Globalization and Global History argues that globalization is not an exotic and new phenomenon. Instead it emphasizes that globalization is something that has been with us as long as there have been people who are both interdependent and aware of that fact.
Studying globalization from the vantage point of long-term global history permits theoretical and empirical investigation, allowing the authors collected to assess the extent of ongoing transformations and to compare them to earlier iterations. With this historical advantage, the extent of ongoing changes - which previously appeared unprecedented - can be contrasted to similar episodes in the past.
The book is divided into three sections. The first focuses on how globalization has been written about from a historical perspective. The second part advances three different takes on how best to view globalization from a very long-term stance. The final section continues this interpretative thread by examining more narrow aspects of globalization processes, ranging from incorporation processes to systemic disruptions.
Globalizations, Global Histories, and Globalizations
Barry K. Gills and William R. Thompson
Globalizing History and Historicising Globalization
Jerry H. Bentley
The Global Animus : In the Tracks of Historical Consciousness
Roland Robertson and David Inglis
Civilizing Processes and International Societies
Andrew Linklater
Globalizations: The First Ten, Hundred, Five Thousand, and Million Years
David Wilkinson
The Big Collapse: A Brief Cosmology of Globalization
Claudio Cioffi-Revilla
[Re} Peripheralization, [Re] Incorporation, Frontiers and Nonstate Societies: Continuities and Discontinuities in Globalization Processes
&lÓ