Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 10
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- PREFACE xiii
- INTRODUCTION 1
- FURTHER READING 15
-
1. WORLD HISTORY OVER TIME: The Evolution of an Intellectual and Pedagogical Movement
- INTRODUCTION 17
- THE RISE OF WORLD HISTORY SCHOLARSHIP 22
- WORLD HISTORY 39
- TOWARD WORLD HISTORY: AMERICAN HISTORIANS AND THE COMING OF THE WORLD HISTORY COURSE 48
- MARSHALL G. S. HODGSON AND THE HEMISPHERIC INTERREGIONAL APPROACH TO WORLD HISTORY 78
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 1 89
-
2. DEFINING WORLD HISTORY: Some Key Statements
- INTRODUCTION 91
- HEMISPHERIC INTERREGIONAL HISTORY AS AN APPROACH TO WORLD HISTORY 97
- THE RISE OF THE WEST AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 107
- DEPTH, SPAN, AND RELEVANCE 121
- A PLEA FOR WORLD SYSTEM HISTORY 130
- MYTHS, WAGERS, AND SOME MORAL IMPLICATIONS OF WORLD HISTORY 145
- WORLD HISTORY AND THE HISTORY OF WOMEN, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY 152
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 2 163
-
3. REGIONS IN WORLD-HISTORICAL CONTEXT
- INTRODUCTION 167
- THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA IN WORLD HISTORY 173
- NO LONGER ODD REGION OUT: REPOSITIONING LATIN AMERICA IN WORLD HISTORY 183
- SOUTHEAST ASIA IN WORLD HISTORY 189
- AMERICAN HISTORY AS IF THE WORLD MATTERED (AND VICE VERSA) 199
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 3 212
-
4. RETHINKING WORLD-HISTORICAL SPACE
- INTRODUCTION 215
- THE ARCHITECTURE OF CONTINENTS: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONTINENTAL SCHEME 222
- SOUTHERNIZATION 242
- OCEANS OF WORLD HISTORY: DELINEATING AQUACENTRIC NOTIONS IN THE GLOBAL PAST 259
- ATLANTIC HISTORY: DEFINITIONS, CHALLENGES, AND OPPORTUNITIES 267
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 4 285
-
5. RETHINKING WORLD-HISTORICAL TIME
- INTRODUCTION 289
- CROSS-CULTURAL INTERACTION AND PERIODIZATION IN WORLD HISTORY 296
- WHEN DOES WORLD HISTORY BEGIN? (AND WHY SHOULD WE CARE?) 304
- HISTORY AND SCIENCE AFTER THE CHRONOMETRIC REVOLUTION 311
- WORLDING HISTORY 317
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 5 329
-
6 WORLD HISTORY AS COMPARISON
- INTRODUCTION 331
- GLOBAL AND COMPARATIVE HISTORY 335
- FRAMEWORKS FOR GLOBAL HISTORICAL ANALYSIS 337
- HOW TO WRITE THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD 342
- WHAT IS WORLD HISTORY GOOD FOR? 347
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 6 354
-
7. DEBATING THE QUESTION OF WESTERN POWER
- INTRODUCTION 357
- POLITICAL ECONOMY AND ECOLOGY ON THE EVE OF INDUSTRIALIZATION: EUROPE, CHINA, AND THE GLOBAL CONJUNCTURE 366
- THE WEST AND THE REST REVISITED: DEBATING CAPITALIST ORIGINS, EUROPEAN COLONIALISM, AND THE ADVENT OF MODERNITY 383
- CAPITALIST ORIGINS , THE ADVENT OF MODERNITY, AND COHERENT EXPLANATION: A RESPONSE TO JOSEPH M. BRYANT 399
- COMPARISON IN GLOBAL HISTORY 412
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 7 418
-
8. WORLD HISTORY, BIG HISTORY, AND THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
- INTRODUCTION 421
- THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE 427
- MATTER MATTERS: TOWARDS A MORE “SUBSTANTIAL” GLOBAL HISTORY 434
- THE ANTHROPOCENE: ARE HUMANS NOW OVERWHELMING THE GREAT FORCES OF NATURE? 440
- BIG HISTORY: THE EMERGENCE OF A NOVEL INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH 459
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 8 472
-
9. GLOBAL HISTORY AND GLOBALIZATION
- INTRODUCTION 475
- GLOBAL HISTORY: APPROACHES AND NEW DIRECTIONS 484
- COMPARING GLOBAL HISTORY TO WORLD HISTORY 495
- CYCLES OF SILVER: GLOBALIZATION AS HISTORICAL PROCESS 503
- WHAT IS THE CONCEPT OF GLOBALIZATION GOOD FOR? AN AFRICAN HISTORIAN’S PERSPECTIVE 514
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 9 529
-
10. CRITIQUES AND QUESTIONS
- INTRODUCTION 533
- GLOBAL HISTORY AND CRITIQUES OF WESTERN PERSPECTIVES 540
- MUCH ADO ABOUT SOMETHING: THE NEW MALAISE OF WORLD HISTORY 555
- MYTHS, WAGERS, AND SOME MORAL IMPLICATIONS OF WORLD HISTORY 561
- BEYOND BLACKS, BONDAGE, AND BLAME: WHY A MULTICENTRIC WORLD HISTORY NEEDS AFRICA 568
- WOMEN’S AND MEN’S WORLD HISTORY? NOT YET 578
- HISTORIES FOR A LESS NATIONAL AGE 587
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 10 611
- TEACHING WORLD HISTORY, FURTHER READING 613
- CREDITS 615
- INDEX 619
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- PREFACE xiii
- INTRODUCTION 1
- FURTHER READING 15
-
1. WORLD HISTORY OVER TIME: The Evolution of an Intellectual and Pedagogical Movement
- INTRODUCTION 17
- THE RISE OF WORLD HISTORY SCHOLARSHIP 22
- WORLD HISTORY 39
- TOWARD WORLD HISTORY: AMERICAN HISTORIANS AND THE COMING OF THE WORLD HISTORY COURSE 48
- MARSHALL G. S. HODGSON AND THE HEMISPHERIC INTERREGIONAL APPROACH TO WORLD HISTORY 78
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 1 89
-
2. DEFINING WORLD HISTORY: Some Key Statements
- INTRODUCTION 91
- HEMISPHERIC INTERREGIONAL HISTORY AS AN APPROACH TO WORLD HISTORY 97
- THE RISE OF THE WEST AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS 107
- DEPTH, SPAN, AND RELEVANCE 121
- A PLEA FOR WORLD SYSTEM HISTORY 130
- MYTHS, WAGERS, AND SOME MORAL IMPLICATIONS OF WORLD HISTORY 145
- WORLD HISTORY AND THE HISTORY OF WOMEN, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY 152
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 2 163
-
3. REGIONS IN WORLD-HISTORICAL CONTEXT
- INTRODUCTION 167
- THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA IN WORLD HISTORY 173
- NO LONGER ODD REGION OUT: REPOSITIONING LATIN AMERICA IN WORLD HISTORY 183
- SOUTHEAST ASIA IN WORLD HISTORY 189
- AMERICAN HISTORY AS IF THE WORLD MATTERED (AND VICE VERSA) 199
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 3 212
-
4. RETHINKING WORLD-HISTORICAL SPACE
- INTRODUCTION 215
- THE ARCHITECTURE OF CONTINENTS: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONTINENTAL SCHEME 222
- SOUTHERNIZATION 242
- OCEANS OF WORLD HISTORY: DELINEATING AQUACENTRIC NOTIONS IN THE GLOBAL PAST 259
- ATLANTIC HISTORY: DEFINITIONS, CHALLENGES, AND OPPORTUNITIES 267
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 4 285
-
5. RETHINKING WORLD-HISTORICAL TIME
- INTRODUCTION 289
- CROSS-CULTURAL INTERACTION AND PERIODIZATION IN WORLD HISTORY 296
- WHEN DOES WORLD HISTORY BEGIN? (AND WHY SHOULD WE CARE?) 304
- HISTORY AND SCIENCE AFTER THE CHRONOMETRIC REVOLUTION 311
- WORLDING HISTORY 317
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 5 329
-
6 WORLD HISTORY AS COMPARISON
- INTRODUCTION 331
- GLOBAL AND COMPARATIVE HISTORY 335
- FRAMEWORKS FOR GLOBAL HISTORICAL ANALYSIS 337
- HOW TO WRITE THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD 342
- WHAT IS WORLD HISTORY GOOD FOR? 347
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 6 354
-
7. DEBATING THE QUESTION OF WESTERN POWER
- INTRODUCTION 357
- POLITICAL ECONOMY AND ECOLOGY ON THE EVE OF INDUSTRIALIZATION: EUROPE, CHINA, AND THE GLOBAL CONJUNCTURE 366
- THE WEST AND THE REST REVISITED: DEBATING CAPITALIST ORIGINS, EUROPEAN COLONIALISM, AND THE ADVENT OF MODERNITY 383
- CAPITALIST ORIGINS , THE ADVENT OF MODERNITY, AND COHERENT EXPLANATION: A RESPONSE TO JOSEPH M. BRYANT 399
- COMPARISON IN GLOBAL HISTORY 412
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 7 418
-
8. WORLD HISTORY, BIG HISTORY, AND THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
- INTRODUCTION 421
- THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE 427
- MATTER MATTERS: TOWARDS A MORE “SUBSTANTIAL” GLOBAL HISTORY 434
- THE ANTHROPOCENE: ARE HUMANS NOW OVERWHELMING THE GREAT FORCES OF NATURE? 440
- BIG HISTORY: THE EMERGENCE OF A NOVEL INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH 459
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 8 472
-
9. GLOBAL HISTORY AND GLOBALIZATION
- INTRODUCTION 475
- GLOBAL HISTORY: APPROACHES AND NEW DIRECTIONS 484
- COMPARING GLOBAL HISTORY TO WORLD HISTORY 495
- CYCLES OF SILVER: GLOBALIZATION AS HISTORICAL PROCESS 503
- WHAT IS THE CONCEPT OF GLOBALIZATION GOOD FOR? AN AFRICAN HISTORIAN’S PERSPECTIVE 514
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 9 529
-
10. CRITIQUES AND QUESTIONS
- INTRODUCTION 533
- GLOBAL HISTORY AND CRITIQUES OF WESTERN PERSPECTIVES 540
- MUCH ADO ABOUT SOMETHING: THE NEW MALAISE OF WORLD HISTORY 555
- MYTHS, WAGERS, AND SOME MORAL IMPLICATIONS OF WORLD HISTORY 561
- BEYOND BLACKS, BONDAGE, AND BLAME: WHY A MULTICENTRIC WORLD HISTORY NEEDS AFRICA 568
- WOMEN’S AND MEN’S WORLD HISTORY? NOT YET 578
- HISTORIES FOR A LESS NATIONAL AGE 587
- FURTHER READING FOR CHAPTER 10 611
- TEACHING WORLD HISTORY, FURTHER READING 613
- CREDITS 615
- INDEX 619