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History 491: Imperial Germany: Dissertations & Theses

Why consult a dissertation?

As you know, the dissertation is a creative, often lengthy in the field of history, thoroughly researched capstone project one conducts in order to earn a doctorate in philosophy. WIU Libraries provides access to the fulltext of these papers back to mid 1990s with the Proquest database to the right of this box. As a student and budding researcher, you are advised to find several dissertations in your subject area a peruse their bibliographies. I have included a current thesis title page, abstract, bibliography here.

Soldiering from the Homefront:

Omaha Nebraska in WWII

by Rebacca Walters

Dissertations & Theses

A dissertation or thesis is a work that supports  a doctorate or master’s degree

The paper presents the author's research and findings. Many databases contain dissertations and theses, including full-text. Electronic versions of theses and dissertations are called ETDs which has made organizing and distributing the documents much easier. Many databases require a paid subscription. But recently these resources are being made available through publishers including university presses (academic publishers).

Previously published journal articles as dissertation chapters

The practice of dissertation authors including their own previously published journal articles as chapters in their official submissions goes by several names: composite thesis, sandwich thesis, and thesis-by-publication are a few of the most common constructions. Whatever one calls it, the practice is overwhelmingly found in the STEM disciplines, where students tend to publish coauthored papers with their lab groups prior to graduation. A different, but related, practice is the “manuscript” option, in which a group of publication-ready papers form the dissertation, with the expectation that students will submit them to publishers after graduation.

Why consult dissertations?

Because the researcher has gone to great lengths to research the topics. You can gain from all of their hard work combing the bibliography for primary and secondary sources. You can also study how they approached the topic. What type of method did they use?  Did they include a statistical analysis? How persuasive is their argument? Did you find the writing engaging? If so, can you learn from this example to improve your own writing?

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