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Overview
Developed to meet the demand for a low-cost, high-quality history book, this text is an economically priced version of WESTERN CIVILIZATION: BEYOND BOUNDARIES, 7e. The Advantage Edition offers the high level of scholarship and engaging narrative of the full text, while limiting the number of features, images, and maps. Each volume is packaged in a paperback, two-color format that appeals to those seeking a comprehensive, trade-sized history text. Like its full-length counterpart, the Advantage Edition of WESTERN CIVILIZATION encompasses the full social and political story of Western Civilization within a wider definition of Europe that includes Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, and European frontiers. The text emphasizes Europe's interaction with the world and encourages students to question why and how history unfolded as it did.
Available in the following split options:
CENGAGE ADVANTAGE BOOKS: WESTERN CIVILIZATION: BEYOND BOUNDARIES, SEVENTH Edition (Chapters 1-30), ISBN: 9781133610120; Volume I: To 1715 (Chapters 1-17), ISBN: 9781133610137; Volume II: Since 1560 (Chapters 15-30), ISBN: 9781133610151.
- Scholarship has been thoroughly revised throughout, and now includes 30 boxed features (one in each chapter). The final chapter has been entirely rewritten to reflect current events, includes a new chapter-opening photo and vignette on the European Union debt crisis and the protests in Greece.
- New and revised "The Global Record" feature boxes include "Crossing Borders, for Better and Worse" (Chapter 1), "Cosmas Indicopleustes Finds Christians in Asia" (Chapter 7), "Ahmad ibn Fadlan Describes the Rus" (Chapter 9), "Dutch Colonies in the Americas: the Challenges of a Trading Empire" (Chapter 16), and "Freeing of Slaves on Guadeloupe, 1794" (Chapter 19).
- New and revised "The Written Record" boxes include such topics as: "A Woman Wins at the Olympics" (Chapter 3), "Two Views of Augustus" (Chapter 6), "The Education of Women" (Chapter 12), "Condorcet's Optimism about Human Progress" (Chapter 18), "Alexis de Tocqueville's Argument Against Slavery in the Colonies" (Chapter 21), and "Questioning the State of Western Civilization" (Chapter 30).
- The book contains 58 two-color maps and 120 pieces of artwork throughout. Map captions encourage readers to think beyond the mere appearance of each map and to make connections across chapters, regions, and concepts.
- Every chapter includes one these three unique feature boxes to help engage students with the key material: "The Written Record" contains a significant document – a primary or secondary source - relevant to the text materials then under discussion and each box also includes a careful introduction and critical thinking questions. "The Global Record" presents a significant document that sets some aspect of Western Civilization within the global perspective. "The Visual Record" focuses on visual evidence and features a discussion of the visual sources as well as helpful critical thinking questions.
- Each chapter begins with an opening photo and corresponding vignette to draw students in, and ends with a chronology table, "Important Events", to help them keep track of key events in context.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS.
1. The Ancestors of the West.
2. The Ship, the Sword, and the Book: Western Asia ca. 1500–400 B.C.
3. The Greeks in the Polis to ca. 350 B.C.
4. Alexander the Great and the Spread of Greek Civilization, ca. 350–30 B.C.
5. Rome, from Republic to Empire.
6. Imperial Rome, 31 B.C.–A.D. 284.
7. The World of Late Antiquity, 284–ca. 600.
8. Early Medieval Civilizations, 600–900.
9. The Expansion of Europe in the High Middle Ages, 900–1300.
10. Medieval Civilization at Its Height, 900–1300.
11. Crisis and Recovery in Late Medieval Europe, 1300–1500.
12. The Renaissance.
13. European Overseas Expansion to 1600.
14. The Age of the Reformation.
15. Europe in the Age of Religious Wars, 1560–1648.
16. Europe in the Age of Louis XIV, ca. 1640–1715.
17. A Revolution in Worldview.
18. Europe on the Threshold of Modernity, ca. 1715–1789.
19. An Age of Revolution, 1789–1815.
20. The Industrial Transformation of Europe, 1750–1850.
21. Restoration, Reform, and Revolution, 1814–1848.
22. Nationalism and Political Reform, 1850–1880.
23. The Age of Optimism, 1850–1880.
24. Imperialism and Escalating Tensions, 1880–1914.
25. War and Revolution, 1914–1919.
26. The Illusion of Stability, 1919–1930.
27. The Tortured Decade, 1930–1939.
28. The Era of the Second World War, 1939–1949.
29. The Age of the Cold War, 1949–1989.
30. A Continuing Experiment: The West and the World Since 1989.
INDEX.