Classes
World History

Subject: Humanities

🧩 32 Practice Tests & Quizzes 📘 86 Study Guides
Introduction

World history or global history as a field of historical study examines history from a global perspective. It emerged centuries ago; leading practitioners have included Voltaire (1694–1778), Hegel (1770–1831), Karl Marx (1818–1883) and Arnold J. Toynbee (1889–1975). 
It is not to be confused with comparative history, which, like world history, deals with the history of multiple cultures and nations, but does not do so on a global scale. World history looks for common patterns that emerge across all cultures. World historians use a thematic approach, with two major focal points: integration (how processes of world history have drawn people of the world together) and difference (how patterns of world history reveal the diversity of the human experience)

World History attempts to recognize and address two structures that have profoundly shaped professional history-writing:

A tendency to use current nation-states to set the boundaries and agendas of studies of the past.
A deep legacy of Eurocentric assumptions (found especially, but not only, in Western history-writing).
Thus World History tends to study networks, connections, and systems that cross traditional boundaries of historical study like linguistic, cultural, and national borders. World History is often concerned to explore social dynamics that have led to large-scale changes in human society, such as industrialization and the spread of capitalism, and to analyse how large-scale changes like these have affected different parts of the world. Like other branches of history-writing in the second half of the twentieth century, World History has a scope far beyond historians' traditional focus on politics, wars, and diplomacy, taking in a panoply of subjects like gender history, social history, cultural history, and environmental history.


Latest Practice Tests / Quizzes
📝 Israel - Palestine Conflict
📝 Middle East History
📝 African Civilizations
Latest Study Guides
📄 World History 101: State-Formation - The Wealth Pump, How Elite Competition Transfers Resources to the 1%
📄 World History 101: State-Formation - The Three Pillars of the Early State, Violence, Bureaucracy, and Charisma
📄 World History 101: State-Formation - The Matthew Principle, How Accumulative Advantage Creates Elite Overproduction
Exam Survival Guides
Survival guide for this class coming soon.