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The Origins of the Modern World : A Global and Ecological Narrative

Part of the World Social Change series
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This volume presents a global narrative of the origins of the modern world.

Unlike most studies, which assume that the "rise of the West" is the story of the coming of the modern world, this history, drawing upon scholarship on Asia, Africa and the New World, constructs a story in which those parts of the world play major roles.

Robert Marks defines the modern world as one marked by industry, the nation state, interstate warfare, a large and growing gap between the wealthiest and poorest parts of the world, and an escape from "the biological old regime".

He explains its origins by emphasizing contingencies (such as the conquest of the New World); the broad comparability of the most advanced regions in China, India and Europe; the reasons why England was able to escape from common ecological constraints facing all of those regions by the 18th century; and a conjuncture of human and natural forces that solidified a gao between the industrialized and non-industrialized parts of the world.

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Product Details
Rowman & Littlefield
0742517535 / 9780742517530
Hardback
909
25/02/2002
United States
English
192 p.
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More