PhD fees and stipend studentship, history of nursing, University of Nottingham
3-Year Faculty of Arts PhD Studentship
Department of History, University of Nottingham
In connection with: ‘Florence Nightingale Comes Home for 2020: an Historico-Literary Analysis of her Family Life’
Applications
are invited for a Faculty of Arts funded PhD studentship granted in
connection to a recent AHRC Standard Grant: 'Florence Nightingale
Comes Home for
2020: an Historico-Literary Analysis of her Family Life’ awarded to
Professor Paul Crawford (Health Sciences) and Dr Anna Greenwood
(History).
The
successful candidate will be given some latitude as to the scope and
approach of their doctorate, but the subject matter should fall into the
general topic area:
‘Nursing Care at the Time of Nightingale’. Applicants should show they
have developed an original research question, have scoped
the availability of relevant archival materials and should demonstrate
an in-depth engagement with relevant historiography. This
full-time studentship, which is funded for three years (subject to
satisfactory progression), will begin on 1 January 2018 and will be
supervised by Dr Greenwood and another academic selected dependent on
the details of the chosen proposal.
This
scholarship will cover HEU tuition fees and provide an annual
maintenance grant (stipend) matching Research Councils UK recommendation
– for 2017/18 £14,553
per annum, pro rata.
The
University of Nottingham's Graduate School's Research Training
Programme offers a broad and comprehensive range of research training
courses from 'Using Archives
in Your Research', to 'Pathways into Publishing'. The Graduate School
also runs training targeted specifically at Faculty of Arts students and
the Arts and Social Sciences Graduate Centre coordinates training and
events that are relevant and useful to research
postgraduates in History.
How to apply:
Applicants
should have a First Class or Upper Second Class degree in history and
an MA at distinction or merit in a relevant discipline, including
medical history,
history of science and gender history. Preference will be given to
applicants with a demonstrable knowledge and interest in post 1800
nursing history specifically, or medical history generally.
Applicants
must be a resident of the UK or European Economic Area (EEA) and have a
UK or EU tuition fee status. In general this means settled in the UK
and have
been ordinarily resident for a period of at least three years before
the start of postgraduate studies. International applicants are not
eligible to apply for this studentship.
Applicants
should submit via email a single MS Word or PDF document which includes
a curriculum vitae (no more than 2 pages), a brief letter (no more
than 2 pages)
outlining their proposed research project and qualification for the
studentship, a sample of writing (c. 3000 words) and the names and
contact details of two academic referees.
Please send this document to the email address ss-pgr-upw@nottingham. ac.uk no
later than 5pm on Monday 30 October 2017. Please ensure the subject line of your email appears as ‘surname, first name – Faculty of Arts/Nottingham studentship’.
Informal enquiries may be directed to anna.greenwood@nottingham. ac.uk.
Interviews are scheduled to be held in Nottingham on Wednesday 22 November.
Shortlisted
candidates will be asked to complete an application for PhD study in
the Department of History in advance of the interview: