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This collection fills the need for a resource that adequately
conceptualizes the place of non-European histories in the larger
narrative of world history. These essays were selected with special
emphasis on their comparative outlook. The chapters range from the
British Empire (India, Egypt, Palestine) to Indonesia, French
colonialism (Brittany and Algeria), South Africa, Fiji, and
Japanese imperialism. Within the chapters, key concepts such as
gender, land and law, and regimes of knowledge are considered.
This collection fills the need for a resource that adequately
conceptualizes the place of non-European histories in the larger
narrative of world history. These essays were selected with special
emphasis on their comparative outlook. The chapters range from the
British Empire (India, Egypt, Palestine) to Indonesia, French
colonialism (Brittany and Algeria), South Africa, Fiji, and
Japanese imperialism. Within the chapters, key concepts such as
gender, land and law, and regimes of knowledge are considered.
World Environmental History, a Berkshire Essential, explores how
the biosphere is affected by human interventions such as climate
change, deforestation, waste management, water and wind energy,
population growth, oil spills, ecological imperialism, and
urbanization. An interdisciplinary approach to the field considers
biological and physical processes as integral parts of history,
with mammals, birds, plants, bacteria, and viruses as "biotic
actors" that play important roles. So do geological formations and
disruptions, such as deserts, mountains, islands, earthquakes, and
tsunamis. The volume's rich content includes articles on the
anthroposphere, carrying capacity, ethnobotany, Gaia theory, and
the Green Revolution, for instance-all of which define key concepts
that shape the environmental studies so crucial to a sustainable
future.
Africa in World History stresses Africa's interrelatedness to other
regions and cultures, from early trade routes, the arrival of
Christianity and Islam, and the ramifications of colonialism to
contemporary issues such as HIV/AIDS and apartheid that have
thwarted Africa's efforts to establish unity. Africa stretches
across more than 11 million square miles, from the Sahara and Sahel
in the north to the mineral-resource-rich south, the endangered
rain forests of the west, and the Serengeti savannas of the east.
Fossils from Ethiopia tell us that the human species originated in
Africa, and scholars have different theories about the journey out
of Africa made by Homo sapiens some 60,000 years ago. Today, Africa
is home to over 1 billion people speaking more than a thousand
different languages.
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Art in World History (Paperback)
David Christian, Ralph C. Croizier, John R. McNeill, William H. McNeill
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R1,405
Discovery Miles 14 050
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Art in World History, a Berkshire Essential, put readers in touch
with art from the Paleolithic period and the millennium-long heyday
of porcelain, to performance art of the postmodernist world. They
explore fundamental questions about the origins of art making and
the case for including visual studies in world history. The volume
balances and interweaves regional coverage with cross-cultural
perspectives - when trade brought Chinese silk to the Romans in the
first century CE, or how celebrated 19th-century Japanese
printmakers used one-point perspective, a Western technique.
Overviews on vernacular architecture and textiles examine how the
study of these art forms can provide insight on a people's
aesthetic sense and development, as well as on the cultural,
political, and socioeconomic aspects of their lives.
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