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Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A History of the World: From the Beginnings of Humankind to the Present Concise High School Edition [Kietas viršelis]

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(San Diego State University), With (University of California - Berkeley), (City College and the Graduate Center, CUNY), (Princeton University)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 984 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 262x213x36 mm, weight: 1802 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Nov-2015
  • Leidėjas: WW Norton & Co
  • ISBN-10: 0393937690
  • ISBN-13: 9780393937695
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 984 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 262x213x36 mm, weight: 1802 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Nov-2015
  • Leidėjas: WW Norton & Co
  • ISBN-10: 0393937690
  • ISBN-13: 9780393937695
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
A Concise Edition with clear connections, comparisons, and sources in every chapter.

The most globally integrated book in its field, Worlds Together, Worlds Apart is now available in a Concise Edition. Drawing even clearer connections and comparisons across time and place, this re-imagined text and companion adaptive learning program provide a wealth of new tools that will enhance reading comprehension and develop fundamental critical thinking and history skills.

Daugiau informacijos

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Current Trends in World History xxii
Analyzing Global Developments xxiii
Global Themes and Sources xxiv
Maps xxviii
Preface xxxi
Highlights of the Concise Edition
xxxi
Our Major Themes
xxxii
Overview of Volume One
xxxii
Overview of Volume Two
xxxiv
Media Ancillaries
xxxvi
For Students
xxxvi
For Instructors
xxxvi
Acknowledgments
xxxvii
About the Authors xxxix
The Geography of the Ancient and Modern Worlds xlii
Chapter 1 Becoming Human 3(42)
Creation Narratives
4(1)
Hominids to Modern Humans
4(15)
Evolutionary Findings and Research Methods
5(1)
Early Hominids, Adaptation, and Climate Change
5(6)
Tool-Use by Homo Habilis
11(1)
Migrations of Homo Erectus
12(2)
Homo Sapiens: The First Modern Humans
14(5)
The Life of Early Homo Sapiens
19(3)
Language
19(1)
Hunting and Gathering
20(1)
Paintings, Sculpture, and Music
21(1)
Agricultural Revolution: Food Production and Social Change
22(13)
The Beginnings of Settled Agriculture and Pastoralism
22(5)
Agricultural Innovation: Afro-Eurasia and the Americas
27(4)
Borrowing Agricultural Ideas: Europe
31(2)
Revolutions in Social Organization
33(2)
Conclusion
35(3)
Global Themes and Sources
38(7)
Competing Perspectives: Creation Narratives
38(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Prehistoric Art
42(3)
Chapter 2 Rivers, Cities, And First States, 3500-2000 BCE 45(38)
Settlement and Pastoralism
46(4)
Early Cities along River Basins
46(1)
Pastoral Nomadic Communities
47(3)
Between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers: Mesopotamia
50(6)
Tapping the Waters
51(1)
Crossroads of Southwest Asia
51(1)
The World's First Cities
51(1)
Gods and Temples
52(1)
Royal Power, Families, and Social Hierarchy
53(1)
First Writing and Early Texts
54(1)
Spreading Cities and First Territorial States
55(1)
"The Gift of the Nile": Egypt
56(7)
The Nile River and Its Floodwaters
56(2)
The Egyptian State and Dynasties
58(1)
Pharaohs, Pyramids, and Cosmic Order
58(1)
Gods, Priesthood, and Magical Power
59(2)
Writing and Scribes
61(2)
Prosperity and the Demise of Old Kingdom Egypt
63(1)
The Indus River Valley: A Parallel Culture
63(5)
Harappan City Life and Writing
65(2)
Trade
67(1)
The Yellow and Yangzi River Basins: East Asia
68(1)
From Yangshao to Longshan Culture
68(3)
Life Outside the River Basins
71(4)
Aegean Worlds
71(1)
Anatolia
72(1)
Europe: The Western Frontier
72(2)
The Americas
74(1)
Sub-Saharan Africa
75(1)
Conclusion
75(3)
Global Themes and Sources
78(5)
Competing Perspectives: Early Writing
78(3)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Burials and Long-Distance Trade
81(2)
Chapter 3 Nomads, Territorial States, And Microsocieties, 2000-1200 BCE 83(38)
Nomadic Movement and the Emergence of Territorial States
84(4)
The Territorial State in Egypt
88(5)
Religion and Trade in Middle Kingdom Egypt (2055-1650 BCE)
90(1)
Migrations and Expanding Frontiers in New Kingdom Egypt (1550-1069 BCE)
91(2)
Territorial States in Southwest Asia
93(4)
Mesopotamian Kingship
94(2)
The Old and New Hittite Kingdoms (1800-1200 BCE)
96(1)
A Community of Major Powers (1400-1200 BCE)
96(1)
Nomads and the Indus River Valley
97(2)
The Shang Territorial State in East Asia (1600-1045 BCE)
99(6)
State Formation
99(4)
Agriculture and Tribute
103(1)
Society and Ritual Practice
103(1)
Shang Writing
104(1)
Microsocieties in the South Pacific and in the Aegean
105(6)
The South Pacific (2500 BCE-400 CE)
)105
The Aegean World (2000-1200 BCE)
107(4)
Conclusion
111(3)
Global Themes and Sources
114(7)
Competing Perspectives: Law Codes of Territorial States and Pastoral Nomads
114(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Bronze-Working
118(3)
Chapter 4 First Empires And Common Cultures In Afro-Eurasia, 1250-325 BCE 121(38)
Forces of Upheaval and the Rise of Early Empires
122(6)
Climate Change
122(1)
Migrations
122(1)
New Technologies
123(3)
Administrative Innovations
126(2)
Empire in Southwest Asia: The Neo-Assyrian and Persian Empires
128(7)
The Neo-Assyrian Empire (911-612 BCE)
129(1)
The Persian Empire (ca. 560-331 BCE)
130(5)
Imperial Fringes in Western Afro-Eurasia
135(4)
Sea Peoples
136(1)
The Greeks
136(2)
The Phoenicians
138(1)
The Israelites
138(1)
Foundations of Vedic Culture in South Asia (1500-600 BCE)
139(4)
Vedic Culture Settles Down
140(1)
Social Distinctions: Clans and Varna
140(2)
Unity through the Vedas and Upanishads
142(1)
The Early Zhou Empire in East Asia (1045- )
143(5)
Dynastic Institutions and Control of the Land
144(2)
"Mandate of Heaven"
146(1)
Social and Economic Controls
147(1)
Limits and Decline of Zhou Power
147(1)
Conclusion
148(4)
Global Themes and Sources
152(7)
Competing Perspectives: Consolidating Early Empires
152(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Tributes
156(3)
Chapter 5 Worlds Turned Inside Out, 1000-350 BCE 159(38)
An "Axial Age"
162(1)
Eastern Zhou China
162(5)
Innovations in Thought
164(1)
Innovations in State Administration
165(1)
Innovations in Warfare
165(1)
Economic, Social, and Cultural Changes
166(1)
The New Worlds of South Asia
167(5)
New Cities and a Changing Economy
169(1)
Brahmans, Their Challengers, and New Beliefs
170(2)
The Mediterranean World
172(8)
Formation of New City-States
173(2)
Economic Innovations
175(1)
New Ideas
176(4)
Common Cultures in the Americas and Sub-Saharan Africa
180(7)
The Chavin in the Andes
180(1)
The Olmecs in Mesoamerica
181(3)
Common Cultures in Sub-Saharan Africa
184(3)
Conclusion
187(3)
Global Themes and Sources
190(7)
Competing Perspectives: Axial Age Ideas
190(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Elsewhere in the Axial Age
194(3)
Chapter 6 Shrinking The Afro-Eurasian World, 350-100 BCE 197(36)
Alexander and the Emergence of a Hellenistic World
198(8)
Alexander's Successors and the Territorial Kingdoms
199(3)
Hellenistic Culture
202(2)
Plantation Slavery and Money-Based Economies
204(2)
Converging Influences in Central and South Asia
206(6)
Chandragupta and the Mauryan Empire
207(3)
Greek Influences in Central Asia
210(2)
The Transformation of Buddhism
212(2)
India as a Spiritual Crossroads
212(1)
The New Buddhism: The Mahayana School
213(1)
New Images of Buddha in Literature and Art
213(1)
The Formation of the Silk Roads
214(10)
Nomads and Trade Routes
215(1)
Caravan Cities and the Incense Trade
215(4)
China and the Silk Economy
219(2)
The Spread of Buddhism along the Trade Routes
221(1)
Commerce on the Red Sea and Indian Ocean
221(3)
Conclusion
224(4)
Global Themes and Sources
228(5)
Competing Perspectives: Spread of Ideas
228(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Coinage
230(3)
Chapter 7 Han Dynasty China And Imperial Rome, 300 BCE-300 CE 233(34)
Globalizing Empires: The Han Dynasty and Imperial Rome
234(1)
The Han Dynasty (206 BCE-220 CE)
235(10)
The Qin Dynasty (221-207 BCE): A Crucial Forerunner
235(3)
Beginnings of the Western Han Dynasty
238(1)
Han Power and Administration
238(1)
Economy and the New Social Order
239(3)
Military Expansion and the Silk Roads
242(1)
Social Upheaval and Natural Disaster
243(1)
The Eastern Han Dynasty
244(1)
The Roman Empire
245(12)
Foundations of the Roman Empire
245(5)
Emperors, Authoritarian Rule, and Administration
250(2)
Town and City Life
252(1)
Social and Gender Relations
253(1)
Economy and New Scales of Production
253(1)
The Rise of Christianity
254(1)
The Limits of Empire
255(2)
Conclusion
257(5)
Global Themes and Sources
262(5)
Competing Perspectives: Maintaining Political and Domestic Order
262(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Images of Power
264(3)
Chapter 8 The Rise Of Universal Religions, 300-600 CE 267(36)
Religious Change and Empire in Western Afro-Eurasia
268(9)
The Appeal of Christianity
268(6)
The "Fall" of Rome in the West
274(2)
Continuity of Rome in the East: Byzantium
276(1)
The Silk Roads
277(5)
Sasanian Persia
279(1)
The Sogdians as Lords of the Silk Roads
279(1)
Buddhism on the Silk Roads
280(2)
Political and Religious Change in South Asia
282(3)
The Hindu Transformation
282(2)
The Transformation of the Buddha
284(1)
Culture and Ideology Instead of an Empire
284(1)
Political and Religious Change in East Asia
285(3)
The Wei Dynasty in Northern China
286(1)
Changing Daoist Traditions
286(1)
Buddhism in China
287(1)
Faith and Cultures in the Worlds Apart
288(7)
Bantus of Sub-Saharan Africa
288(3)
Mesoamericans
291(4)
Conclusion
295(3)
Global Themes and Sources
298(5)
Competing Perspectives: Pilgrimage and Universalizing Religions
298(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Representations of Holiness
300(3)
Chapter 9 New Empires And Common Cultures, 600-1000 CE 303(38)
The Origins and Spread of Islam
304(11)
A Vision, a Text, a New Community
305(1)
Muhammad's Successors and the Expanding Dar Al-Islam
305(3)
The Abbasid Revolution
308(2)
The Blossoming of Abbasid Culture
310(1)
Islam in a Wider World
310(2)
Opposition within Islam: Shiism and the Fatimids
312(3)
The Tang State
315(12)
Territorial Expansion under the Tang Dynasty
315(1)
Organizing the Tang Empire
316(3)
An Economic Revolution
319(2)
Accommodating World Religions
321(3)
Tang Interactions with Korea and Japan
324(3)
The Fall of Tang China
327(1)
The Emergence of European Christendom
327(6)
Charlemagne's Fledgling Empire
327(2)
Christianity in Western Europe
329(1)
Vikings and Christendom
330(2)
Greek Orthodox Christianity
332(1)
Conclusion
333(3)
Global Themes and Sources
336(5)
Competing Perspectives: Women, Faith, and Empire
336(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Transmission of Religious Knowledge
338(3)
Chapter 10 Becoming "The World," 1000-1300 CE 341(42)
Development of Maritime Trade
342(3)
The Islamic World in a Time of Political Fragmentation
345(3)
Political Divisions
345(2)
The Spread of Sufism
347(1)
What Was Islam?
347(1)
India as a Cultural Mosaic
348(4)
What Was India?
351(1)
Song China: Insiders versus Outsiders
352(5)
Economic and Political Developments
352(1)
China's Neighbors: Nomads, Japan, and Southeast Asia
353(3)
What Was China?
356(1)
Christian Europe
357(4)
Localization of Power
357(2)
What Was Christian Europe?
359(1)
Relations with the Islamic World
359(2)
Worlds Coming Together: Sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas
361(7)
Sub-Saharan Africa Comes Together
362(2)
The Americas
364(4)
The Mongol Transformation of Afro-Eurasia
368(5)
Who Were the Mongols?
368(1)
Conquest and Empire
368(5)
Conclusion
373(3)
Global Themes and Sources
376(7)
Competing Perspectives: "World" Travelers
376(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Imagining the World
380(3)
Chapter 11 Crises And Recovery In Afro-Eurasia 1300-1500 383(36)
Collapse and Consolidation
384(7)
The Black Death
384(5)
Rebuilding States
389(2)
The Islamic Heartland
391(5)
The Ottoman Empire
392(4)
Western Christendom
396(8)
The Catholic Church, State Building, and Economic Recovery
396(4)
Political Consolidation and Trade in the Iberian Peninsula
400(2)
The Renaissance
402(2)
Ming China
404(6)
Restoring Order
404(1)
Centralization under the Ming
405(2)
Ming Ruler-ship
407(1)
Trade and Exploration under the Ming
408(2)
Conclusion
410(4)
Global Themes and Sources
414(5)
Competing Perspectives: Cultural Responses to the Black Death
414(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Marking Boundaries, Inspiring Loyalty
416(3)
Chapter 12 Contact, Commerce, And Colonization, 1450-1600 419(34)
The Old Trade and the New
420(3)
The Revival of Asian Economies
420(2)
European Exploration and Expansion
422(1)
The Atlantic World
423(13)
First Encounters
423(3)
First Conquests
426(6)
The Iberian Empires in the Americas
432(4)
The Transformation of Europe
436(4)
The Reformation
436(3)
Religious Warfare in Europe
439(1)
Prosperity in Asia
440(5)
Mughal India and Commerce
440(2)
Prosperity in Ming China
442(1)
Asian Relations with Europe
442(3)
Conclusion
445(3)
Global Themes and Sources
448(5)
Competing Perspectives: Cultural Contact in the Age of Exploration
448(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Conflict and Consent
450(3)
Chapter 13 Worlds Entangled, 1600-1750 453(44)
Economic and Political Effects of Global Commerce
454(4)
Extracting Wealth: Mercantilism
455(3)
Exchanges and Expansions in North America
458(3)
Expanding Mainland Colonies
458(3)
The Plantation Complex in the Caribbean
461(1)
The Slave Trade and Africa
462(7)
Capturing and Shipping Slaves
462(5)
Slavery's Gender Imbalance
467(1)
Africa's New Slave-Supplying States
467(2)
Asia in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
469(10)
The Dutch in Southeast Asia
469(1)
Transformations in the Islamic Heartland
470(3)
From Ming to Qing in China
473(4)
Tokugawa Japan
477(2)
Transformations in Europe
479(7)
Expansion and Dynastic Change in Russia
479(3)
Economic and Political Fluctuations in Central and Western Europe
482(4)
Conclusion
486(4)
Global Themes and Sources
490(7)
Competing Perspectives: Slavery in the Atlantic World
490(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: A World of Goods
494(3)
Chapter 14 Cultures Of Splendor And Power, 1500-1780 497(34)
Trade and Culture
498(1)
Culture in the Islamic World
499(4)
The Ottoman Cultural Synthesis
499(2)
Safavid Culture, Shiite State
501(1)
Power and Culture under the Mughals
501(2)
Culture and Politics in East Asia
503(6)
China: The Challenge of Expansion and Diversity
503(4)
Cultural Identity and Tokugawa Japan
507(2)
African Cultural Flourishing
509(1)
The Asante, Oyo, and Benin Cultural Traditions
509(1)
The Enlightenment in Europe
510(7)
The New Science
511(1)
Enlightenment Thinkers
512(5)
Creating Hybrid Cultures in the Americas
517(2)
Spiritual Encounters
517(1)
Intermarriage and Cultural Mixing
518(1)
Forming American Identities
518(1)
The Influence of European Culture in Oceania
519(3)
The Scientific Voyages of Captain Cook
520(2)
Ecological and Cultural Effects
522(1)
Conclusion
522(4)
Global Themes and Sources
526(5)
Competing Perspectives: What is Enlightenment?
526(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Envisioning the World
528(3)
Chapter 15 Reordering The World, 1750-1850 531(40)
Revolutionary Transformations and New Languages of Freedom
532(1)
Political Reorderings
533(12)
The North American War of Independence, 1776-1783
533(4)
The French Revolution, 1789-1799
537(2)
The Napoleonic Era , 1799-1815
539(2)
Revolution in Saint- Domingue (Haiti)
541(1)
Revolutions in Spanish and Portuguese America
541(4)
Change and Trade in Africa
545(1)
Abolition of the Slave Trade
545(1)
New Trade with Africa
546(1)
Economic Reordering
546(7)
An Industrious Revolution
547(1)
The Industrial Revolution
548(3)
Working and Living
551(2)
Persistence and Change in Afro-Eurasia
553(7)
Revamping the Russian Monarchy
553(1)
Reforming Egypt and the Ottoman Empire
553(2)
Colonial Reordering in India
555(2)
Persistence of the Qing Empire
557(3)
Conclusion
560(4)
Global Themes and Sources
564(7)
Competing Perspectives: Revolution for Whom?
564(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Framing the Subject
568(3)
Chapter 16 Alternative Visions Of The Nineteenth Century 571(36)
Reactions to Social and Political Change
572(1)
Prophecy and Revitalization in the Islamic World and Africa
572(7)
Islamic Revitalization
573(4)
Charismatic Military Men in Non-Islamic Africa
577(2)
Prophecy and Rebellion in China
579(2)
The Dream of Hong Xiuquan
579(1)
The Rebellion
579(2)
Socialists and Radicals in Europe
581(5)
Restoration and Resistance
582(1)
Radical Visions
582(4)
Insurgencies against Colonizing and Centralizing States
586(11)
Native American Prophets
587(3)
The Caste War of the Yucatan
590(2)
The Rebellion of 1857 in India
592(5)
Conclusion
597(3)
Global Themes and Sources
600(7)
Competing Perspectives: Envisioning Alternatives to Nineteenth-Century Capitalism
600(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: The Gender of Nations
604(3)
Chapter 17 Nations And Empires, 1850-1914 607(38)
Consolidating Nations and Constructing Empires
608(1)
Building Nationalism
608(1)
Expanding the Empires
608(1)
Expansion and Nation Building in the Americas
609(5)
The United States
609(3)
Canada
612(1)
Latin America
612(2)
Consolidation of Nation-States in Europe
614(3)
Defining "The Nation"
614(1)
Unification in Germany and Italy
615(1)
Nation Building and Ethnic Conflict in the Austro-Hungarian Empire
616(1)
Domestic Discontents in France and Britain
616(1)
Industry, Science, and Technology
617(2)
New Technologies, Materials, and Business Practices
617(1)
Integration of the World Economy
618(1)
Global Expansionism and an Age of Imperialism
619(10)
India and the Imperial Model
620(1)
Colonizing Africa
621(5)
The American Empire
626(2)
Imperialism and Culture
628(1)
Pressures of Expansion in Japan, Russia, and China
629(6)
Japan's Transformation and Expansion
629(3)
Russian Transformation and Expansion
632(2)
China under Pressure
634(1)
Conclusion
635(3)
Global Themes and Sources
638(7)
Competing Perspectives: Evolution and Imperialism
638(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Occidentalism: Representing Western Influence
642(3)
Chapter 18 An Unsettled World, 1890-1914 645(38)
Progress, Upheaval, and Movement
646(5)
Peoples in Motion
646(5)
Discontent with Imperialism
651(5)
Unrest in Africa
651(2)
The Boxer Uprising in China
653(3)
Worldwide Insecurities
656(5)
Financial, Industrial, and Technological Change
656(2)
The "Woman Question"
658(1)
Class Conflict
659(2)
Cultural Modernism
661(6)
Popular Culture Comes of Age
663(1)
Modernism in European Culture
664(2)
Cultural Modernism in China
666(1)
Rethinking Race and Reimagining Nations
667(5)
Nation and Race in North America and Europe
667(1)
Race-Mixing and the Problem of Nationhood in Latin America
668(1)
Sun Yat-sen and the Making of a Chinese Nation
669(1)
Nationalism and Invented Traditions in India
670(1)
The Pan Movements
671(1)
Conclusion
672(4)
Global Themes and Sources
676(7)
Competing Perspectives: Global Feminisms
676(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Global Modernism
680(3)
Chapter 19 Of Masses And Visions Of The Modern, 1910-1939 683(38)
The Quest for the Modern
684(1)
The Great War
684(8)
The Fighting
685(7)
The Peace Settlement and the Impact of the War
692(1)
Mass Society: Culture, Production, and Consumption
692(4)
Mass Culture
692(2)
Mass Production and Mass Consumption
694(2)
Mass Politics: Competing Visions for Building Modern States
696(15)
Liberal Democracy under Pressure
696(2)
Authoritarianism and Mass Mobilization
698(6)
The Hybrid Regimes in Latin America
704(1)
Anticolonial Visions of Modern Life
705(6)
Conclusion
711(3)
Global Themes and Sources
714(7)
Competing Perspectives: Technology, Religion, and the Meaning of Progress
714(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Men, Machines, and Mass Production
718(3)
Chapter 20 The Three-World Order, 1940-1975 721(42)
World War II and Its Aftermath
722(5)
The War in Europe
722(3)
The Pacific War
725(2)
The Beginning of the Cold War
727(7)
Rebuilding Europe
727(5)
War in The Nuclear Age: The Korean War
732(2)
Decolonization
734(7)
The Chinese Revolution
734(1)
Negotiated Independence in India and Africa
734(4)
Violent and Incomplete Decolonizations
738(3)
Three Worlds
741(8)
The First World
741(2)
The Second World
743(2)
The Third World
745(4)
Tensions Within the Three Worlds
749(3)
Tensions in the First World
749(1)
Tensions in World Communism
750(1)
Tensions in the Third World
751(1)
Conclusion
752(4)
Global Themes and Sources
756(7)
Competing Perspectives: Independence and Nation Building
756(4)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: War and Propaganda
760(3)
Chapter 21 Globalization, 1970-2000 763(38)
Removing Obstacles to Globalization
764(5)
Ending the Cold War
764(2)
Africa and the End of White Rule
766(3)
Unleashing Globalization
769(10)
Finance and Trade
769(2)
Migration
771(4)
Global Culture
775(3)
Communications
778(1)
Characteristics of the New Global Order
779(9)
The Demography of Globalization
779(9)
Citizenship in the Global World
788(5)
Supranational Organizations
788(1)
Violence
789(1)
Religious Foundations of Politics
790(2)
Acceptance of and Resistance to Democracy
792(1)
Conclusion
793(3)
Global Themes and Sources
796(5)
Competing Perspectives: The Power of Grassroots Democracy
796(2)
Interpreting Visual Evidence: Chimerica
798(3)
Epilogue 2001-The Present 801
Global Challenges
801(4)
War on Terror
802(1)
Islamic Militancy
803(1)
Crisis and Inequality in the Global Economy
803(2)
Global Warming
805(1)
The United States, the European Union, and Japan
805(2)
A Changing Western Europe
805(1)
Demographic Issues
805(1)
Anti-Immigrant Sentiments
806(1)
China, India, and Russia
807(7)
Economic Globalization and Political Effects
807(6)
Internal Divisions, External Rivalries
813(1)
The Middle East, Africa, and Latin America
814
The Arab Spring
814(6)
Poverty, Disease, Genocide
820(1)
Deepening Inequalities
821
Further Readings R-1
Glossary G-1
Credits C-1
Index I-1
Elizabeth Pollard, lead author of Volume 1 Full and Concise (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is Distinguished Professor for Teaching Excellence at San Diego State University, where she has been teaching courses in Roman History, World History, and witchcraft studies since 2002. Pollard is founding Co-Director of the Center for Comics Studies and co-Champion of Comics and Social Justice for the SDSU Presidents Big Ideas Initiative (2020present). Her research investigates women accused of witchcraft in the Roman world and explores the exchange of goods and ideas between the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean in the early centuries of the Common Era. Pollard is currently working on two comics-related projects: an analysis of comics about ancient Rome over the last century and a graphic history exploring the influence of classical understandings of witchcraft on their representations in modern comics. She has also published on various pedagogical and digital history topics, including writing about witchcraft on wikipedia, tweeting on the backchannel of the large lecture, and digital humanities approaches to visualizing Roman History. Pollard is also deeply immersed in assessment; she has served as both the assessment coordinator for the Arts and Science Division at San Diego State University and has served as consultant to the College Board. She is also the co-editor of Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A Companion Reader 4th Edition. Clifford Rosenberg, lead author of Concise Edition Volume 2 (Ph.D., Princeton University) is associate professor of European history at City College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. Professor Rosenberg specializes in the social and political history of modern Europe, especially France, and on the relationship between the continent and its colonial hinterlands. He has published a book on immigration control and the transformation of citizenship in interwar France. His current research concerns the spread of tuberculosis from France to Algeria and back, and efforts to combat it, from 1830 to the present. He is also the co-editor of Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A Companion Reader 4th Edition. Robert Tignor, general editor emeritus (Ph.D., Yale University) is professor emeritus and the Rosengarten Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Princeton University and the three-time chair of the history department. With Gyan Prakash, he introduced Princetons first course in world history thirty years ago. Professor Tignor has taught graduate and undergraduate courses in African history and world history and has written extensively on the history of twentieth-century Egypt, Nigeria, and Kenya. Besides his many research trips to Africa, Professor Tignor has taught at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria and the University of Nairobi in Kenya. Alan Karras, lead media author and author of the Worlds Together, Worlds Apart AP Edition (Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania) is the associate director of International and Area Studies at the University of California at Berkeley and has previously served as chair of the College Boards test development committee for world history and as co-chair for the College Boards commission on AP history course revisions. The author and editor of several books, he has written about the eighteenth-century Atlantic World and, more broadly, global interactions that focus on illicit activities like smuggling and corruption. An advocate of linking the past to the present, he is now working on a history of corruption in empires, focusing on the East India Company.