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World Civilizations: The Global Experience, Combined Volume 7th edition [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 1104 pages, aukštis x plotis: 276x229 mm, weight: 2341 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Feb-2014
  • Leidėjas: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0205986307
  • ISBN-13: 9780205986309
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 1104 pages, aukštis x plotis: 276x229 mm, weight: 2341 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Feb-2014
  • Leidėjas: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0205986307
  • ISBN-13: 9780205986309
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
ALERT: Before you purchase, check with your instructor or review your course syllabus to ensure that youselect the correct ISBN. Several versions of Pearsons MyLab & Mastering products exist for each title, including customized versions for individual schools, and registrations are not transferable. In addition,you may need a CourseID, provided by your instructor, to register for and use Pearsons MyLab & Mastering products.Packages Access codes for Pearsons MyLab & Mastering products may not be included when purchasing or renting from companies other than Pearson; check with the seller before completing your purchase.Used or rental books If you rent or purchase a used book with an access code, the access code may have been redeemed previously and you may have to purchase a new access code.Access codes Access codes that are purchased from sellers other than Pearson carry a higher risk of being either the wrong ISBN or a previously redeemed code. Check with the seller prior to purchase.0133828204 / 9780133828207 World Civilizations: The Global Experience, Combined Volume Plus NEW MyHistoryLab with Pearson eText -- Access Card PackagePackage consists of: 0205206549 / 9780205206544 NEW MyHistoryLab with Pearson eText -- Valuepack Access Card0205986307 / 9780205986309 World Civilizations: The Global Experience, Combined Volume-- Presents a truly global history This global world history text emphasizes the major stages in societies’ different interactions and assesses the development of major societies. Encompassing social, cultural, political and economic history, the authors examine key civilizations in world history. World Civilizations balances the discussion of independent developments in the worlds major civilizations with comparative analysis of the results of global contact.MyHistoryLab is an integral part of the Stearns/Adas/Schwartz/Gilbert program. An integrated etext and and engaging resources bring history to life for students.
MyHistoryLab Video Series xvii
MyHistoryLab Documents xix
Maps xxvii
Preface xxxi
Supplementary Instructional Materials xxxvii
About the Authors xliii
Prologue xlvii
Part I Early Human Societies, 2.5 Million-600 B.C.E.: Origins And Development 1(67)
Chapter 1 The Neolithic Revolution and the Birth of Civilization
7(17)
Human Life in the Era of Hunters and Gatherers
9(5)
Document: Tales of the Hunt: Paleolithic Cave Paintings as History
13(1)
Agriculture and the Origins of Civilization: The Neolithic Transformations
14(5)
Visualizing the Past: Representations of Women in Early Art
18(1)
The First Towns: Seedbeds of Civilization
19(4)
Thinking Historically: The Idea of Civilization in World Historical Perspective
21(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: The Neolithic Revolution as the Basis for World History
23(1)
Further Readings
23(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
23(1)
Chapter 2 The Rise of Civilization in the Middle East and Africa
24(20)
Early Civilization in Mesopotamia
25(5)
Later Mesopotamian Civilization: A Series of Conquests
30(3)
Visualizing the Past: Mesopotamia in Maps
31(1)
Document: Hammurabi's Law Code
32(1)
Ancient Egypt
33(4)
Thinking Historically: Women in Patriarchal Societies
36(1)
Egypt and Mesopotamia Compared
37(1)
Civilization Centers in Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean
38(3)
The Issue of Heritage
41(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: The Early Civilizations and the World
42(1)
Further Readings
42(1)
Critical Thinking Question
43(1)
Chapter 3 Asia's First Civilizations: India and China
44(24)
The Indus Valley and the Birth of South Asian Civilization
46(4)
Indo-European Incursions and Early Vedic Society in India
50(3)
Document: Aryan Poetry in Praise of a War Horse
52(1)
A Bend in the River and the Beginnings of China
53(4)
The Decline of the Shang and the Era of Zhou Dominance
57(6)
Visualizing the Past: Mapping the Rise of Civilizations
59(2)
Thinking Historically: Nomadic Contacts and the Endurance of Asia's First Civilizations
61(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Contrasting Legacies: Harappan and Early Chinese Civilizations
63(1)
Further Readings
63(1)
Critical Thinking Question
64(4)
Part II The Classical Period, 600 B.C.E.-600 C.E.: Uniting Large Regions 68(167)
Chapter 4 Unification and the Consolidation of Civilization in China
74(22)
Philosophical Remedies for the Prolonged Crisis of the Later Zhou
76(4)
Document: Teachings of the Rival Chinese Schools
79(1)
The Triumph of the Qin and Imperial Unity
80(4)
The Han Dynasty and the Foundations of China's Classical Age
84(10)
Thinking Historically: Xunzi and the Shift from Ritual Combat to "Real" War
85(6)
Visualizing the Past: Capital Designs and Patterns of Political Power
91(3)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Classical China and the World
94(1)
Further Readings
94(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
95(1)
Chapter 5 Classical Civilizations in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East
96(22)
The Persian Empire: A New Perspective in the Middle East
98(2)
The Political Character of Classical Greece
100(4)
The Hellenistic Period
104(3)
Visualizing the Past: Political Rituals in Persia
107(1)
Greek And Hellenistic Culture
107(5)
Document: The Power of Greek Drama
109(3)
Patterns of Mediterranean and Middle Eastern Society
112(5)
Thinking Historically: Defining Social History
114(3)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Persia, Greece, and the World
117(1)
Further Readings
117(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
117(1)
Chapter 6 Religious Rivalries and India's Golden Age
118(22)
The Age of Brahman Dominance
119(3)
An Era of Widespread Social Change
122(4)
Thinking Historically: Inequality as a Social Norm
123(3)
Religious Ferment and the Rise of Buddhism
126(2)
The Rise and Decline of the Mauryas
128(3)
Brahmanical Recovery and the Splendors of the Gupta Age
131(4)
Visualizing the Past: The Pattern of Trade in the Ancient Eurasian World
132(3)
Intensifying Caste and Gender Inequities and Gupta Decline
135(3)
Document: A Guardian's Farewell Speech to a Young Woman About to Be Married
136(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: India and the Wider World
138(1)
Further Readings
138(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
139(1)
Chapter 7 Rome and Its Empire
140(20)
The Development of Rome's Republic
142(4)
Roman Culture
146(2)
Document: Rome and a Values Crisis
147(1)
How Rome Ruled Its Empire
148(3)
Visualizing the Past: Religions in Rome
151(1)
The Evolution of Rome's Economic and Social Structure
151(3)
Thinking Historically: The Classical Civilizations in Comparative Perspective
153(1)
The Origins of Christianity
154(3)
The Decline of Rome
157(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Rome and the World
158(1)
Further Readings
158(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
159(1)
Chapter 8 The Peoples and Civilizations of the Americas
160(23)
Origins of American Societies
162(5)
Spread of Civilization in Mesoamerica
167(8)
Document: Deciphering the Maya Glyphs
172(1)
Thinking Historically: Different Times for Different Peoples
173(2)
The Peoples to the North
175(2)
The Andean World
177(4)
Visualizing the Past: Ancient Agriculture
180(1)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: American Civilizations and the World
181(1)
Further Readings
181(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
182(1)
Chapter 9 The Spread of Civilizations and the Movement of Peoples
183(29)
The Spread of Civilization in Africa
186(9)
Document: Myths of Origin
191(3)
Thinking Historically: Language as a Historical Source
194(1)
Nomadic Societies and Indo-European Migrations
195(6)
Visualizing the Past: Varieties of Human Adaptation and the Potential for Civilization
200(1)
The Spread of Chinese Civilization to Japan
201(4)
The Scattered Societies of Polynesia
205(5)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: The Emerging Cultures
210(1)
Further Readings
210(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
211(1)
Chapter 10 The End of the Classical Era: World History in Transition, 200-700 C.E.
212(23)
Upheavals in Eastern and Southern Asia
214(4)
Document: The Popularization of Buddhism
216(2)
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
218(5)
Thinking Historically: The Problem of Decline and Fall
222(1)
The Development and Spread of World Religions
223(6)
Visualizing the Past: Religious Geography
227(2)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: The Late Classical Period and the World
229(1)
Further Readings
229(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
230(5)
Part III The Postclassical Period, 600-1450: New Faith And New Commerce 235(222)
Chapter 11 The First Global Civilization: The Rise and Spread of Islam
242(26)
Desert and Town: The Harsh Environment of the Pre-Islamic Arabian World
244(5)
The Life of Muhammad and the Genesis of Islam
249(3)
The Arab Empire of the Umayyads
252(8)
Thinking Historically: Civilization and Gender Relationships
258(2)
From Arab to Islamic Empire: The Early Abbasid Era
260(6)
Visualizing the Past: The Mosque as a Symbol of Islamic Civilization
262(2)
Document: The Thousand and One Nights as a Mirror of Elite Society in the Abbasid Era
264(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Early Islam and the World
266(1)
Further Readings
266(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
267(1)
Chapter 12 Abbasid Decline and the Spread of Islamic Civilization to South and Southeast Asia
268(22)
The Islamic Heartlands in the Middle and Late Abbasid Eras
270(5)
Document: Ibn Khaldun on the Rise and Decline of Empires
274(1)
An Age of Learning and Artistic Refinements
275(3)
The Coming of Islam to South Asia
278(8)
Visualizing The Past: The Pattern of Islam's Global Expansions
279(5)
Thinking Historically: Conversion and Accommodation in the Spread of World Religions
284(2)
The Spread of Islam to Southeast Asia
286(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Islam: A Bridge between Worlds
288(1)
Further Readings
288(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
289(1)
Chapter 13 African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam
290(20)
African Societies: Diversity and Similarities
291(4)
Kingdoms of the Grasslands
295(6)
Document: The Great Oral Tradition and the Epic of Sundiata
298(3)
Visualizing the Past: The Architecture of Faith
301(1)
The Swahili Coast of East Africa
301(2)
Peoples of the Forest and Plains
303(6)
Thinking Historically: Two Transitions in the History of World Population
304(4)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Internal Development and Global Contacts
308(1)
Further Readings
309(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
309(1)
Chapter 14 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe
310(17)
Civilization in Eastern Europe
311(2)
The Byzantine Empire
313(4)
Visualizing the Past: Women and Power in Byzantium
315(2)
The Split between Eastern and Western Christianity
317(4)
Thinking Historically: Eastern and Western Europe: The Problem of Boundaries
320(1)
The Spread of Civilization in Eastern Europe
321(1)
The Emergence of Kievan Rus'
321(5)
Document: Russia Turns to Christianity
323(3)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Eastern Europe and the World
326(1)
Further Readings
326(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
326(1)
Chapter 15 A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe
327(24)
Stages of Postclassical Development
329(10)
Visualizing The Past: Peasant Labor
331(5)
Document: European Travel: A Monk Visits Jerusalem
336(3)
Thinking Historically: Western Civilization
339(1)
Western Culture in the Postclassical Era
339(4)
Changing Economic and Social Forms in the Postclassical Centuries
343(3)
The Decline of the Medieval Synthesis
346(3)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Medieval Europe and the World
349(1)
Further Readings
349(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
350(1)
Chapter 16 The Americas on the Eve of Invasion
351(22)
Postclassic Mesoamerica, 1000-1500 C.E.
353(5)
Aztec Society in Transition
358(4)
Document: Aztec Women and Men
360(2)
Twantinsuyu: World of the Incas
362(6)
Visualizing the Past: Archeological Evidence of Political Practices
363(2)
Thinking Historically: The "Troubling" Civilizations of the Americas
365(3)
The Other Peoples of the Americas
368(3)
Global Connections: The Americas and the World
371(1)
Further Readings
371(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
372(1)
Chapter 17 Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties
373(21)
Rebuilding the Imperial Edifice in the Sui-Tang Era
374(7)
Document: Ties That Bind: Paths to Power
379(2)
Tang Decline and the Rise of the Song
381(4)
Tang and Song Prosperity: The Basis of a Golden Age
385(8)
Visualizing the Past: Footbinding as a Marker of Male Dominance
389(2)
Thinking Historically: Artistic Expression and Social Values
391(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: China's World Role
393(1)
Further Readings
393(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
393(1)
Chapter 18 The Spread of Chinese Civilization: Japan, Korea, and Vietnam
394(23)
Japan: The Imperial Age
396(4)
The Era of Warrior Dominance
400(5)
Thinking Historically: Comparing Feudalisms
402(3)
Korea: Between China and Japan
405(3)
Between China and Southeast Asia: The Making of Vietnam
408(7)
Visualizing the Past: What Their Portraits Tell Us: Gatekeeper Elites and the Persistence of Civilizations
412(2)
Document: Literature as a Mirror of the Exchanges among Asian Centers of Civilization
414(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: In the Orbit of China: The East Asian Corner of the Global System
415(1)
Further Readings
415(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
416(1)
Chapter 19 The Last Great Nomadic Challenges: From Chinggis Khan to Timur
417(20)
The Transcontinental Empire of Chinggis Khan
419(6)
Document: A European Assessment of the Virtues and Vices of the Mongols
423(2)
The Mongol Drive to the West
425(4)
Visualizing the Past: The Mongol Empire as a Bridge between Civilizations
428(1)
The Mongol Interlude in Chinese History
429(6)
Thinking Historically: The Global Eclipse of the Nomadic Warrior Culture
433(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: The Mongol Linkages
435(1)
Further Readings
435(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
436(1)
Chapter 20 The World in 1450: Changing Balance of World Power
437(20)
Key Changes in the Middle East
439(1)
The Structure of Transregional Trade
440(2)
The Rise of the West
442(6)
Visualizing the Past: Population Trends
443(1)
Document: Bubonic Plague
444(4)
Outside the World Network
448(4)
Thinking Historically: The Problem of Ethnocentrism
450(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: 1450 and the World
451(1)
Further Readings
452(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
452(5)
Part IV The Early Modern Period, 1450-1750: The World Shrinks 457(171)
Chapter 21 The World Economy
464(21)
The West's First Outreach: Maritime Power
465(6)
Thinking Historically: Causation and the West's Expansion
470(1)
The Columbian Exchange of Disease and Food
471(2)
Toward a World Economy
473(3)
Visualizing The Past: West Indian Slaveholding
474(2)
Colonial Expansion
476(7)
Document: Western Conquerors: Tactics and Motives
478(5)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: The World Economy-and the World
483(1)
Further Readings
483(1)
Critical Questions
484(1)
Chapter 22 The Transformation of the West, 1450-1750
485(20)
The First Big Changes: Culture and Commerce, 1450-1650
487(5)
The Commercial Revolution
492(3)
The Scientific Revolution: The Next Phase of Change
495(2)
Visualizing the Past: Versailles
497(1)
Political Change
497(3)
Thinking Historically: Elites and Masses
498(2)
The West by 1750
500(4)
Document: Controversies about Women
501(3)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Europe and the World
504(1)
Further Readings
504(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
504(1)
Chapter 23 Early Latin America
505(28)
Spaniards and Portuguese: From Reconquest to Conquest
507(8)
Document: A Vision from the Vanquished
513(2)
The Destruction and Transformation of Indigenous Societies
515(1)
Colonial Economies and Governments
516(5)
Thinking Historically: An Atlantic History
518(3)
Brazil: The First Plantation Colony
521(2)
Multiracial Societies
523(3)
Visualizing the Past: Race or Culture? A Changing Society
524(2)
The 18th-Century Reforms
526(5)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Latin American Civilization and the World Context
531(1)
Further Readings
531(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
532(1)
Chapter 24 Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade
533(25)
Africa and the Creation of an Atlantic System
534(2)
The Atlantic Slave Trade
536(4)
African Societies, Slavery, and the Slave Trade
540(7)
Thinking Historically: Slavery and Human Society
542(5)
White Settlers and Africans in Southern Africa
547(2)
The African Diaspora
549(7)
Document: An African's Description of the Middle Passage
551(2)
Visualizing the Past: The Cloth of Kings in an Atlantic Perspective
553(3)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Africa and the African Diaspora in World Context
556(1)
Further Readings
556(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
557(1)
Chapter 25 The Rise of Russia
558(15)
Russia's Expansionist Politics under the Tsars
559(4)
Thinking Historically: Multinational Empires
562(1)
Russia's First Westernization, 1690-1790
563(6)
Document: The Nature of Westernization
565(4)
Themes in Early Modern Russian History
569(3)
Visualizing The Past: Oppressed Peasants
570(2)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Russia and the World
572(1)
Further Readings
572(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
572(1)
Chapter 26 The Muslim Empires
573(27)
The Ottomans: From Frontier Warriors to Empire Builders
575(9)
Document: An Islamic Traveler Laments the Muslims' Indifference to Europe
583(1)
The Shi'a Challenge of the Safavids
584(6)
Thinking Historically: The Gunpowder Empires and the Shifting Balance of Global Power
586(4)
The Mughals and the Apex of Muslim Civilization in India
590(8)
Visualizing The Past: Art as a Window into the Past: Paintings and History in Mughal, India
593(5)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Gunpowder Empires and the Restoration of the Islamic Bridge among Civilizations
598(1)
Further Readings
598(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
599(1)
Chapter 27 Asian Transitions in an Age of Global Change
600(28)
The Asian Trading World and the Coming of the Europeans
602(7)
Ming China: A Global Mission Refused
609(9)
Document: Exam Questions as a Mirror of Chinese Values
611(5)
Visualizing the Past: The Great Ships of the Ming Expeditions That Crossed the Indian Ocean
616(1)
Thinking Historically: Means and Motives for Overseas Expansion: Europe and China Compared
617(1)
Fending Off the West: Japan's Reunification and the First Challenge
618(4)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: An Age of Eurasian Proto-Globalization
622(1)
Further Readings
622(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
623(5)
Part V The Dawn Of The Industrial Age, 1750-1900 628(133)
Chapter 28 The Emergence of Industrial Society in the West, 1750-1900
635(26)
Context for Revolution
636(2)
The Age of Revolution
638(5)
Visualizing the Past: The French Revolution in Cartoons
640(3)
The Industrial Revolution: First Phases
643(2)
The Consolidation of the Industrial Order, 1850-1900
645(5)
Document: Protesting the Industrial Revolution
647(3)
Cultural Transformations
650(3)
Western Settler Societies
653(4)
Thinking Historically: Two Revolutions: Industrial and Atlantic
654(3)
Diplomatic Tensions and World War I
657(2)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: Industrial Europe and the World
659(1)
Further Readings
659(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
660(1)
Chapter 29 Industrialization and Imperialism: The Making of the European Global Order
661(25)
The Shift to Land Empires in Asia
664(7)
Thinking Historically: Western Education and the Rise of an African and Asian Middle Class
669(2)
Industrial Rivalries and the Partition of the World, 1870-1914
671(4)
Patterns of Dominance: Continuity and Change
675(9)
Document: Contrary Images: The Colonizer versus the Colonized on the "Civilizing Mission"
676(3)
Visualizing The Past: Capitalism and Colonialism
679(5)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: A European-Dominated Early Phase of Globalization
684(1)
Further Readings
684(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
685(1)
Chapter 30 The Consolidation of Latin America, 1810-1920
686(27)
From Colonies to Nations
688(4)
New Nations Confront Old and New Problems
692(2)
Latin American Economies and World Markets, 1820-1870
694(8)
Document: Confronting the Hispanic Heritage: From Independence to Consolidation
699(3)
Societies in Search of Themselves
702(9)
Thinking Historically: Explaining Underdevelopment
705(3)
Visualizing the Past: Images of the Spanish-American War
708(3)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: New Latin American Nations and the World
711(1)
Further Readings
711(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
712(1)
Chapter 31 Civilizations in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and Qing China
713(23)
From Empire to Nation: Ottoman Retreat and the Birth of Turkey
715(3)
Western Intrusions and the Crisis in the Arab Islamic Heartlands
718(6)
Thinking Historically: Western Global Dominance and the Dilemmas It Posed for the Peoples and Societies of Africa and Asia
719(5)
The Rise and Fall of the Qing Dynasty
724(10)
Visualizing The Past: Mapping the Decline of Two Great Empires
725(8)
Document: Transforming Imperial China into a Nation
733(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Muslim and Chinese Retreat and a Shifting Global Balance
734(1)
Further Readings
734(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
735(1)
Chapter 32 Russia and Japan: Industrialization Outside the West
736(25)
Russia's Reforms and Industrial Advance
738(6)
Document: Conditions for Factory Workers in Russia's Industrialization
742(2)
Protest and Revolution in Russia
744(3)
Japan: Transformation without Revolution
747(9)
Thinking Historically: The Separate Paths of Japan and China
749(3)
Visualizing the Past: Two Faces of Western Influence
752(3)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Russia and Japan in the World
755(1)
Further Readings
756(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
756(5)
Part VI The Newest Stage Of World History: 1900-Present 761
Chapter 33 Descent into the Abyss: World War I and the Crisis of the European Global Order
769(28)
The Coming of the Great War
772(2)
A World at War
774(7)
Visualizing the Past: Trench Warfare
776(5)
Failed Peace and Global Turmoil
781(1)
The Nationalist Assault on the European Colonial Order
782(13)
Document: Lessons for the Colonized from the Slaughter in the Trenches
783(8)
Thinking Historically: Women in Asian and African Nationalist Movements
791(4)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: World War and Global Upheavals
795(1)
Further Readings
795(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
796(1)
Chapter 34 The World between the Wars: Revolutions, Depression, and Authoritarian Response
797(36)
The Roaring Twenties
798(6)
Revolution: The First Waves
804(12)
Thinking Historically: A Century of Revolutions
809(7)
The Global Great Depression
816(3)
The Nazi Response
819(2)
Authoritarianism and New Militarism in Key Regions
821(9)
Visualizing the Past: Guernica and the Images of War
822(5)
Document: Socialist Realism
827(3)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Economic Depression, Authoritarian Response, and Democratic Retreat
830(1)
Further Readings
830(2)
Critical Thinking Questions
832(1)
Chapter 35 A Second Global Conflict and the End of the European World Order
833(26)
Old and New Causes of a Second World War
835(3)
Thinking Historically: Total War, Global Devastation
836(2)
Unchecked Aggression and the Coming of War in Europe and the Pacific
838(2)
The Conduct of a Second Global War
840(8)
Document: Japan's Defeat in a Global War
846(2)
War's End and the Emergence of the Superpower Standoff in the Cold War
848(1)
Nationalism and Decolonization in South and Southeast Asia and Africa
849(8)
Visualizing the Past: National Leaders for a New Global Order
852(5)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Persisting Trends in a World Transformed by War
857(1)
Further Readings
857(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
858(1)
Chapter 36 Western Society and Eastern Europe in the Decades of the Cold War
859(30)
After World War II: A New International Setting for the West
861(3)
The Resurgence of Western Europe
864(6)
Thinking Historically: The United States and Western Europe: Convergence and Complexity
868(2)
Cold War Allies: The United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand
870(2)
Culture and Society in the West
872(5)
Visualizing The Past: Women at Work in France and the United States
874(3)
Eastern Europe after World War II: A Soviet Empire
877(3)
Soviet Culture: Promoting New Beliefs and Institutions
880(7)
Document: A Cold War Speech
885(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: The Cold War and the World
887(1)
Further Readings
887(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
888(1)
Chapter 37 Latin America: Revolution and Reaction into the 21st Century
889(22)
Latin America after World War II
891(2)
Radical Options in the 1950's
893(6)
Visualizing the Past: Murals and Posters: Art and Revolution
895(3)
Document: The People Speak
898(1)
The Search for Reform and the Military Option
899(6)
Thinking Historically: Human Rights in the 20th Century
902(3)
Societies in Search of Change
905(5)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Struggling Toward the Future in a Global Economy
909(1)
Further Readings
910(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
910(1)
Chapter 38 Africa, the Middle East, and Asia in the Era of Independence
911(26)
The Challenges of Independence
913(11)
Document: Cultural Creativity in the Emerging Nations: Some Literary Samples
920(2)
Thinking Historically: Artificial Nations and the Rising Tide of Communal Strife
922(2)
Postcolonial Options for Achieving Economic Growth and Social Justice
924(6)
Delayed Revolutions: Religious Revivalism and Liberation Movements in Settler Societies
930(6)
Visualizing The Past: Globalization and Postcolonial Societies
934(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Postcolonial Nations in the Cold War World Order
935(1)
Further Readings
936(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
936(1)
Chapter 39 Rebirth and Revolution: Nation-Building in East Asia and the Pacific Rim
937(28)
East Asia in the Postwar Settlements
939(6)
The Pacific Rim: More Japans?
945(5)
Visualizing the Past: Pacific Rim Growth
947(2)
Thinking Historically: The Pacific Rim as a U.S. Policy Issue
949(1)
Mao's China: Vanguard of World Revolution
950(7)
Document: Women in the Revolutionary Struggles for Social Justice
955(2)
Colonialism and Revolution in Vietnam
957(6)
Global Connections And Critical Themes: East Asia and the Pacific Rim in the Contemporary World
962(1)
Further Readings
963(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
964(1)
Chapter 40 Power, Politics, and Conflict in World History, 1990-2014
965(21)
The End of the Cold War
966(8)
Visualizing the Past: Symbolism in the Breakdown of the Soviet Bloc
973(1)
The Spread of Democracy
974(2)
Document: Democratic Protest and Repression in China
975(1)
The Great Powers and New Disputes
976(3)
The United States as Sole Superpower
979(5)
Thinking Historically: Terrorism, Then and Now
981(2)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: New Global Standards, New Divisions
983(1)
Further Readings
984(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
985(1)
Chapter 41 Globalization and Resistance
986
Global Industrialization
987(3)
Globalization: Causes and Processes
990(7)
Document: Protests against Globalization
995(2)
The Global Environment
997(3)
Resistance and Alternatives
1000(4)
Thinking Historically: How Much Historical Change?
1001(2)
Visualizing the Past: Two Faces of Globalization
1003(1)
Toward the Future
1004(1)
Global Connections and Critical Themes: Civilizations and Global Forces
1005(1)
Further Readings
1005(1)
Critical Thinking Questions
1006
Glossary G-1
Credits C-1
Index I-1
Peter N. Stearns is provost and professor of history at George Mason University. He received his Ph.D.

from Harvard University. Before moving to George Mason University, he taught at Rutgers University,

the University of Chicago, and Carnegie Mellon, where he won the Robert Doherty Educational

Leadership Award and the Elliott Dunlap Smith Teaching Award. He has taught world history for more than 15 years. He currently serves as chair of the Advanced Placement World History Committee and also founded and is the editor of the Journal of Social History. In addition to textbooks and readers, he has written studies of gender and consumerism in a world history context. Other books address modern social and cultural history and include studies on gender, old age, work, dieting, and emotion. His most recent book in this area is American Fear: Causes and Consequences of High Anxiety.

 

Michael Adas is the Abraham Voorhees Professor of History and a board of governors chair at Rutgers

University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Over the past couple of decades his teaching has focused on

patterns and processes of global and comparative history. His courses on race and empire in the early

modern and industrial eras and on world history in the 20th century have earned him a number of teaching prizes. In addition to texts on world history, Adas has written mainly on the comparative history of colonialism and its impact on the peoples and societies of Asia and Africa. His books include Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance, which won the Dexter Prize, and the recently published Dominance by Design: Technological Imperatives and Americas Civilizing Mission. He is currently writing a global history of the First World War.

 

Stuart B. Schwartz was born and educated in Springfield, Massachusetts, and then attended Middlebury

College and the Universidad Autonoma de Mexico. He has an M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University

in Latin American history. He taught for many years at the University of Minnesota and joined the faculty at Yale University in 1996. He has also taught in Brazil, Puerto Rico, Spain, France, and Portugal. He is a specialist on the history of colonial Latin America, especially Brazil, and is the author of numerous books, notably Sugar Plantations in the Formation of Brazilian Society (1985), which won the Bolton Prize for the best book in Latin American History. He is also the author of Slaves, Peasants, and Rebels (1992), Early

Latin America(1983), and Victors and Vanquished (1999). He has held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton). For his work on Brazil he was recently decorated by the Brazilian government. He continues to read widely in the history and anthropology of Latin America, Africa, and early modern Europe.

 

Marc Jason Gilbert is the holder of an NEH supported Chair in World History at Hawaii Pacific

University in Honolulu, Hawaii. He is a former University System of Georgia Distinguished Professor of

Teaching and Learning. He received his Ph.D in history in 1978 at UCLA, where he built his own program

in world history out of a mixture of more traditional fields. He is a founding member of the World History Association and one of its initial elected officers. More than a decade ago, he founded and served as executive director of the Southeastern World History Association. He has codirected two Summer Institutes for Teaching Advanced Placement World History. He has attempted to bring a global dimension to the study of south and southeast Asian history in numerous articles and books, such as Why the North Won the Vietnam War.