the penal system through the 1948 Criminal Justice Act, reform of the franchise and further reform of the House of Lords. It will discuss the programme of nationalisation, but also why the public turned against Labour. It will examine how, when Churchill returns to power in 1951, the Tories leave the post-war consensus in place. Was that down to the elderly Churchill’s inertia, and reversion to his pre-war persona of misjudgement, or was it because of a shrewd assessment by the Tories that much of what Attlee had done still had public support?
‘Never had it so good’
From Suez to Scandal – the Era of ‘Tory misrule’.
Suez precipitated the end not just of Empire, but of Britain’s self-estimation as a great world power: and the political rhetoric becomes that of ‘managing decline’. Yet the Tories win a second, and then an even more convincing third, term in office; Britain wallows in ‘never had it so good’ affluence. Social change, especially among the young, is in the air: this is the era of the ‘Kitchen Sink’ film, Beatniks, Teddy Boys and mods and rockers, but also the growth of television as a highly influential medium. Britain starts to modernise, with the closing of railways and the opening of motorways. However, the Tories look out of touch and the Profumo scandal exposes Macmillan’s isolation, which effectively brings him down.
The Wilson/Heath Consensus
From White Heat to the Winter of Discontent.
Harold Wilson, catapulted to power after Gaitskell’s sudden death in 1963, promised a technological revolution to transform Britain: but forms a pact with the trades unions, who resist such change and bring down the Heath government in 1974. In 1978-79 they challenge the democratic legitimacy of the Callaghan administration, and break the post-war consensus. A fissure grows in the Labour party between hard-line socialists and social democrats. Heath is challenged by a right-wing faction, led by Enoch Powell, who has important intellectual followers in Margaret Thatcher and Keith Joseph: and Thatcher’s ascent to the Tory leadership in 1975 ends Tory statism. Powell opens lines of crucial intellectual debate; on immigration; on monetarism; on constitutional reform; on withdrawal from east of Suez; and on the Common Market. Parliament takes Britain into the European Economic community in 1973, laying the ground for decades of strife and internal division; essentially, the trente glorieueses from 1945 to 1975 have made Mrs Thatcher inevitable.
The Eighties Revolution
The Impact of Thatcher
This seminar, conducted by one of Mrs Thatcher’s closest former advisers and biographers, will examine the social and economic revolution her policies wrought. It will look at the apparent paradox of Mrs Thatcher’s intense social conservatism against her political radicalism. And it will look at the confrontations she set up to get her way: with organised labour, the City of London, and the Irish Republican Army; and how her relationship with Ronald Reagan and role in ending the Cold War gave Britain powerful international influence. But it will examine how the Community Charge proved a confrontation too far: how her Powellite ideology of national sovereignty and self-determination made her the enemy of the European project, and cost her her job – but not her place in history, and certainly not her legacy.
The Historiography of 20th century British history.
This seminar will review the nature of the writing of the history of the country between the Great War and the fall of Mrs Thatcher – in terms of the methods and the motivations and aims of historians – and will highlight areas that would benefit from further research and exploration, or where existing accounts require revision. It will also encourage the critical reading of historical texts and, during archival research, critical appraisal of original documents.
Dismantling the British Empire, from Ireland to Hong Kong.
Starting with the victory of Sinn Féin in Ireland at the 1918 General Election, the seminar will study how throughout the period from 1920 to 1980 Britain had broker the independence of its former possessions. It will discuss the main driving forces of anti-imperialism in the British political class after the Great War, but also those – such as Churchill – who fought to retain Victoria’s empire into the second half of the 20th Century. The seminar will consider the 1931 Statute of Westminster; the independence movement in India; and the rush to Indian independence between February and August 1947, and whether the bloody events of that process shaped attitudes to the African and West Indian decolonisations in the 1950s and 1960s. It will also consider the idea of the ‘British’ world, mass immigration to the former mother country, and the wider legacy of empire, and will conclude with the handover of Hong Kong in 1997.
Graduate studies in twentieth-century British history
Associate Students
For those who wish to attend the seminars and to join the post-seminar dinners with the visiting speakers, it is possible to join the programme as an Associate Student. Associate Students do not enrol for the MA and do not have to submit any written work, but they are otherwise full members of the seminar and free to take part in discussion. There is also a substantially reduced fee.
For further information, please contact humanitiespg-admissions@buckingham.ac.uk
Entry Requirements
The minimum entry-level required for this course is as follows:
- a first or upper second-class honours degree from a recognised university or,
- a recognised professional qualification with relevant work experience.
In cases where candidates are applying on the basis of work experience, they may be asked to complete a short written assignment and/or attend an interview as part of the applications process.
Mature students
Age is no barrier to learning and we welcome all applications from suitably qualified students. Due to their flexibility, our London-based MAs by research attract a wide variety of applicants from a range of backgrounds, including people in full-time employment and retirees. Our current students range in age from 25 to 75.
International students
We are happy to consider all international applications and if you are an international student, you may find it useful to visit our international pages for details of entry requirements from your home country.
The University is a UKVI Student Sponsor.
English levels
If English is not your first language, please check our postgraduate English language requirements. If your English levels don’t meet our minimum requirements, you may be interested in applying for our Pre-sessional English Language Foundation Programmes.
Selection process
Candidates apply online, sending in their supporting documents, and will be assessed on this basis by the Programme Director. The Programme Director or Admissions Assistant will be happy to answer any enquiries. Call us on +44 (0)1280 820227 or get in touch via our online form.
Student Contract for prospective students
When you are offered a place at the University you will be notified of the student contract between the University and students on our courses of study. When you accept an offer of a place on the course at the University a legal contract is formed between you and the University on the basis of the student contract in your offer letter. Your offer letter and the student contract contain important information which you should read carefully before accepting an offer. Read the Student Contract.
Teaching & Assessment
The MA does not offer systematic instruction in the facts; instead, the emphasis is on independent thought and research.
At the heart of the ³Ô¹ÏÍø MA is the close working relationship between student and supervisor. While the final thesis must be an independent work, it is the supervisor who offers advice on refining the topic (if necessary), on primary sources, on secondary reading, on research techniques and on writing the final text (which should be not less than 25,000 words). Supervisors and students will meet frequently throughout the year, and not less than twice a term; and the supervisor shall always be the student’s primary contact for academic advice and support.
After Your Course
The University’s Course Directors, students’ supervisors, and the Research Officer and Tutor for Graduate Students are available to discuss students’ post-graduation plans and how they may utilise most effectively the skills acquired during their studies.
Fees & Scholarships
The fees for this course are:
Start | Type | First Year | Total cost |
---|---|---|---|
Sep 2025 Full-time (6 Months) Associate | UK | £3,433 | £3,433 |
INT | £5,493 | £5,493 | |
Sep 2025 Full-time (1 Year) | UK | £10,300 | £10,300 |
INT | £16,480 | £16,480 | |
Sep 2025 Part-time (2 Years) | UK | £5,150 | £10,300 |
INT | £8,240 | £16,480 |
The University reserves the right to increase course fees annually in line with inflation linked to the Retail Price Index (RPI). If the University intends to increase your course fees it will notify you via email of this as soon as reasonably practicable.
Course fees do not include additional costs such as books, equipment, writing up fees and other ancillary charges. Where applicable, these additional costs will be made clear.
** Please be aware that the 6 month option relates to the associate course only
Please note that The University of ³Ô¹ÏÍø has four terms per year. Students will pay the same termly fee for the duration of their studies, unless studies are interrupted and resumed later. The tuition fee quoted is therefore the total cost of the degree.
Postgraduate loan scheme
A system of postgraduate loans for Masters degrees in the UK is available with support from the UK Government. The loan is available for taught and research Masters courses in all subject areas. The loans can be used for tuition fees, living expenses or both.
Scholarships
Details of other scholarships can be found on our main Bursaries and Scholarships page. You should make an application to study at the University and receive an offer letter confirming our acceptance of your application before applying for a scholarship.
You may also find it useful to visit our External Funding page.
Accommodation
Due to the mode of study on this course you will not normally need a room in University accommodation during your degree.