The Cambridge World History
Volume 1. Introducing World History, to 10,000 BCE
£33.99
Part of The Cambridge World History
- Editor: David Christian, Macquarie University, Sydney
- Date Published: November 2017
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781108406420
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Volume 1 of the Cambridge World History is an introduction to both the discipline of world history and the earliest phases of world history up to 10,000 BCE. In Part I leading scholars outline the approaches, methods, and themes that have shaped and defined world history scholarship across the world and right up to the present day. Chapters examine the historiographical development of the field globally, periodisation, divergence and convergence, belief and knowledge, technology and innovation, family, gender, anthropology, migration, and fire. Part II surveys the vast Palaeolithic era, which laid the foundations for human history, concentrating on the most recent phases of hominin evolution, the rise of Homo sapiens and the very earliest human societies through to the end of the last ice age. Anthropologists, archaeologists, historical linguists and historians examine climate and tools, language, and culture, as well as offering regional perspectives from across the world.
Read more- Provides a synopsis of the current state of research in two areas: the historiography of world history and the Palaeolithic era
- Examines the relatively neglected topic of the earliest eras of human history in world history scholarship
- Offers an authoritative work of reference by leading international scholars
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×Product details
- Date Published: November 2017
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781108406420
- length: 496 pages
- dimensions: 225 x 143 x 24 mm
- weight: 0.77kg
- contains: 29 b/w illus. 19 maps 2 tables
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
1. Introduction and overview David Christian
Part I. Historiography, Method, and Themes:
2. Writing world history Marnie Hughes-Warrington
3. The evolution of world histories Dominic Sachsenmaier
4. Evolution, rupture and periodisation Michael Lang
5. From divergence to convergence: centrifugal and centripetal forces in history David Northrup
6. Belief, knowledge and language Luke Clossey
7. Historiography of technology and innovation Daniel Headrick
8. Fire and fuel in human history Johan Goudsblom
9. Family history and world history: from domestication to biopolitics Mary Jo Maynes and Ann Waltner
10. Gendered world history Merry Wiesner-Hanks
11. What does anthropology contribute to world history? Jack Goody
12. Migration in human history Pat Manning
Part II. The Palaeolithic and the Beginnings of Human History:
13. Before the farmers: culture and climate from the emergence of homo sapiens to about ten thousand years ago Felipe Fernandez-Arnesto
14. Early humans: tools, language and culture Christopher Ehret
15. Africa from 48,000 to 9600 BCE Christopher Ehret
16. Migration and innovation in Palaeolithic Europe John Hoffecker
17. Asian Palaeolithic dispersals Robin Dennell
18. The Pleistocene colonisation and occupation of Australasia Peter Hiscock
19. The Pleistocene colonisation and occupation of the Americas Nicole M. Waguespack.
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