In the final year of their studies, undergraduates undertake extended independent research, stretching over two teaching blocks.
Students are required to identify their own topic, formulate the particular questions to be asked, identify the main primary sources to be used, set the research questions in the context of the issues arising from the secondary literature, and carry through a scholarly and analytical study to the highest standards. In short, the dissertation builds on skills learned in earlier special projects and in the group project, but in the Dissertation students will take their first really independent steps as art historians in their own right.
The earlier students begin to think about the topic the better. The best dissertations tend to come from those who began to think about what they might research, and discuss their thoughts with a member of staff, towards the end of their second year.
In the new syllabus, guidance to help you in researching and writing your Dissertation will be provided (as part of the Researching History skills-unit in Teaching Block 1 of the final year) in the form of lectures on devising a research topic and on identifying and using primary sources and you will also have a dissertation supervisor. In the old syllabus (in its final year in 2011-12) support is delivered entirely through one-to-one contact with your supervisor.
Your assigned a supervisor will discuss with you in one-to-one consultations, which should not normally exceed three hours per student including email advice, your draft dissertation proposal and subsequent work on the dissertation, as well as the particular challenges of the chosen topic. Students are, however, also free to consult other lecturers with relevant expertise in their consultation hours.
A key component of the dissertation is that it should engage with primary source materials (broadly defined). Students are, however, also expected to demonstrate how their analysis fits into and contributes to the existing literature on their topic.
In June 2011 the Department voted to begin to publish the best of the annual dissertations produced by History of Art's final year undergraduates and to award a 'Best History of Art dissertation of [year]' prize to the best of the best.