Civilizations Past and Present, Combined Volume, 13th edition
Published by Pearson (January 4, 2020) © 2021
- Robert R. Edgar Howard University
- Neil J. Hackett St. Louis University
- George F. Jewsbury Centre des Etudes Russe, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
- Barbara A. Molony Santa Clara University
- Matthew S. Gordon Miami University
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For courses in World History.
A narrative exploration of world history and cultures
Civilizations Past and Present presents a survey of world history. The authors treat the development and growth of civilization as a global phenomenon involving the interaction of all of the world's cultures. The text illustrates this global interaction through examination of the various elements of history: social, economic, political, military, religious, aesthetic, legal and technological. The authors emphasize world trends while avoiding placing these trends within a Western conceptual basis.
The 13th Edition has been substantially revised to present the most current interpretations of historical events.
Hallmark features of this title
- Chapter Opening Timelines identify the most important events of the chapter.
- Discovery Through Maps features give students a unique perspective on the world's various cultures. These visually engaging features help students gain a better understanding of how societies viewed themselves and others. They also encourage readers to think outside common assumptions about borders and identity.
- Chronology boxes help students understand events within the specific movements, cultures or regions discussed in each chapter.
- Global Issues essays examine critical issues of world history that transcend time and region. Topics include slavery, migration, environmental sustainability, disease and technological exchange.
New and updated features of this title
- UPDATED: The 13th Edition of this text has been substantially revised to present the most current interpretations of historical events. Highlights include:
- expanded coverage of the political and cultural history of the Islamic world following the early imperial period
- fresh material on how modern European economics and politics produced the powerful nation-states that harnessed their resources and skills in a continual competition
- updated coverage of how Europe achieved its highest peak of global influence in the nineteenth century based on industrial, scientific and economic advances
- revised discussions of World War I that shows how European nation-states formed alliances and stumbled into a disastrous war that saw their economic domination pass to the United States
- updated coverage of many Asian nations, including China, Japan, Korea, Indonesia and Pakistan in Chapter 32, Asia and the South Pacific Since 1945
- Stone Age Societies and the Earliest Civilizations of the Near East
- Early Chinese Civilization
- Early Indian Civilizations
- The Greeks 2000-30 BCE
- Rome, 900 BCE to 476 CE
- The Eastern Mediterranean World, 300-950 CE
- The Islamic World, 950-1300 CE
- African Beginnings
- The Americas to 1500
- The Creation of Europe: 300-1500
- Culture, Power, and Trade in the Era of Asian Hegemony, 220-1350
- The Great Dynastic Empires of Eurasia, 1300-1650
- East Asian Cultural and Political Systems, 1300-1650
- New Ways of Thinking: 1300-1700: Renaissance, Reformations, and Scientific Revolution
- Global Encounters: Europe and the New World Economy, 1400-1650
- Europe: The Rise of the Nation States, 1500-1815
- Africa in the World Economy, 1650-1850
- Asian and Middle Eastern Empires and Nations, 1650-1815
- The Americas, 1650-1825
- The European Century, 1815-1914
- Africa and the Near East During the Age of European Imperialism
- Imperialism and Modernity in Asia and the Pacific, 1815-1914
- The Americas, 1825-1914
- World War I: The Origins and Consequences of a European Tragedy
- The Failure of the Liberal Model and the Rise of Authoritarianism
- World War II
- Forging New Nations in Asia, 1910-1950
- National Movements and the Drive for Independence in the Near East and Africa from the 1920s to 1950s
- The West Since 1945: Cold War and Confused Peace
- The Near East and Africa Since 1945
- Latin America Since 1910
- Asia and the South Pacific Since 1945
Volume I includes chapters 1-16; Volume II includes chapters 16-32.
About our authors
Robert R. Edgar is Professor of African Studies at Howard University in Washington, D.C. and a Senior Fellow in the Department of History at Stellenbosch University. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Virginia, Georgetown University, National University of Lesotho, University of Cape Town and University of Western Cape. He specializes in modern religious and political movements in southern Africa. Among his books are An African American in South Africa: The Travel Notes of Ralph Bunche (1992), African Apocalypse: The Story of Nontetha Nkwenkwe, a Twentieth Century South African Prophet (2000) (co-authored with Hilary Sapire), and The Finger of God: Enoch Mgijima, the Israelites and the Bulhoek Massacre (2018).
Neil J. Hackett is Associate Professor Emeritus at Oklahoma State University. He has also served as Adjunct Professor of History at St. Louis University. He received his PhD in history and classics from the University of Cincinnati. He served as Associate and Interim Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Oklahoma State, and for 5 years as Director of Oklahoma State’s branch campus in Kyoto, Japan.
George F. Jewsbury is Professor Emeritus of History at Oklahoma State University. He earned his PhD from the University of Washington in Russian and East European history. He has also served as a Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Nancy II, Senior Associate Member at St. Antony’s College, Oxford, and as an Associate Researcher at the School for the Advanced Study of the Social Sciences in Paris. He has published The Russian Annexation of Bessarabia: 1774 to 1828, and several articles dealing with French influence in Russia from 1770 to 1828 and Russian-Romanian relations from 1800 to the present.
Barbara Molony, Professor of Japanese History at Santa Clara University, co-President of the Coordinating Council for Women in History, and past president of the American Historical Association Pacific Coast Branch, specializes in research on women’s rights, transnational feminisms, and the construction and representation of gender in Japan and East Asia. She has published more than 2 dozen articles and chapters on these topics. She has also co-authored or co-edited Women’s Activism and “Second Wave” Feminism: Transnational Histories (with Jennifer Nelson, 2017), Gender in Modern East Asia (with Janet Theiss and Hyaeweol Choi, 2016), Modern East Asia: An Integrated History (with Jonathan Lipman and Michael Robinson, 2010), Asia’s New Mothers: Crafting Gender Roles and Childcare Networks in East and Southeast Asian Societies (with Ochiai Emiko, 2008), and Gendering Modern Japanese History (with Kathleen Uno, 2005). She is an associate editor of Women and Social Movements in Modern Empires since 1820. She is currently co-authoring Ichikawa Fusae: A Political Biography (in progress).
Matthew S. Gordon is Professor of Middle East and Islamic studies at Miami University, where he is the Philip R. Shriver Professor of History. He earned his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1993. Among his publications on the history of the Islamic Near East are 2 edited volumes, including Concubines and Courtesans: Women and Slavery in Islamic History (2017); a series of textbooks, including The Rise of Islam (2005); and a monograph on the Abbasid caliphate, The Breaking of a Thousand Swords (2001). Gordon is a co-editor of the online journal, Al-Usur al-Wusta, and is presently at work on a history of the early Abbasid Empire.
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