West, The

West, The book cover

West, The

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Found in this section:

1. Brief Table of Contents

2. Full Table of Contents

1. BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

Part IV Challenges, Conflicts, and Departures 1300 to 1700

Chapter 12 Renaissance and Exploration

Chapter 13 Reformation, Religious Wars, and National Conflicts

Part V The Revolutionary Impulse

Chapter 14 The Early Modern State

Chapter 15 New World Views: Europe’s Scientific Revolution

Chapter 16 The Age of Enlightenment: Rationalism and its Uses

Chapter 17 Rebellion and Revolution: American Independence and the French Revolution

Part VI Europe Triumphant 1815 to 1914

Chapter 18 Industry, Society, and Environment

Chapter 19 The Age of Ideology in Western Europe

Chapter 20 The Consolidation of Nation States

Chapter 21 Global Empire and European Culture

Part VII Europe in Crisis 1914 to 1945

Chapter 22 World War I: The End of Enlightenment

Chapter 23 The Troubled Interwar Years

Chapter 24 World War II: Europe in Eclipse

Part VIII The Postwar Western Community 1945 to 2008

Chapter 25 Decolonization and the Cold War

Chapter 26 Western Civilization and the Global Community


2. FULL TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

Part IV – Challenges, Conflicts, and Departures 1300 to 1700

Chapter 12: Renaissance and Exploration

Key Question: How should a society use its history?

The Context for the Renaissance

The Culture of the Renaissance

The Northern Renaissance

The Middle East: The Ottoman Empire

Europe and Atlantic Exploration

Chapter 13: Reformation, Religious Wars, and National Conflicts

Key Question: How do civilized societies justify war?

The Lutheran Reformation

The Swiss Reformation

The Catholic Reformation

The Habsburg-Valois Wars

England’s Ambivalent Reformation

Convergence of Foreign and Domestic Politics: England, Spain, and France

The Final Religious Upheaval

Part V The Revolutionary Impulse

Chapter 14: The Early Modern State

Key Question: How do political systems reflect the structure of social and economic life?

Society in Early Modern Europe

Forging Centralized States

Absolutism in France

Constitutionalism in England

Wars of Empire and Global Markets

Central and Eastern Europe

Europe’s Declining Powers

Chapter 15: New World Views: Europe’s Scientific Revolution

Key Question: How does the study of the natural world influence religious belief and the understanding of truth?

The Medieval World View

Anticipating the New Science

New Directions in Astronomy and Physics

New Approaches to Truth

Theory and Application

Politics as Science

Science as Religion

Superstition and Its Victims

Chapter 16: The Age of Enlightenment: Rationalism and its Uses

Key Question: How do people construct ideas of progress?

Critiquing the Traditional Way of Life

Formulas for Improving Material Conditions

Enlightened Despots

Critiquing the Enlightenment

The Arts in the Age of Reason

Chapter 17: Rebellion and Revolution: American Independence and the French Revolution

Key Question: Can political change occur without social and economic upheaval?

America Rejects Europe

Revolution in France

Napoleon Bonaparte and the Export of Revolution, 1799—1815

The French Revolution and the Americas

Part VI Europe Triumphant 1815 to 1914

Chapter 18: Industry, Society, and Environment

Key Question: How do technology and urbanization influences the relationship between humans and nature?

From Rural to Urban Lifestyles in Europe

Agriculture, Demographics, and Labor

Innovations in Production

The Social Consequences of Industrialization

Industry, the State, and Global Power

Chapter 19: The Age of Ideology in Western Europe

Key Question: What leads people to challenge conventional ideas and practices?

The Congress System and the Conservative Agenda

Ideological Ferment

The Revolutions of 1848

Britain and Reform

The Romantic Movement

Utilitarianism and Utopian Socialism

The Marxist Challenge

Chapter 20: The Consolidation of Nation States

Key Question: Is nationalism a constructive force in the modern age?

Italian Unification

The Creation of Modern Germany

Constitutional Change in France and Britain

The Waning of the Habsburg, Russian, and Ottoman Empires

The United States and Western Europe

Nationalism and Race

Chapter 21: Global Empire and European Culture

Key Question: How does the projection of power reflect wider cultural values?

The New Imperialism: Motives and Methods

The Scramble for Empire: Africa

The Scramble for Empire: South and East Asia

The Legacy of Empire

Imperialism, Intellectual Controversy, and European Culture

Transformation in the Arts

Part VII Europe in Crisis 1914 to 1945

Chapter 22: World War I: The End of Enlightenment

Key Question: Are nation states inherently adversarial?

The Alliance System

The Experience of Modern Warfare

The Eastern Front and Europe’s Empire

Naval War and American Entry

The Impact of Total War at Home

Bolshevik Revolution in Russia

Peace Settlement and European Consciousness

Chapter 23: The Troubled Interwar Years

Key Question: Can personal liberty be maintained under conditions of material hardship?

Postwar Problems in Western Europe

The Price of Victory

The Great Depression, 1929—1939

Coping with the Depression

Italy: The First Fascist State

Authoritarian Regimes in Spain and Eastern Europe

The Emergence of Nazi Germany

Imperial Japan

The Soviet Union under Stalin

Chapter 24: World War II: Europe in Eclipse

Key Question: Can the force of ideas sustain a civilization under attack?

The Process of Appeasement, 1933—1939

Nazism Triumphant, 1939—1941: Europe and North Africa

The German Empire

The Destruction of the Jews

The Home Front and the Role of Women

War in Asia and the Pacific

The Tide Turns, 1942—1945

Planning for the Postwar World

Part VIII The Postwar Western Community 1945 to 2008

Chapter 25: Decolonization and the Cold War

Key Question: How does ideology shape public policy?

The Eclipse of Postwar Optimism

The End of European Empire

Expanding the Cold War

The Cold War and Nuclear Threat

Cuban Missile Crisis

Divisions and Detente

Chapter 26: Western Civilization and the Global Community

Key Question: Has the West defined the process of globalization?

The End of Communism

United Europe?

Science, Technology and the Envirnoment

Women and the Struggle for Equality

Religious Divides and Ethnic Nationalism

The Postindustrial West

A. Daniel Frankforter is Professor of History at the Pennsylvania State University, where he has taught for four decades. His undergraduate work was in the history of ideas and philosophy at Franklin and Marshall College. He earned a Master of Divinity degree from Drew University, did graduate work at Columbia University and the University of Göttingen, and completed master’s and doctoral degrees in medieval history and religious studies at Penn State. His research interests are in English ecclesiastical history, the evolving status of women in medieval Europe, and textual criticism. Articles on these topics have appeared in such journals as Manuscripta, Church History, The British Studies Monitor, The Catholic Historical Review, The American Benedictine Review, The International Journal of Women’s Studies, and The Journal of Women’s History. His books include A History of the Christian Movement: An Essay on the Development of Christian Institutions, Civilization and Survival, The Shakespeare Name Dictionary (with J. Madison Davis), The Medieval Millennium: An Introduction, The Western Heritage, brief edition (with Donald Kagan, Stephen Ozment, and Frank Turner), The Heritage of World Civilizations, brief third edition (with Albert Craig, William Graham, Donald Kagan, Stephen Ozment, and Frank Turner), an edition and translation of Poullain de la Barre’s De L’Égalité des deux Sexes, and Stones for Bread: A Critique of Contemporary Worship. His most recent work is: Word of God/Words of Men: The Use and Abuse of Scripture. Over the course of his career he has developed 15 courses dealing with aspects of the ancient and medieval periods of Western civilization, the Judeo-Christian tradition, and gender issues. His service in the classroom has been acknowledged by the Penn State Behrend Excellence in Teaching Award and the prestigious Amoco Foundation Award for Excellence in Teaching Performance.

William M. Spellman is Professor of History at the University of North Carolina Asheville and Director of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges, a constorium of twenty-six institutions in the United States and Canada. He is a graduate of Suffolk University, Boston, and holds a PhD from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. He is the author of John Locke and The Problem of Depravity (Oxford, 1988); The Latitudinarians and the Church of England (Georgia, 1993); John Locke (Macmillan, 1995): European Political Thought, 1600-1700 (Macmillan, 1997); Monarchies, 1000-2000 (Reaktion, 2000); The Global Community: Migration and the Making of the Modern World (Sutton, 2002): A Concise History of the World Since 1945 (Palgrave, 2006); Uncertain Identity: International Migration Since 1945 (Reaktion, 2008); and A Short History of Western Political Thought (Palgrave, 2011).

THE BOOK STUDENTS WILL READ: CONCISE. RELEVANT. ACCESSIBLE.

  • The 3rd edition of The West is an integrated learning program closely tied to the new MyHistoryLab.
  • The final chapter has been revised to include coverage up to 2011.

PERSONALIZE LEARNING WITH NEW MYHISTORYLAB

The new MyHistoryLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.

  •   The Pearson eText lets students access their textbook anytime, anywhere, and any way they want–including listening online or downloading to iPad.
  • A personalized study plan for each student, based on Bloom’s Taxonomy, promotes critical-thinking skills and helps students succeed in the course and beyond.
  • Assessment tied to videos, applications, and chapters enables instructors and students to track progress and get immediate feedback. Instructors will be able to find the best resources for teaching their students.
  • Class Preparation Tool collects the best class presentation resources in one convenient online destination. Resources include PowerPoint slides, streaming audio and video, audio clips for class tests and quizzes, and all illustrations for creating interactive lectures.
  • Closer Look tours walk students through key primary sources in detail, helping them to uncover their meaning and understand their context.
  • Lecture and Archival Videos include speeches, news footage, and brief discussions by experts on topics mentioned in the text.
  • New MyHistoryLab Icons appear in the margins of the text to connect resources and media assignments in MyHistoryLab to specific topics within the chapters. The icons are labeled Read the Document, View the Image, See the Map, Watch the Video, Hear the Audio, and Study and Review. (ex. p. 606)
  • New MyHistoryLab Connections sections at the end of each chapter in the text list the analytical questions that drive the program’s chapter Study Plan and provide an inventory of resources marked by the MyHistoryLab Icons within the chapter. The analytical questions are ordered from less complex thinking to higher critical thinking. (ex. p. 616)
  • The new Annotated Instructor’s eText serves as a hub for all instructor resources, with chapter-by-chapter links to PowerPoint slides and MyHistoryLab’s ClassPrep engine. It also includes content from the Instructor’s Manual and the MyHistoryLab Instructor’s Guide.
  • MyHistoryLibrary includes hundreds of excerpts from primary sources, including many referenced in the text, and the History Bookshelf, which includes 100 of the most commonly assigned complete works.

IMPROVE CRITICAL THINKING

  • End-of-chapter resources include two new sections:
    • Suggested Activities sections propose various student research projects. (ex. p. 643)
    • Further Reading sections encourage students to continue exploring topics covered in the chapter. (ex. p. 644)

SUPPORT INSTRUCTORS

  • The new Annotated Instructor’s eText serves as a hub for all instructor resources, with chapter-by-chapter links to PowerPoint slides and MyHistoryLab’s ClassPrep engine. It also includes content from the Instructor’s Manual and the MyHistoryLab Instructor’s Guide.
  • The Instructor’s Manual & Test Bank, MyTest, and Powerpoints have been revised to reflect changes in the 3rd edition.
  • Create a Custom Text: For enrollments of at least 25, create your own textbook by combining chapters from best-selling Pearson textbooks and/or reading selections in the sequence you want. To begin building your custom text, visit www.pearsoncustomlibrary.com. You may also work with a dedicated Pearson Custom editor to create your ideal text–publishing your own original content or mixing and matching Pearson content. Contact your Pearson Publisher’s Representative to get started.

Details

  • Loose-leaf, 3-hole-punched pages
  • Free shipping

THE BOOK STUDENTS WILL READ: CONCISE. RELEVANT. ACCESSIBLE.

  • The West is a concise history that is not abridged, so students learn the full story of Western civilization.
  • The Key Question features provide a springboard for wide-ranging class discussion of topics that are relevant to today’s students. (ex. p. 379)
  • This learning program is accessible to students. It is closely integrated with the new MyHistoryLab and comes in several formats for more options and more ways to save.
  • The text is divided into eight parts, each beginning with an illustration, a brief introduction, and a timeline, to help students understand the vast time period covered. (ex. p. 528)
  • Chronological charts within the chapters help students visualize the sequence of events discussed. (ex. p. 543)

PERSONALIZE LEARNING WITH NEW MYHISTORYLAB

The new MyHistoryLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.

  • The Pearson eText lets students access their textbook anytime, anywhere, and any way they want—including listening online or downloading to iPad.
  • A personalized study plan for each student, based on Bloom’s Taxonomy, promotes critical-thinking skills and helps students succeed in the course and beyond.
  • Assessment tied to videos, applications, and chapters enables instructors and students to track progress and get immediate feedback. Instructors will be able to find the best resources for teaching their students.
  • Class Preparation Tool collects the best class presentation resources in one convenient online destination. Resources include PowerPoint slides, streaming audio and video, audio clips for class tests and quizzes, and all illustrations for creating interactive lectures.
  • Closer Look tours walk students through key primary sources in detail, helping them to uncover their meaning and understand their context.
  • Lecture and Archival Videos include speeches, news footage, and brief discussions by experts on topics mentioned in the text.
  • New MyHistoryLab Icons appear in the margins of the text to connect resources and media assignments in MyHistoryLab to specific topics within the chapters. The icons are labeled Read the Document, View the Image, See the Map, Watch the Video, Hear the Audio, and Study and Review. (ex. p. 547)
  • New MyHistoryLab Connections sections at the end of each chapter in the text list the analytical questions that drive the program’s chapter Study Plan and provide an inventory of resources marked by the MyHistoryLab Icons within the chapter. The analytical questions are ordered from less complex thinking to higher critical thinking. (ex. p. 556)
  • The new Annotated Instructor’s eText serves as a hub for all instructor resources, with chapter-by-chapter links to PowerPoint slides and MyHistoryLab’s ClassPrep engine. It also includes content from the Instructor’s Manual and the MyHistoryLab Instructor’s Guide.
  • MyHistoryLibrary includes hundreds of excerpts from primary sources, including many referenced in the text, and the History Bookshelf, which includes 100 of the most commonly assigned complete works.

IMPROVE CRITICAL THINKING

  • Integrated MyHistoryLab learning tools, including MyHistoryLab Icons and a Study Plan in the MyHistoryLab Connections section for every chapter, ensure student success in learning to think critically about the past. (ex. p. 577)
  • Each chapter opens with the following resources:
    • A Key Question that reflects the chapter’s theme and promotes understanding of important topics. (ex. p. 649)
    • A brief Key Question essay. (ex. p. 679)
    • A vivid image with learning objective questions. (ex. p. 678)
    • Quotations from primary sources. (ex. p. 739)
  • Each chapter ends with resources to help students master the information from the chapter:
    • The Key Question Revisited reexamines the chapter-opening Key Question. A brief essay highlights what a particular moment in history suggests about the possibilities for answering the Key Question. (ex. p. 766)
    • Key Terms draw students’ attention to important terminology that appears in bold type within the narrative. (ex. p. 805)
    • New Suggested Activities sections propose various student research projects. (ex. p. 767)
    • New Further Reading sections encourage students to continue exploring topics covered in the chapter. (ex. p. 416)

ENGAGE STUDENTS

  • “People in Context” features present biographies that add human interest to the narrative. (ex. p. 548)
  • Colorful maps in each chapter raise questions about the influence of geography and environment on history. (ex. p. 544)
  • Abundant illustrations in each chapterinclude cartoons, fine art, and photographs and reinforce the notion that historians work from visual as well as written sources. In-depth captions explore how these visual sources illustrate themes and events discussed in the narrative. (ex. p. 355)

SUPPORT INSTRUCTORS

  • The new Annotated Instructor’s eText serves as a hub for all instructor resources, with chapter-by-chapter links to PowerPoint slides and MyHistoryLab’s ClassPrep engine. It also includes content from the Instructor’s Manual and the MyHistoryLab Instructor’s Guide.
  • The Instructor’s Resource Manual contains chapter summaries, chapter outlines with references to the MyHistoryLab resources cited in the text, learning objectives from the text, lecture topics, class discussion topics, and the MyHistoryLab Connections feature found at the end of each chapter in the text. Available within the instructor account at www.MyHistoryLab.com or at www.pearsonhighered.com/irc.  
  • The Test Item File contains a diverse set of over 2,100 multiple choice, short answer, essay, identification, and map-based questions to support different assessment strategies. The large pool of multiple choice questions for each chapter includes factual, conceptual, and analytical questions, so instructors may assess students on basic information as well as critical thinking. Available at www.pearsonhighered.com/irc or as MyTest.
  • MyTest, a flexible online test-generating software, includes all questions found in the printed Test Bank. Instructors can quickly and easily create customized tests with MyTest. Available within the instructor account in MyHistoryLab and at http://www.pearsonmytest.com.
  • PowerPoint slides include a lecture outline for each chapter and full-color illustrations and maps from the printed text. All images from the text have captions that provide background information about the image. Available within the instructor account on MyHistoryLab or at www.pearsonhighered.com/irc.  
  • Create a Custom Text: For enrollments of at least 25, create your own textbook by combining chapters from best-selling Pearson textbooks and/or reading selections in the sequence you want. To begin building your custom text, visit www.pearsoncustomlibrary.com. You may also work with a dedicated Pearson Custom editor to create your ideal text—publishing your own original content or mixing and matching Pearson content. Contact your Pearson Publisher’s Representative to get started.

The book students will read: Concise. Relevant. Accessible.

The West: A Narrative History is a concise but not abridged introduction to the West, encompassing all cultures that trace their ancestry to the ancient Mediterranean world. It is not a reduced version of a larger study, but a full narrative of the West written concisely.

This learning program is built around a Key Question in every chapter, a feature that shows students why western civilization is relevant for them. Students will discover the key questions that define the past are in many ways the same key questions of today. Since students often see conflict between a Christian “West” and an Islamic “East” in today’s society, the authors highlight the ongoing role the Middle East has played in shaping the West. Students will understand the links between people of the West and those in other regions.

The West is an accessible program available in several formats to give instructors and students more choices and more ways to save. With the release of the 3rd edition, The West becomes an integrated program tied closely to the new MyHistoryLab.

A better teaching and learning experience
This program will provide a better teaching and learning experience—for you and your students. Here’s how:

  • Personalize Learning – The new MyHistoryLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.
  • Improve Critical Thinking – Each chapter opens with a Key Question and a brief Key Question essay. The Key Question is revisited at the end of the chapter, and MyHistoryLab Icons and Connections features ensure close integration with the new MyHistoryLab.
  • Engage Students – Maps, illustrations, and a biography feature promote discussion of the narrative.
  • Support Instructors – MyHistoryLab, Class Preparation Tool, Instructor’s Manual, MyTest, Annotated Instructor’s eText, and PowerPoints are available.

For the volume one books a la carte edition of this text, search ISBN-10: 0205241077

Note: MyHistoryLab does not come automatically packaged with this text. To purchase MyHistoryLab, please visit: www.myhistorylab.com or you can purchase a ValuePack of the text + MyHistoryLab (at no additional cost): ValuePack ISBN-10: 0205241107 / ValuePack ISBN-13: 9780205241101.

The book students will read: Concise. Relevant. Accessible.

 

The West: A Narrative History is a concise but not abridged introduction to the West, encompassing all cultures that trace their ancestry to the ancient Mediterranean world. It is not a reduced version of a larger study, but a full narrative of the West written concisely.

 

This learning program is built around a Key Question in every chapter, a feature that shows students why western civilization is relevant for them. Students will discover the key questions that define the past are in many ways the same key questions of today. Since students often see conflict between a Christian “West” and an Islamic “East” in today’s society, the authors highlight the ongoing role the Middle East has played in shaping the West. Students will understand the links between people of the West and those in other regions.

 

The West is an accessible program available in several formats to give instructors and students more choices and more ways to save. With the release of the 3rd edition, The West becomes an integrated program tied closely to the new MyHistoryLab.

 

A better teaching and learning experience
This program will provide a better teaching and learning experience—for you and your students. Here’s how:

  • Personalize Learning – The new MyHistoryLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.
  • Improve Critical Thinking – Each chapter opens with a Key Question and a brief Key Question essay. The Key Question is revisited at the end of the chapter, and MyHistoryLab Icons and Connections features ensure close integration with the new MyHistoryLab.
  • Engage Students – Maps, illustrations, and a biography feature promote discussion of the narrative.
  • Support Instructors – MyHistoryLab, Annotated Instructor’s eText, Class Preparation Tool, Instructor’s Manual, MyTest, and PowerPoints are available.

For the volume one books a la carte edition of this text, search ISBN-10: 0205241077

Additional information

Dimensions 0.80 × 6.00 × 9.10 in
Imprint

Format

ISBN-13

ISBN-10

Author

,

Subjects

history, higher education, humanities, western civilization, Humanities and Social Sciences