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Overview
THE HUMAN RECORD is the leading primary source reader for the World History course, providing balanced coverage of the global past. Each volume contains a blend of visual and textual sources that are often paired or grouped together for comparison, as in the Multiple Voices feature. A prologue entitled “Primary Sources and How to Read Them” appears in each volume and serves as a valuable pedagogical tool. Approximately one-third of the sources in the Eighth Edition are new, and these documents continue to reflect the myriad experiences of the peoples of the world.
- Updated throughout to reflect current scholarship, the Eighth Edition of this leading primary source reader for world history features a number of new visual sources and continues to ensure adequate coverage of global empires.
- The final chapter of Volume II has been split into two chapters to allow for greater focus on the voices of women and minorities.
- This number one world history reader is known for the selection of unique sources, the quality of its source introductions, the Prologue on how to read primary sources, and the Multiple Voices feature that employs the use of comparative documents.
- The authors are well known in their field, in part through participation in the World History Association, for which Al Andrea has served on the Executive Committee.
- A Multiple Voices feature in each part illustrates one of the following: multiple viewpoints on a common event or phenomenon, multiple sources that demonstrate changes over time, or multiple perspectives from different cultures on a common issue.
- The prologue, “Primary Sources and How to Read Them,” outlines a process for the reading and analysis of the sources in the text.
- Part, chapter, section, and individual source introductions help students place primary sources within a historical context.
- Questions for Analysis precede each source and are presented in a three-tiered format that resembles a historian's approach to source analysis.
- Each volume opens with useful topical and geographical Tables of Contents for flexible instruction.
VOLUME II: Since 1500.
Prologue: Primary Sources and How to Read Them.
Part I: AN ERA OF CHANGE AND INCREASED GLOBAL INTERACTION: THE FIFTEENTH THROUGH SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES.
1. Europe in an Age of Conflict and Expansion.
2. The Islamic Heartland and India.
3. Africa and the Americas.
4. Continuity and Change in East and Southeast Asia.
Part II: A WORLD IN TRANSITION, FROM THE MID-SEVENTEENTH CENTURY TO THE EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY.
5. Europe and the Americas in an Age of Science, Economic Growth, and Revolution.
6. Africa, Southwest Asia, and India in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.
7. Change and Continuity in East Asia.
Part III: THE WORLD IN THE AGE OF WESTERN DOMINANCE: 1800–1914.
8. The West in the Age of Industrialization and Imperialism.
9. Western Pressures, Nationalism, and Reform in Africa, Southwest Asia, and India in the 1800s.
10. East and Southeast Asia Confront the West.
Part IV: THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY AND ITS CHALLENGES IN THE TWENTIETH AND TWENTY-FIRST CENTURIES.
11. The Industrialized World in Crisis.
12. Anticolonialism, Nationalism, and Revolution in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
13. The Global Community from the 1940s through the 1980s: The End of a European-Dominated World.
14. The World Since 1990.
Prologue: Primary Sources and How to Read Them.
Part I: AN ERA OF CHANGE AND INCREASED GLOBAL INTERACTION: THE FIFTEENTH THROUGH SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES.
1. Europe in an Age of Conflict and Expansion.
2. The Islamic Heartland and India.
3. Africa and the Americas.
4. Continuity and Change in East and Southeast Asia.
Part II: A WORLD IN TRANSITION, FROM THE MID-SEVENTEENTH CENTURY TO THE EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY.
5. Europe and the Americas in an Age of Science, Economic Growth, and Revolution.
6. Africa, Southwest Asia, and India in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.
7. Change and Continuity in East Asia.
Part III: THE WORLD IN THE AGE OF WESTERN DOMINANCE: 1800–1914.
8. The West in the Age of Industrialization and Imperialism.
9. Western Pressures, Nationalism, and Reform in Africa, Southwest Asia, and India in the 1800s.
10. East and Southeast Asia Confront the West.
Part IV: THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY AND ITS CHALLENGES IN THE TWENTIETH AND TWENTY-FIRST CENTURIES.
11. The Industrialized World in Crisis.
12. Anticolonialism, Nationalism, and Revolution in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
13. The Global Community from the 1940s through the 1980s: The End of a European-Dominated World.
14. The World Since 1990.