Frameworks of world history:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Oxford Univ. Press
|
Ausgabe: | Combined volume |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
ISBN: | 9780199987795 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804152199561871360 |
---|---|
adam_text | Contents
Issues
in
Doing
World
History
xix
Images
on the Screen
xx
Preface
xxi
Acknowledgments
xxi
About the Author
xxii
Introduction
xxiii
The Model
xxiv
Networks and Hierarchies
xxiv
Cultural Frames and Screens
xxvi
The Use of Models in History
xxvii
Models: Advantages and Uses
xxviii
Doing History
xxviii
Overview
xxix
Features and additional Resources
xxix
A Note about Dates
xxxi
Using the Model: Key Terms
xxxi
Periodization Terms
xxxii
The Model: General Terms
xxxii
Network Terms
xxxii
Hierarchy Terms
xxxii
Terms Relating to the Intersection of Networks and Hierarchies
xxxii
Cultural Frame and Screen Terms
xxxii
Color Code
xxxiii
part i. Formations: To
600
ВСЕ
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chapter one
О
Early Humans and the Foundations of Human History: To
8000
ВСЕ
4
Introduction
5
Big History
5
FRAMING Early Humans and the Foundations of Human History: To
8000
ВСЕ
6
Deep History: Human Evolution, Biology, and Culture
9
Early Hominids
9
Homo erectus
10
Homo sapiens
13
Consequences of the Cognitive-Linguistic Revolution
14
Note: All volumes include the Introduction. Volume
L
ends with Chapter
14;
Volume
2
begins with
Frameworks of World History to
1500:
A Summary, followed by Chapter
14.
vi
Contents
Issues
in Doing World History: What Is Natural ?
18
The Model: A First Look
19
Demographics
19
Networks
22
Hierarchies
24
The Intersection of Networks and Hierarchies
26
Cultural Frames and Screens
27
The Late Hunter-Gatherer Era
29
Images on the Screen: Modern Minds, Modem Art
30
Hunting
ani
Gathering Societies
31
Settlement and Its Consequences
32
Conclusion
34
chapter two
О
Patterns and Parameters: Development of the Agrarian
World since
10,000
ВСЕ
36
Introduction
37
The Agricultural Revolution
37
FRAMING Patterns and Parameters: Development of the Agrarian
World since
10,000
ВСЕ
38
Preconditions and Elements
40
Invention and Diffusion
42
Variations and Hierarchies
45
Agrarian Development
46
Constraints
46
Patterns of Development
52
Differential Development
52
Networks and Complexity
53
Hierarchies and Complexity
54
Issues in Doing World History: Progress, Teleology, and Contingency
55
Images on the Screen: Warriors, Glory, Masculinity
59
Conclusion
60
chapter three
О
The World of Early Complex Societies:
4000
ВСЕ
to
600
ВСЕ
62
Introduction
63
State-Level Complex Societies
63
FRAMING The World of Early Complex Societies:
4000
ВСЕ
to
600
ВСЕ
64
Issues in Doing World History: The Meaning of the Word Civilization
66
The Limits of Warrior
Chiefdoms 66
Agrarian States: The Model
67
The Founding State-Level Societies,
4000
ВСЕ
to
2000
ВСЕ
73
Commonalities
77
Causes for the Emergence of State-Level Societies
79
Challenges
81
Images on the Screen: justifying Hierarchy
82
Nomads and Sedentary Peoples
84
The Indo-Europeans
84
A Long-Term Pattern
86
Contents
vu
State Development, 2200
ВСЕ
to
600
ВСЕ
88
Transitions,
2200
ВСЕ
to
1700
ВСЕ
88
Chariot Kingdoms,
1700
ВСЕ
to
1200
ВСЕ
88
Cities and Small States,
1200
ВСЕ
to
600
ВСЕ
91
Conclusion
94
part
и.
Transformations:
600
ВСЕ
to
700
CE
CHAPTER FOUR The Axial Age:
600
ВСЕ
to
300
ВСЕ
98
Introduction
99
FRAMING The Axial Age:
600
ВСЕ
to
300
ВСЕ
WO
Networks and Hierarchies
102
Intersections
102
Networks Flows
102
The Limits of Isolation
104
An Axial Age Overview
104
New Cultural Frames
105
Images on the Screen: Lasting Images: Axial Age Thinkers on Modern
Cultural Screens
106
Axial Age Worlds
107
India: Care of the Soul
107
China: The Cosmic State 111
Persia: God s
РЫп
116
Greece: The Thrill of the Chase
120
Comparisons
125
Issues In Doing World History: The Impact of Ideas
127
Conclusion
128
chapter five The Age of Empires:
500
ВСЕ
to
400
CE
130
Introduction
131
FRAMING The Ages of Empires:
500
ВСЕ
to
400
CE
132
A World of Empires
134
Southwest Asia
134
Alexander and the Hellenistic Kingdoms
137
India
139
Rome
142
China
144
Beyond the Axial Age Core
148
Empires and Models
149
Types of Empires
150
Networks and Empires
151
Empires as Hierarchies
154
Images on the Screen: Advertising Power
159
Issues in Doing World History: Western Civilization
160
Conclusion
162
viii
j
Contents
chapter six
О
Societies and Peoples: Everyday Life in the Agrarian World
164
Introduction
165
FRAMING Societies and Peoples: Everyday Life in the Agrarian World
166
Varieties of Culture
168
The Great Cultural Divide
168
The Individual and Society
171
Religion: Central to Cultural Frames
173
Life Cycles: Daily Life in the Traditional World
175
Birth
175
Issues In Doing World History: Science, Evidence, and History
177
Childhood
178
Marriage
179
Images on the Screen: Weddings: Advertising Social Relationships
180
Work
183
Play
185
Death
187
Cultural Worlds,
200
to
1000 189
The Worlds
0/200189
Migration and Salvation
192
The Worlds of
1000193
Conclusion
196
chapterseven
О
The Salvation Religions:
200
ВСЕ
to
900
CE
198
Introduction
199
FRAMING The Salvation Religions:
200
ВСЕ
to
900
CE
200
Themes and Patterns
202
Which Religions Count?
202
Contexts
202
Issues in Doing World History: The Connection of Past and Present
203
The Response: Common features
204
Rise and Spread
210
Mahayana Buddhism
210
Devotional Hinduism
214
Christianity
216
Islam
219
Patterns of Expansion
223
Impact and Limits
225
Network Impacts
225
Hierarchy Impacts
226
Images on the Screen: Images of Legitimacy
227
Cultural Frame Impacts
228
Limits
228
Conclusion
228
Contents ix
partiu.
Traditions:
400
to
1100
chapter eight Contested Intersections: Networks, Hierarchies,
and Traditional Worlds to
1500 232
Introduction
233
FRAMING Contested Intersections: Networks, Hierarchies,
and Traditional Worlds to
1500 234
Expanding Networks
236
Population and Production
236
Technologies of Communication
236
Expansion and Hierarchies
237
Trade Circuits
238
Maritime Worlds
239
Maritime Geography
239
Issues in Doing World History: Oceanic and National Histories
244
Patterns of Activity
244
Images on the Screen: Projecting Naval Power
248
Contested Intersections
250
Tensions: Community and Identity
250
Synergies: Networks and Knowledge
254
Management: the Merchant Dilemma
259
Conclusion
260
chapter nine Traditional Worlds I: Inner Circuit Eurasia,
400
to
1100 262
Introduction
263
FRAMING Traditional Worlds I: inner Circuit Eurasia,
400
to
1100 264
Themes and Topics
266
Issues in Doing World History: Slicing Up a Vast Topic
267
The Steppe World
268
Peoples and Migrations: A World in Motion
268
Oasis Cities
270
China: The
Sui
and Tang Dynasties
270
The Tang Dynasty
272
The Song Dynasty
275
North China: The Jin
277
The Indie World
279
The Gupta Empire and Successor States,
220
to
800 279
Islamic Invasions:
800
to
1100 281
The Islamic World
281
Images on the Screen: Textual Authority
282
Foundations to
750 283
The Abassid Revolution and Islamic Hierarchies, post-750
286
The Byzantine World
289
Byzantium on the Defensive,
640
to
900 289
Byzantium,
900
to
1100:
Expansion and Crisis
292
Kievan
Rus
295
Conclusion
296
Contents
chapter ten
О
Traditional Worlds
II:
Outer Circuit Afro-Eurasia,
400
to
í
100 298
Introduction
299
FRAMING Traditional Worlds II: Outer Circuit Afro-Eurasia,
400
to
1100 300
Cores and Margins
302
Outer East Asia: In the Shadow of China
303
Vietnam: Conquered Kingdom
303
Korea: Opponent and Ally
305
Japan: Imitation at a Distance
306
The Indian Ocean World: Networked Worlds Around an Oceanic
Highway
309
Secondary Cores
310
Trade Kleptocracies
313
Networked City-States
314
The Sahel: Between Desert and Forest
314
Images on the Screen: Writing Imitation and Distinction
316
Western Europe
317
Issues In Doing World History: Archival Survival
318
Barbarian Kingdoms,
400
to
750318
The Carolingian Interlude,
750
to
900 321
Kingdoms, Counties, and City-States,
900
to
1100 323
Conclusion
326
chapter eleven
О
Traditional Worlds III: Separate Circuits,
400
to
1500 328
Introduction
329
FRAMING Traditional Worlds III: Separate Circuits,
400
to
1500 330
Isolated Worlds
332
Isolation and Complexity
333
Worlds of Simple Societies
333
From Simplicity to Complexity: Bantu Africa
335
Issues in Doing World History: Romanticizing the Past
336
Geography and Diversity: The Polynesian Pacific
338
Images on the Screen: Images in Stone
342
Complex American Worlds
343
The Mayan World
343
The Aztec World
346
The Incan World
349
North America
352
Isolation Revisited: Networks and Resiliency
353
Conclusion
355
part
iv.
Contradictions:
1100
to
1500
chapter twelve
О
War, States, Religions:
1100
to
1400 358
Introduction
359
FRAMING War, States, Religions:
1100
to
1400 360
Expanding Worlds
362
Contents xi
When Cultural Frames Collide
364
Frames and Cultural Contact
365
Images on the Screen: Projecting the Enemy
367
frames, War, and State
Formation
368
Collisions
368
Suljuk Turks and Byzantium
368
The Crusades
371
Issues in Doing World History: Cultural Frames and Holy War
372
The Iberian
Reconquista
374
The Delhi Sultinate
377
Formations
379
Mamluk Egypt: Slave Soldiers and Sultans
379
Japan: Warriors and Courtiers
381
Western Europe: Knights and Merchants
384
Conclusion
388
chapter thirteen
О
The Crisis of the Mongol Age:
1200
to
1400 390
Introduction
391
FRAMING The Crisis of the Mongol Age:
1200
to
1400 392
The Mongols
394
Temujin and the Mongol Reconstruction
394
The Mongol Conquests
397
Immediate Impacts
398
The Black Death
400
Origin and Epidemiology of a Catastrophe
401
Issues In Doing World History: Evolution and Historical
Evidence
401
Spread
402
Immediate Impacts
403
Images on the Screen: The Plague
405
Reactions and Reconstructions
406
Ming China
407
Islam
410
Russia
412
Central Asia
415
Conclusion
418
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
О
Innovation and Tradition:
1350
to
1550 420
Introduction
421
FRAMING Innovation and Tradition:
1350
to
1550 422
Broken: Post-Plague Western Europe
424
Towar
A Breakdown
424
Framing a Breakdown
427
Post-Plague Networks
433
Issues in Doing World History: European Exceptionalism
434
Maritime Worlds
436
Maritime Technologies
437
xii Contents
Images
on the Screen; Charting the Waters
439
Case Studies in Maritime Organization and Goals
440
Comparisons
446
A Global Network Emerges
449
Conclusion
450
party. Connections:
1500
to
1800
chapter fifteen
О
The Late Agrarian World I: Networks of Exchange,
1500
to
1800 454
Introduction
455
FRAMING The Late Agrarian World I: Networks of Exchange,
1500
to
1800 456
The Connected World of
1500
to
1800 458
Commodities
459
Issues in Doing World History: Late Agrarian versus Early Modern
460
The Columbian Exchange
460
The Silver Circuit
462
Distant Luxuries
463
Local and Bulk Goods
465
Human Commodities: The Slave Trade
466
Production Systems
468
Agriculture
468
Traditional Manufacturing
470
Images on the Screen: Cities as Images
472
Transport and Merchant Capitalism
473
Cores, Peripheries, Colonies
478
Cores and Peripheris
479
Colonies
481
Conclusion
482
chapter sixteen
О
The Late Agrarian World II: Hierarchies in a Global
System,
1500
to
1800 484
Introduction
485
FRAMING The Late Agrarian World II: Hierarchies in a Global System,
1500
to
1800 486
Global Systems
488
States and Societies
488
Hierarchies and the Network
496
States, Other States, and Screen Images
497
Images on the Screen: Mapping Authority
499
Regional Patterns
500
Cavalry, Cannon, and the Closing of the Steppes
500
Warring States
505
Maritime Worlds
510
Issues In Doing World History: The Military Revolution
511
Systemic Maturity
515
Conclusion
516
Contents xiii
chapter seventeen
s
.
The Late Agrarian World III; Cultural Frames,
Cultural Encounters,
1500
to
1800 518
Introduction
519
FRAMING The Late Agrarian World HI: Cultural Frames, Cultural
Encounters,
1500
to
1800 520
Cultural Frames and Screens: Themes and Patterns
522
Constructing Self-Identity
522
Encounters
523
Making Meaning
524
Technologies of Culture: Printing
525
Encounters
527
Subcultural Encounters
528
Images on the Screen: Projecting Individualism
529
Meeting the Americas
531
Confucians and Jesuits
533
Slavery and Race
536
The Scientific Revolution
540
Contexts and Origins
540
Models, Data, and Meaning
541
Science in the World
543
Issues in Doing World History: Science and Religion
544
Conclusion
545
chapter eighteen ; Late Agrarian Transitions: North Atlantic Revolutions,
1650
to
1800 546
Introduction
547
FRAMING Late Agrarian Transitions: North Atlantic Revolutions,
1650
to
1800 548
Changing European Hierarchies
550
Networks and Social Change
550
Framing (and Screening) Social Change
551
Stretching the Pyramid: Social-Political Disjunction
554
The Oddity of England
555
State and Society
555
Culture and Identity
558
Political Transformations
559
Forging a New Hierarchy Model
561
Theorizing the New Hierarchy
566
English Infections: Political Revolutions
568
The American Revolution
568
The French Revolution
570
Images on the Screen: Images of Revolution
572
Haiti
574
The Limits of Politically Led Restructuring
574
Issues in Doing World History: The Meaning of the Word
Revolution
575
Conclusion
576
xiv Contents
parivi.
Convulsions:
1750
to
1914
chapter nineteen
Ô
The Industrial Revolution: Overview, Networks,
Economics
580
Introduction
581
FRAMING The Industrial Revolution: Overview, Networks, Economics
582
English Origins
584
Context
584
Economic Resources
585
Early Industries
587
Issues in Doing World History: Great Men
588
Industrialization: A Global Overview
588
Chronology
589
Impacts: Mass and the End of the Agrarian World
591
Implications
593
Images on the Screen: Images of Industry
594
Industrial Economics: Good-bye Low and Slow
595
Mechanisms of Transformation
595
Mass: Production, Consumption, Markets
598
Impacts
601
Economic Culture: Capitalism
603
Capitalism as an Economic System
603
Capitalism as a Screen Image
604
Consequences of Capitalism
605
Conclusion
608
chapter twenty
О
Industrial Hierarchies: Society, State, Culture
610
Introduction
611
FRAMING Industrial Hierarchies: Society, State, Culture
612
The Shape of Industrial Hierarchies
614
The Social Sphere
616
Mass Society
618
The Corporate Sphere
620
The State
620
Industrialization and the Growth of State Power
620
The State and Warfare
622
Mass Politics
623
Professionalization
626
Cultural Frames and Screens
629
Mass Media, Mass Access: Erasing the Great Cultural Divide
629
Isms : Self-Conscious Ideology
630
The Challenge of Cohesion
631
Nationalism
631
Issues In Doing World History: Nationalism and Academic History
632
A World of «Isms»
635
Images on the Screen: Ismic Art
636
Conclusion
638
Contents
j
xv
chapter twenty-one
О
Imperialism: Structures and Patterns
640
Introduction
641
FRAMING Imperialism: Structures and Patterns
642
The Imperialist Moment
644
A Brief Overview of Imperialism
644
Causes of Imperialism
647
Network Dynamics
647
Hierarchy Dynamics
649
Cultural Dynamics
650
Images on the Screen: Imagining the Colonized
652
Tools of Dominance
653
Network Tools
654
Hierarchy Tools
656
Cultural Tools
657
Issues In Doing World History: Post-Colonial Theory
658
Imperial Interactions
659
Imperialist Hierarchies
659
Imperial Networks
664
Imperial Cultures
667
Conclusion
670
chapter twenty-two
О
Imperialism: Reactions and Consequences
672
Introduction
673
FRAMING Imperialism: Reactions and Consequences
674
The Industrial Challenge
676
Network Challenges
676
Hierarchy Challenges
677
Issues In Doing World History: Modern, Western, Historical Processes
679
Cultural Challenges
679
Responding to Challenges: Case Studies
680
Traditionalist Resistance
680
Westernization
684
Modernization
689
Migrations and Identities
697
Migration
698
Cultural Identities
700
Images on the Screen: Moving Identities
701
Conclusion
702
part
vii.
Crises:
1914
to
1989
chapter twenty-three
О
The West in Crisis,
1914
to
1937 706
Introduction
707
FRAMING The West In Crisis,
1914
to
1937 708
War and Society since Industrialization
710
The Changing Nature of War
710
The Widening Effects of War
712
xvi
I Contents
World War I
716
The Causes of the War
716
The Course of the War
720
Images on the Screen: Enemies on the Screen
725
Consequences of the War
726
Political Upheavals
728
Pre-War Revolutions
728
Ideology and Polities
730
Issues In Doing World History: Marxism and History
733
Conclusion
736
chapter twenty-four
О
The World in Crisis,
1929
to
1945 738
Introduction
739
FRAMING: The West In Crisis,
1929
to
1945 740
The Growing Global Crisis
742
Network Crisis: The Great Depression
742
Crisis and Hierarchies
743
Crisis and Culture: Science
747
Images on the Screen: The Promise and Threat of Science
749
World War II
750
Causes
750
Analyzing the War
751
Military Developments
755
Ideology, Race, and War
759
Consequences of the War
763
Issues In Doing World History: World War II and Video Culture
765
Conclusion
766
chapter twenty-five
О
Crisis Institutionalized and Transformed:
1945
to
1989 768
Introduction
769
FRAMING Crisis Institutionalized and Transformed:
1945
to
1989 770
The World of
1945
to
1989 772
The Global Network Recovers
772
Hierarchies Dividing the Network
773
Cultural Screens
775
Crisis Part III: The Cold War
776
Causes
776
Images on the Screen: Capitalism versus Communism
777
Issues in Doing World History: The Problem of Contemporary History
779
Asian Complications
779
Patterns
782
Detente,
Dénouement
786
Transformations: Decolonization and Beyond
787
Causes
787
The Process of Decolonization
790
Post-Colonial Transitions
793
Conclusion
797
Contents
j
xvii
part
viii.
Modernity: Since
1970
chapter twenty-six
·Γ*
The Modern Global Network: Environment
and Economy since
1970 800
Introduction
801
FRAMING The Modern Global Network: Environment and Economy
since
1970 802
Environment
804
More People
804
The Next Revolution?
806
Issues and Constraints
806
Responses
815
forecasting?
816
The Global Network
818
A Networked World
818
Images on the Screen: A Networked World
820
Network-Hierarchy Tension: The Corporate Sphere
823
Issues in Doing World History: The Textbook Industry
830
Conclusion
831
chapter twenty-seven
О
Modern Hierarchies.· States, Societies,
and Conflicts since
1970 832
Introduction
833
FRAMING Modern Hierarchies: States, Societies, and Conflicts
since
1970 834
Hierarchies and the Network
836
The Global Political Network
836
Tension:
Capitalism,
Markets, and Borders
838
Images on the Screen: Global Villages
842
Hierarchy Cultures
843
Democracy
843
Nationalism
Resurgent
846
Varieties of Modern Conflict
853
Issues in Doing World History: Is
а
Global Perspective Possible?
854
Conventional Wars
854
Civil Wars
856
Civil Revolts
856
Failed States
859
Terrorism and War Paradigms
860
Responses to Conflict
862
Conclusion
862
chapterTWENTY-ESGHT
О
Networked Frames and Screens:
Culture since
1970 864
Introduction
865
FRAMING Networked Frames and Screens: Culture since
1970 866
Revisiting the Cognitive-Linguistic Revolution
868
xviii
j
Contents
ł~
Dynamics of Culture
869
Culture, Capitalism, and Networks
869
Images on the Screen: Mosaic Projections
873
Culture and
Lanßuaßes 874
Issues in Doing World History: Languages, Knowledge, History
875
Identity
876
Making Identity
876
Applied Identity
878
Making Meaning
882
Communication and Community
882
Answering
Biß
Questions
886
Consumerism
890
History and Meaning
892
Conclusion
892
Glossary G-l
Sourcebook Table of Contents SF-1
Credits C-l
Index
1-1
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Morillo, Stephen 1958- |
author_GND | (DE-588)188424571 |
author_facet | Morillo, Stephen 1958- |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV041852433 |
callnumber-first | D - World History |
callnumber-label | D21 |
callnumber-raw | D21 |
callnumber-search | D21 |
callnumber-sort | D 221 |
callnumber-subject | D - General History |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)880418005 (DE-599)BVBBV041852433 |
dewey-full | 909 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 909 - World history |
dewey-raw | 909 |
dewey-search | 909 |
dewey-sort | 3909 |
dewey-tens | 900 - History & geography |
discipline | Geschichte |
edition | Combined volume |
era | Weltgeschichte gnd |
era_facet | Weltgeschichte |
format | Book |
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spelling | Morillo, Stephen 1958- Verfasser (DE-588)188424571 aut Frameworks of world history Stephen Morillo, Wabash College Combined volume New York Oxford Univ. Press txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index Weltgeschichte gnd rswk-swf World history Textbooks (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Weltgeschichte z DE-604 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 21 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027296862&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Morillo, Stephen 1958- Frameworks of world history World history Textbooks |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Frameworks of world history |
title_auth | Frameworks of world history |
title_exact_search | Frameworks of world history |
title_full | Frameworks of world history Stephen Morillo, Wabash College |
title_fullStr | Frameworks of world history Stephen Morillo, Wabash College |
title_full_unstemmed | Frameworks of world history Stephen Morillo, Wabash College |
title_short | Frameworks of world history |
title_sort | frameworks of world history |
topic | World history Textbooks |
topic_facet | World history Textbooks Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027296862&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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