how to read a book

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How to Read a Book

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How to Read a Book. What to Look For as You Read. The main characteristics in the major civilizations Cross-civilizational patterns of migration, trade and exchange, spread of religion, disease, plant exchange, & cultural interchange within and among major societies—SIMILARITIES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: How to Read a Book

How to Read a Book

Page 2: How to Read a Book

What to Look For as You Read

• The main characteristics in the major civilizations• Cross-civilizational patterns of migration, trade and

exchange, spread of religion, disease, plant exchange, & cultural interchange within and among major societies—SIMILARITIES

• The basic features of agricultural economies• How key aspects of the past & present have been shaped

by global forces, e.g., exchange of technology & ideas• Assess continuity and change over time• Common impulses in the human experience

Page 3: How to Read a Book

What is Global History?

A study of the evolution and development of the world’s leading civilizations

Major stages in the nature and degree of interactions among different peoples and societies

around the globe

Page 4: How to Read a Book

The Emergence of World History

“Not until the 20th century, with an increase in the international contacts and a vastly expanded knowledge of the historical patterns of major societies did a full world history become possible.”

14th Century Arab historian Ibn

Khaldun

Page 5: How to Read a Book

River Valleys as Central

• Nile (Egypt)

• Tigris-Euphrates (Mesopotamia—the Middle East)

• Indus (India)

• Yellow (China)

Flood waters renewed soil, kept it fertile; drew animal life to the banks;

provided means of transporting goods & people

Page 6: How to Read a Book

What is Civilization?

• Cities (versus a nomadic lifestyle)• Well-organized central governments, bureaucracies• Complex religions• Job specialization—specialized occupations• Social classes—differentiated social status• Arts & architecture• Public works (temples, palaces, irrigation systems, roads,

bridges, walls)• Writing (tax rolls, business or marriage contracts)• Long distance trading networks

Must all these be present for civilization to exist?

Page 7: How to Read a Book

Civilization• “Most humans have always shown a tendency to operate

in groups that provide a framework for economic activities, governance, and cultural forms-beliefs and artistic styles”

• Civilizations “generate surpluses beyond survival needs”• Civilizations give “human groups the capacity to

fundamentally reshape their environments and to dominate most other living creatures”

• “A genuinely global definition of what it means to be civilized should focus on underlying patterns of social development that are common to complex societies throughout history”

Page 8: How to Read a Book

The Problem of Ethnocentrism

• “The tendency to judge other peoples’ cultural forms solely on the basis of how much they resemble one’s own”

• This requires an international approach on our part

• “In the West, world history depended on a growing realization that the world could not be understood simply as a mirror reflecting the West’s greater glory or a stage for Western-dominated power politics”—LeRoy don’t want the ball, Coach!”

Page 9: How to Read a Book

The Criteria for Determining what Constitutes a “Period” in History

• A geographic rebalancing among major civilization areas—changing boundaries

• An increase in the intensity and extent of interaction across civilizations

• The emergence of new and roughly parallel developments in most, if not all, of these major civilizations

Page 10: How to Read a Book

Periodization of World History

Period #1

World history developments before 1000 C.E.—“Pre-history” & Emergence of Early

Regional CivilizationsC. E. = A. D.

B. C. E. = B. C.

Page 11: How to Read a Book

Period #2

The Classical Period—“a new capacity to integrate larger regions and diverse groups of people through overarching cultural political systems

1000 B.C. E – 500 C. E.

Page 12: How to Read a Book

Period #3

The “Postclassical Era”—”emergence of new commercial and cultural linkages that

brought most civilizations into contact with one another and with nomadic

groups; the decline of the great classical empires, the rise of new civilizational

centers, and the emergence of a network of world contacts (especially commercial),

including the spread of major religious systems

Page 13: How to Read a Book

Period #4

The Shrinking World---1450-1750

The rise of the West, the intensification to new levels of global contacts, the growth of

trade, and the formation of new empires.

Page 14: How to Read a Book

Period #5

Industrialization & Western Global Hegemony, 1750-1914

Industrialization of Europe and European Imperial expansion; increase & intensification of commercial interchange, technoiogical innovations, & cultural contacts

Page 15: How to Read a Book

Period #620th Century in World History—Are we at a crossroads? Are new global patterns on the horizon?

The retreat of Western Imperialism; the rise of new political systems like communism; the surge of the U. S. & U.S.S.R.; a host of economic innovations and inventions

Page 16: How to Read a Book

Themes• Commonalities among societies, e.g., impact of

technological change on environment, social structure, gender equity

• Contacts / interplay between civilizations• Tensions between established traditions and forces of

change brought by trade, migration• What role did individuals play—human agency as

part of world-historical causation• Changing patterns of inequality• Nomads and international connections

Page 17: How to Read a Book
Page 18: How to Read a Book

Structure & Organization of the Book

• “Part Introductions”—identifies fundamental new characteristics of parallel or comparable developments and regional or international exchange that define each period—Key Themes

• “Chapter Introductions”—identifies key themes and analytical issues: chief strengths, causes for deterioration, decline, collapse

• “Timelines—major “events, countries, in all societies discussed in chapter”

• “On the Web”—annotated websites—should help in writing your six weeks essays

Page 19: How to Read a Book

Happy

Reading!