ISBN-13: 9783030057060 / Angielski / Twarda / 2019 / 284 str.
ISBN-13: 9783030057060 / Angielski / Twarda / 2019 / 284 str.
Introduction: Big History Context.- Introduction: Globalization Context.- Archaic Globalization: The Birth of the World System.- Global Dynamics 1-1800 CE: Trends and Cycles.- Proto-Modern and Early Modern Globalization. How Was the Global World Born?.- Early Modern Globalization and World Dynamics: Global Growth, Global Crisis, and Global Divergence.- The Early Modern Period: Emerging Global Processes and Institutions.- Global Technological and Economic Transformations in the Late 18th and 19th Centuries.- Global Sociopolitical Transformations of the 19th Century.- Global Sociocultural Transformations of the 19th Century.- The First “Golden Age” of Globalization (1870-1914).- Conclusion: The Big History of Globalization Told in Ten Pages.
Julia V. Zinkina is a Senior Research Fellow of the International Research Laboratory on Demography and Human Capital at the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration (RANEPA) in Moscow. She also holds a research position at the Faculty of Global Studies, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia. Her current research interests include demographic processes at global and national levels, worldwide social networks, sociopolitical destabilization, macrohistory and long-term trends. She is the author of more than 90 publications including two monographs in Russian.
This book presents the history of globalization as a network-based story in the context of Big History. Departing from the traditional historic discourse, in which communities, cities, and states serve as the main units of analysis, the authors instead trace the historical emergence, growth, interconnection, and merging of various types of networks that have gradually encompassed the globe. They also focus on the development of certain ideas, processes, institutions, and phenomena that spread through those networks to become truly global.
The book specifies five macro-periods in the history of globalization and comprehensively covers the first four, from roughly the 9th – 7th millennia BC to World War I. For each period, it identifies the most important network-related developments that facilitated (or even spurred on) such transitions and had the greatest impacts on the history of globalization.
By analyzing the world system's transition to new levels of complexity and connectivity, the book provides valuable insights into the course of Big History and the evolution of human societies.
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