Apologies for cross posting:

Wilson Fellowship for MA Photographic History and Practice, De Montfort 
University

 

The Wilson Fellowship in Photographic History. Call for Applications.

De Montfort University is pleased to announce the availability of one

Wilson Fellowship for its new MA in Photographic History and Practice.

The Fellowship offers ?5,000 toward the defrayal of tuition and other

costs related to the MA, and is open to all students UK, EU and

International. To apply for the Wilson Fellowship, please submit a piece

of recent writing on photographic history no longer than 10,000 words,

in English, to the Admissions Committee. For applications to the MA,

please contact Student Recruitment at the Faculty of Art and Design at

artanddesign at dmu.ac.uk or apply online at ukpass.ac.uk. For questions

about the MA programme or the Wilson Fellowship please contact Programme

Leader, Dr Kelley Wilder at kwilder at dmu.ac.uk. 

 

The MA in Photographic History and Practice is the first course of its

kind in the UK. It lays the foundations for understanding the scope of

photographic history and provides the tools to carry out the independent

research in this larger context, working in particular from primary

source material. In addition to our collaboration with the Wilson Centre

for Photography Studies in London, we will work with the collections of

the National Media Museum, Bradford, the Central Library, Birmingham,

the British Library and private collections throughout Britain. Students

handle photographic material, learn analogue photographic processes,

write history from objects in collections, compare historical

photographic movements, and debate the canon of photographic history.

They also learn about digital preservation and access issues through

practical design projects involving Website and database design.

Research Methods are a core component, providing students with essential

handling, writing, digitizing and presentation skills needed for MA and

Research level work. Further modules will encourage independent thinking

in theory and in history writing, introduce students to methodologies

commonly encountered in photographic history, and set the students on a

course for finding their own MA dissertation topic. Students receive

expert advice on the thesis topic of their choosing, which is written in

the summer months and submitted in September, one year after the course

begins, in the case of full time study, or two years in the case of

part-time. For further details on the course and application process,

please download a course brochure from

http://kmd.dmu.ac.uk/kmd_photohistory_page/HOPP.pdf. 

 

 

Professor Stephen Brown

Director, Knowledge Media Design

http://kmd.dmu.ac.uk <http://kmd.dmu.ac.uk> 

tel: 0116 257 7173

mob: 07989 948230

 


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