Dr Miriam Dobson
M.A. (Cantab.), M.A., Ph.D. (London)
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Reader in Modern History
Widening Participation Officer
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+44 114 222 2567
Full contact details
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
91直播
S3 7RA
- Profile
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I studied Russian and French at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, before moving to the School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, University College London, where I gained an M.A. in History and later my PhD.
I held a Scouloudi History Research Fellowship at the Institute of Historical Research (2002-03) and a one-year lectureship at the University of Liverpool (2003-4), before starting at 91直播 in September 2004.
My first monograph won the awarded by Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 'for the most important contribution to Russian, Eurasian, and East European studies in any discipline of the humanities or social sciences published in English in the United States in the previous calendar year'.
I was principal investigator on a four-year AHRC-funded project entitled .
I have published four journal articles based on this research and I am currently completing the manuscript for a monograph provisionally entitled Unorthodox Communities in the Cold War: Protestants, Secularisation, and Soviet Atheism, 1945-1985.
- Research interests
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My research interests lie in the history of the Soviet Union, with a particular emphasis on the social and cultural history of post-war Russia and Ukraine. My first book explored popular responses to the reforms of the Khrushchev era, in particular the massive exodus of prisoners from the Gulag. Khrushchev's Cold examined the impact of these returnees on communities and, more broadly, Soviet attempts to come to terms with the traumatic legacies of Stalin's terror.
My second project explores the history of Baptist and Pentecostal communities in the Soviet Union. It draws on archival material and oral history interviews conducted as part of a AHRC-funded project entitled . I have published a major document collection (with N. Beliakova) and four articles relating to this research: on the sensationalist depiction of evangelicals in the Soviet press; on interviews conducted with believers by social scientists; on the role of women in Protestant communities; and on pacifism and apocalyptic fears during the early Cold War. I have completed a monograph provisionally entitled The Unorthodox: Soviet Atheism, Protestants, and the Cold War, 1944-1985.
My future research takes the form of a collaboration with Professor Polly Jones (University of Oxford) for a project called 鈥楾he 101st kilometre: Banishment, belonging and the control of Soviet space鈥. The concept 鈥101st kilometre鈥 denotes the zones around major cities from which various politically or socially 鈥榤arginal鈥 populations were banished.
- Publications
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Books
Edited books
Journal articles
Chapters
Book reviews
- Research group
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Research supervision
- Current Students
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Primary Supervisor
- Completed Students
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- Mirjam Galley - Builders of Communism, 'Defective鈥 Children and Social Orphans. Soviet Children in Care after 1953.
- Hannah Parker - Voices of the New Soviet Woman: Gender, Emancipation and Agency in Letters to the Soviet State, 1924-1941.
- Alun Thomas (Russian and Slavonic Studies, co-supervisor) - Kazakh Nomads and the New Soviet State, 1919-1934.
- Joel Baker (second supervisor) - 'Anti-politics', infrastructure policy and civil society mobilisations in Spain under the Primo de Rivera dictatorship (1923-1930)
- James Yeoman (second supervisor) - Print Culture and the Formation of the Anarchist Movement in Spain: 1890-1915.
- Matthew Kerry (second supervisor) - Radical Politics in the Spanish Second Republic: Asturias, 1931-1936.
- David Lyon (second supervisor) - Bitter Justice: The Penitentiary of El Puerto De Santa Maria and it's Basque Dimension 1936-1949.
- Teaching activities
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Undergraduate:
- HST112 - Paths from Antiquity to Modernity
- HST202 - Historians and History
- HST232 - Holy Russia, Soviet Empire: Nation, Religion and Identity in the 20th Century
- HST3027/8 - Stalinism and De-Stalinisation, 1929-1961
- HST3303 - Identity and Belief
Postgraduate:
- HST6085 - Under Attack: The Home Front during the Cold War
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Member
Administrative roles:
- Deputy Admissions Tutor (2018-)
- Senior Tutor (2010-2013)
- Director of MA Programmes (2008-09)
- Member of Teaching Committee (2005-present), Postgraduate Committee (2008-09), Research Committee (2008-09) and Admissions Committee (2004-07)
- History Department Teaching and Learning Advocate (2005-08)
- Public engagement
I have given talks to local audiences including lectures for 91直播 University of the Third Age and 91直播 Historical Association, and a pre-concert talk for Music in the Round. I have blogged for and for the department鈥檚 . I am enthusiastic about engaging school-age students with history and have organized various events including a 鈥楬istory Taster Day鈥, workshops in collaboration with Music in the Round, and a talk and exhibition on the 鈥楽oviet Empire鈥
As part of the Schools History Network the department has made a series of videos for use in the classroom. Below is a short video of myself talking about Khruschev's Secret Speech.
In the media:
I contribute to a variety of history blogs including the where I blog on topics ranging from Soviet baby boomers, the meaning of 1991 and the Soviet imagery of nuclear work.
I also contribute to the department's blog. This blog exhibits cutting-edge research, the history behind the headlines and why we think history really matters.