Overview
The Master’s Degree in Archives (Digital Technologies Applied to History) offered by École nationale des chartes - PSL is built around the scientific challenges of using digital technologies to process sources (objects, text, images) in service of history and heritage.
This Master’s program is intended for students who wish to learn the methods for analyzing historical and literary sources, as well as the digital technologies they will need for their research.
This master's program is part of PSL Translitterae graduate program.
Opportunities
The Master’s Degree in Archives has two objectives:
- offer methodological training to those wishing to pursue doctoral studies, with a heavy emphasis on using digital technologies to develop their research
- give young historians an opportunity to find a job in the public or private sector, within entities or for projects that use digital technologies to process or make use of primary documents
Structure
Year one of the Master’s program
The first year of the Master’s degree provides a common core of general education on sources, including core courses and three specialized tracks (Archives; Art History; Books and Media).
The two semesters draw on courses from the paleography archivist program, which provides the experience and pedagogical coordination to ensure a cohesive program.
Approval by the faculty committee is required for students to continue into the second year of the Master’s degree.
Year two of the Master’s program
In the second year, students begin learning information and communication technologies as a bridge with History Master’s programs, for students in those programs who do not wish to sit the competitive exams to become teachers but wish to broaden their education.
Semester 3: 30 ECTS
Core curriculum: 270 hours
Coursework, which includes lectures, visits, and meetings alongside many hours of tutorials, covers:
- digital documents and techniques for digitization
- reporting and describing collections
- some foundations of programming
- electronic publication techniques
- techniques for structuring documents and data
- challenges and strategies related to digital documents
- a broad overview of existing e-resources
- perpetuation of digital information
- designing and creating a document application for the web
- conducting projects to digitize primary source
Semester 4: 30 ECTS
S4 is devoted to developing a project, namely:
For the research track, a written thesis in history, art history, or literature, that involves digital processing; could potentially be replaced by developing software applied to research
For the professional track, a digital project (XML template, digital corpus using XML, database, electronic source publishing, dynamic web application, virtual exhibit, specifications, software study or prototype, etc.) related to heritage objects or collections and conducted on behalf of an institution for the conservation of heritage, a research team in the humanities and social sciences, or a private company as part of a long internship in France or abroad
Technical workshops may be held to expand upon the practical work given in Semester 3, depending on the students’ internships and thesis topics.
Costs
Funding
Admissions
Admission to the “Digital technologies applied to history” program presumes that the student has previously acquired the general knowledge in history or literature required to succeed in the program. As such, general history classes, either by period or topic, are absent from the curriculum.
For the 1st year: Bachelor’s degree (in history, art history, classic literature, modern literature, or law) or equivalent degree, with approval from the faculty committee, after an interview with the faculty committee
For the 2nd year: M1 earned from École des Chartes or another institute of higher education, with approval from the faculty committee