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Patterns of World History, Brief Edition, Volume One

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The authors offer a distinct intellectual framework for the role of innovation and historical change through patterns of origins, interactions, and adaptations. Each small or large technical or cultural innovation originated in one geographical center or independently in several different
centers. As people in the centers interacted with their neighbors, the neighbors adapted to, and in many cases were transformed by, the innovations. By "adaptation" the authors include the entire spectrum of human responses, ranging from outright rejection to creative borrowing and, at times, forced
acceptance.

Approximately twenty-five percent shorter than the highly acclaimed comprehensive text, this Brief Edition features a streamlined and tightened narrative. With prices starting at $24.95 per split volume, the Brief Edition is one of the least expensive full-color world history textbooks available. It
is also available as an embedded eBook with OUP's online learning and assessment platform, Dashboard.


Seeing patterns of various kinds in historical development brings to light connections and linkages among peoples, cultures, and regions-as in the aforementioned examples-that might not otherwise present themselves.

Second, such patterns can also reveal differences among cultures that other approaches to world history tend to neglect. For example, the differences between the civilizations of the Eastern and Western Hemispheres are generally highlighted in world history texts, but the broad commonalities of
human groups creating agriculturally based cities and states in widely separated areas also show deep parallels in their patterns of origins, interactions, and adaptations. Such comparisons are at the center of Patterns of World History.

Third, this kind of analysis offers insights into how an individual innovation was subsequently developed and diffused across space and time-that is, the patterns by which the new eventually becomes a necessity in daily lives. Through all of this we gain a deeper appreciation of the unfolding of
global history from its origins in small, isolated areas to the vast networks of global interconnectedness in our present world.

Finally, the authors' use of a broad-based understanding of continuity, change, and innovation allows them to restore culture in all its individual and institutionalized aspects-spiritual, artistic, intellectual, scientific-to its rightful place alongside technology, environment, politics, and
socioeconomic conditions. That is, understanding innovation in this way allows this text to help illuminate the full range of human ingenuity over time and space in a comprehensive, evenhanded, and open-ended fashion.

896 pages, Paperback

Published September 1, 2017

About the author

Peter von Sivers

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