What are some /his/ related careers to pursue aside being a teacher/professor?
>>3193849
Lawyer
>>3193849
Linguistics
Museum curator
Archivist
Librarian
Archeologist
Diplomat
Travel agent
>>3193946
>Diplomat
Depends on the country. You can't take the access examinations with just a history degree in mine.
>>3193849
Teacher here. Don't you fucking do it unless you love it, and even then for God's sake have some backup.
>>3193849
arts& antiques dealer, that is if you got business sense.
>>3193961
This. Some of my HS classmates loved history and went to college to be history teachers and they are almost burned up already. Kids are horrible these days.
My HS history teacher was really good, had a natural authority and could teach so the kids were interested, and even then he had business which brought him several times more money than teaching and did it just for fun.
>>3193849
cook, barista, cleaner, waiter, garbage collector, NEET
>>3193849
Military advisor
>>3193849
Historical revisionism. Stupid people pay a lot of money to subscribe or join up to an organization specializing in this shit.
>>3193849
Welfare leech
E-celeb
Burger flipper
>>3193946
This. Went for a master in History from a political science oriented university. Diplomacy was my dream, failed the exam to become diplomat. Was preparing to take it again, then got offered a job as glorified tourist guide for rich people by the father of a friend. Pays well but I hate my life.
I still think that History is a decent choice for studies, and certainly the best out of the Humanities (unless you consider Law to be an humanity, in which case it's close second). It's an all-rounder, a good, stable foundation, and pretty respected.
>>3193961
One of my friends went the teaching route, did one year in a public school, came back pretty much mentally scarred. Thankfully he got a job in a private school and now he loves it.
>>3193849
Taxi driver
Burger flipper
Coffee brewer
>>3194376
teaching in public schools is asking to be hurt on a deep emotional level
Since this thread seems like a topical thread to ask
If I didn't get a BA in a history related field, would it still be possible to earn a masters in history? I've always been well read when it comes to historical non-fiction, and I feel some regrets as to how I handled my undergrad education. I was young and stupid at the time. I didn't have any passion or drive, and didn't really discover my love for history until after I graduated.
First citizen and warlord for when world order collapses