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The Essential World History, Enhanced Edition, Volume 1

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THE ESSENTIAL WORLD HISTORY, Enhanced Third Edition, shows you how to use the maps, images, and documents in the book to give you an edge in your study of history. A brief introduction to the text -- "Studying from Primary Source Materials" -- reveals some of the tricks to uncovering the past that your instructor wants you to know. "Discovery" sections, at the end of every chapter, assist you in practicing these skills, which will help you connect the text's seven themes of world history and excel in your course. This bestselling text presents a balanced, highly readable overview of world history that explores common challenges and experiences uniting the human past and informing key global patterns over time. Thorough coverage of political, economic, social, religious, intellectual, cultural, and military history has been integrated into a chronologically ordered synthesis to help you gain an appreciation and understanding of the distinctive character and development of individual cultures. The text takes a global approach to world history, helping you link events together in a broad comparative framework and place the contemporary world in a more meaningful historical context.

444 pages, Paperback

First published July 23, 2001

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About the author

William J. Duiker

78 books23 followers
William J. Duiker is a former United States Foreign Service officer and Professor of History at Penn State University. His area of expertise is East Asia; while in the Foreign Service he spent several years in Vietnam, where an injury left him with partial hearing in one ear. Duiker is the author of Ho Chi Minh: A Life, published in 2000, which was the first comprehensive biography of Ho Chi Minh using sources from Vietnam. He recently retired from teaching.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for S. Alberto ⁻⁷ (semi-active, always yearning).
414 reviews5 followers
July 11, 2024
Is an okay textbook that provides a broad overview of historical events spanning a significant time period. It serves as a good starting point for comparative historiography or any essays that require comparing and contrasting different cultures while presenting opposing views. However, it's not very in-depth, which might leave readers wanting more detailed analyses. Additionally, there are occasional misuses of images to emphasize different historical moments. For instance, when describing the Celts fighting, they used a picture of "Gaia Pleads with Athena to Spare Her Son" from the Gigantomachy frieze—completely the wrong context, as I know from my classical studies. Despite these flaws, it still offers a solid foundation for beginners.
Profile Image for John Carranza.
2 reviews
June 29, 2013
A decent textbook for a course that is wide in scope. The authors believe that geography helped to determine a lot of human progress, but the book lacks sufficient maps for comparison and contrasts. The Comparative Essays and Opposing Viewpoints could be helpful.
254 reviews
January 11, 2012
A mediocre attempt at best. But I guess the confusion and intractability are due to the inherent difficulty of the topic itself rather than the inadequacy of the authors.
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