Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Studies in Comparative World History-serien

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  • - Essays in Atlantic History
    av Philip D. Curtin
    550 - 1 118,-

    A new edition of Philip Curtin's classic work on the history of the plantations.

  • - Science and Medicine in Portugal's Empire, 1450-1700
    av Hugh (University of Utah) Cagle
    356 - 528,-

    This book charts the convergence of science, culture, and politics across Portugal's empire, showing how a global geographical concept was born. In accessible, narrative prose, this book explores the unexpected forms that science took in the early modern world. It highlights little-known linkages between Asia and the Atlantic world.

  • - Southeast Asia in Global Context, c.800-1830
    av Victor B. Lieberman
    601 - 1 043,-

    Lieberman argues that over a thousand years, each of mainland Southeast Asia's great lowland corridors experienced a pattern of accelerating integration punctuated by recurrent collapse. These trajectories were synchronized not only between corridors but, most curiously, between the mainland as a whole, much of Europe, and other sectors of Eurasia.

  • - Southeast Asia in Global Context, c.800-1830
    av Victor B. Lieberman
    665 - 1 820,-

    This book seeks both to integrate Southeast Asia into world history and to rethink much of Eurasia's premodern past. It argues that Southeast Asia, Europe, Japan, China, and South Asia all embodied idiosyncratic versions of a hitherto unrecognized pattern of political and cultural integration that was governed by Eurasian-wide climatic, commercial, and military stimuli.

  • - Essays on Europe, Islam and World History
    av Marshall G. S. Hodgson
    409 - 1 267,-

    Is the history of the modern world the history of Europe? Or is it possible to situate the history of modernity as a world historical process apart from its origins? This text challenges adherents of Eurocentrism and multiculturalism to rethink the roles of Europe and Islamic civilisation in world history.

  • av John K. Thornton
    434 - 1 103,-

    This book explores Africa's involvement in the Atlantic world from the fifteenth century to the eighteenth century. It focuses especially on the causes and consequences, economic, political, and cultural, of the slave trade, in Africa, in Europe, and in the New World.

  • - Legal Regimes in World History, 1400-1900
    av Lauren (New York University) Benton
    362 - 1 013,-

    Advances an interesting perspective in world history, arguing that institutions and culture serve as important elements of international order. Focusing on colonial legal politics, it uses case studies to trace a shift from the multicentric law of early empires to the state-centered law of the colonial world.

  • - Forced Migration in the Dutch East India Company
    av Houston) Ward & Kerry (Rice University
    460,-

    This examination of the Dutch East India Company grapples with the theoretical nature of empire, examines how empires exist through the movement and control of people within their realms, and proposes a new concept of diaspora, demonstrating how all empires have unique networks of free and forced migration.

  • - Industrial Production, 1770-2010
    av Amsterdam) Bosma & Ulbe (International Institute of Social History
    460 - 1 333,-

    In this book, Ulbe Bosma details how the British and Dutch introduced the sugar plantation model in Asia around 1800, when abolitionist campaigns in the Caribbean began, and refashioned it over time. Previously, European markets had almost exclusively relied on Caribbean sugar produced by slave labor.

  • - Objects and Practices, 1600-2000
     
    1 660,-

    This anthology charts the different contexts in which luxury objects have been used across the globe, ranging from the social practices linked to these objects to their production, exchange, and consumption. Using luxury goods as a conduit, Luxury in Global Perspective enriches our understanding of global history.

  • - The Material Culture of Diplomacy in Early Modern Eurasia
     
    1 377,-

    Global Gifts examines the ways in which material goods contributed to the growth of political exchanges between Asia, Africa and Europe, and specifically how those exchanges influenced the global production and circulation of art and material culture before 1800.

  • - The Material Culture of Diplomacy in Early Modern Eurasia
     
    463,-

    Global Gifts examines the ways in which material goods contributed to the growth of political exchanges between Asia, Africa and Europe, and specifically how those exchanges influenced the global production and circulation of art and material culture before 1800.

  • av Philip D. Curtin
    585,-

    A single theme is pursued in this book - the trade between peoples of differing cultures through world history. Extending from the ancient world to the coming of the commercial revolution, Professor Curtin's discussion encompasses a broad and diverse group of trading relationships. Drawing on insights from economic history and anthropology, Professor Curtin has attempted to move beyond a Europe-centred view of history, to one that can help us understand the entire range of societies in the human past. Examples have been chosen that illustrate the greatest variety of trading relationships between cultures. The opening chapters look at Africa, while subsequent chapters treat the ancient world, the Mediterranean trade with China, the Asian trade in the east, and European entry into the trade with maritime Asia, the Armenian trade carriers of the seventeenth century, and the North American fur trade. Wide-ranging in its concern and the fruit of exhaustive research, the book is nevertheless written so as to be accessible and stimulating to the specialist and the student alike.

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