So, I'm in yr 11 now, and I thinking in doing History ext for yr12, I looked at the syllabus and it seems to be very interesting , but i don't understand the major project thing, i mean what we have to do and can i do a project about any topic in history or what.
can someone explain it to me?
thanx
It's not exactly a project on history, but
historiography. Historiography is basically the study of the study of history (as opposed to the study of history i.e. what a typical historian does) and forms the basis of History Extension. In other words, it's kinda like meta-history.
For example, take a fairly bog-standard topic, the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
It's not about arguing whether the bombings were necessary or even justifiable - this is essentially immaterial to the project.
The project is not about analysing what historians have to say about Hiroshima/Nagasaki, but
why they are saying what they are saying. So you analyse context, their methodology, beliefs, the purpose of their history, their ideology and come to a conclusion about why they have such an opinion.
Take Historian A, who believes that H/N were a genocidal terrorist attack. What A actually thinks is irrelevant, but why he thinks this is very relevant. On further analysis, you see he has a Japanese grandfather, or he is pacifistic, or whatever and thus make the argument that this is why he thinks that.
You can analyse a change in historical perception, perhaps you make the argument that H/N is viewed more favorably today than it was 50 years ago, due to the influences of the Cold War on historians, or post-modernism, or whatever.
We're basically operating on three levels here
1. What actually happened - this is basic content stuff, basically yr9-10 level (and in ancient I think)
2. What you/historians think about what happened - this is the critical analysis you do in essays at a 2U history level (particularly in modern), where you use historians to support an argument you devise
3. Why historians think what they think about what happened - this is the historiographical analysis that forms the core of the history extension course, its no longer about what happened, but the perception of what happened in history and why this perception exists as it does