Wegen der schnellen Ausbreitung des Coronavirus bleiben in der Schweiz alle Museen zurzeit geschlossen. Viele bieten auf ihrer Website oder über die sozialen Medien digitale Angebote an, die wir an dieser Stelle vorstellen möchten.
Der Überblick beschränkt sich auf die Historischen Museen und ist nicht abschliessend.
Many graduate history students will be familiar with the moment (or phase) in their studies when they have to make a decision about the topic of their final thesis. Some students may already know the topic early on. Others may take a few productive detours on their way to developing their final thesis topic. I am a history student from Germany who is working on the final thesis and in the latter category. With this blog contribution, I would like to share insights into the perspective of me as a historian at the end of my graduate academic education, whose final thesis research also marked my first foray into the field of digital history.
At the beginning of my Master’s degree
program at Bielefeld University, Germany, I was sure that I wanted to do research
on a different topic than my Bachelor thesis. World War I, albeit an
exceptionally cruel war, has always been fascinating to me. I was especially
interested in researching the fate of soldiers with neurotic/ psychiatric symptoms
during or after their military service (today it would be called PTSD)
Therefore, my general topic was clear. What was less clear was my exact research
question and, related to this, the accessibility of sources.