Reviews
We plan our teaching and learning in a Learning Community format in Italy. Courses offered will include, W. Civ, Government, English Comp., World Literature, Humanities, Cultural Studies, Speech, Art and Design, Art History, Photography, Italian, and Walking for Fitness! Teaching methods will relate material in every course to every other. I recently introduced this text to the other faculty members who are now considering using it as a basic text for every student in the program. I think it will lend itse|9780534610661|, This text is the best of its kind in print. It is clear and precise with sufficient facts to illustrate the themes and it does not push politically correct points of view as so many of its rivals try to do. Yet it has a solid political basis. The organization is generally good and the scholarship generally adequate for a work at this level and this breadth. Even students lacking preparation as so many do today, if they are diligent and are not overburdened with family problems or work can master the information. I recommend it highly and will continue to use it while teaching this course., The text doesn't stray from the topic. On the contrary, reference back to the topic being discussed is offered with needed regularity. There is also a balance between what might be called interesting ?tid-bits? (the students like these), for example, Maria Theresa's calling Catherine the Great, ?Lady Prayerful,? with the overall flow of what was going on., The text doesn't stray from the topic. On the contrary, reference back to the topic being discussed is offered with needed regularity. There is also a balance between what might be called interesting 'tid-bits' (the students like these), for example, Maria Theresa's calling Catherine the Great, 'Lady Prayerful,' with the overall flow of what was going on., My first impression ... is that it is concise, direct and easy to read. ... As history is cause and effect, the text is effective in presenting perspectives and guiding the reader along a critical thinking path., I would say the Cannistraro book is the best all-around text on the market. It is especially good on the cultural and social aspects, but gives the other aspects its due weight. What I have noticed is that the students read it. I always had my doubts about other texts., This text is the best of its kind in print. It is clear and precise with sufficient facts to illustrate the themes and it does not push politically correct points of view as so many of its rivals try to do. Yet it has a solid political basis. The organization is generally good and the scholarship generally adequate for a work at this level and this breadth. Even students lacking preparation as so many do today, if they are diligent and are not overburdened with family problems or work can master the inform|9780534610661|, The text doesn’t stray from the topic. On the contrary, reference back to the topic being discussed is offered with needed regularity. There is also a balance between what might be called interesting ’tid-bits’ (the students like these), for example, Maria Theresa’s calling Catherine the Great, ’Lady Prayerful,’ with the overall flow of what was going on., We plan our teaching and learning in a Learning Community format in Italy. Courses offered will include, W. Civ, Government, English Comp., World Literature, Humanities, Cultural Studies, Speech, Art and Design, Art History, Photography, Italian, and Walking for Fitness! Teaching methods will relate material in every course to every other. I recently introduced this text to the other faculty members who are now considering using it as a basic text for every student in the program. I think it will lend itself well to the Learning Community format and we are excited to proceed with preparing our teaching and learning using this resource.
Table of Content
Part I: THE ANCIENT WORLD. 1. People Before History. 2. Mesopotamia and Its Cities. 3. Egypt of the Pharaohs. 4. Other Peoples in the Ancient Near East. 5. Art and Belief in the Ancient World. 6. The Structure and Economic Life of Ancient Society. Part II: CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY. 7. The Emergence of Greece: From Bronze to Iron. 8. The Greeks in the Archaic Era. 9. The Greek World in Conflict: The Peloponnesian War and Its Aftermath. 10. The Classical Vision. 11. The Life and Commerce of Classical Greece. 12. Alexander and the Hellenistic Age. 13. The Rise of Rome. 14. Romans of the Republic. 15. The Collapse of the Roman Republic. 16. The Empire: From Augustus to Marcus Aurelius. 17. Politics and the Arts: Roman Imperial Culture. 18. Daily Life in the Roman World. 19. Christianity and the Crisis of Empire. Part III: MEDIEVAL EUROPE. 20. Politics After Rome: The Germanic Kingdoms. 21. Early Medieval Christianity. 22. Byzantium: The Eastern Empire. 23. Europe and Islam. 24. The First Europe: The West in the Age of Charlemagne. 25. The Social Order of Medieval Europe. 26. The Feudal Monarchies. 27. The Militant Church: Reform and the Papacy. 28. Scholars, Troubadours, and Builders. 29. Monarchy and Its Limits: Government in the High Middle Ages. 30. Art and Ideas in the Gothic Age. 31. The Fourteenth Century: Stress and Change in European Society. 32. The Late Middle Ages. Part IV: THE RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION. 33. The Age of the New Monarchs. 34. Power and Culture in Renaissance Italy. 35. The Visual Arts of the Italian Renaissance. 36. Arts and Letters in Renaissance Europe. 37. Upheaval and Transformation in Eastern Europe. 38. The Era of Reconnaissance. 39. The Reformation. 40. The Social Worlds of the Renaissance and Reformation. Part V: THE EARLY MODERN WORLD. 41. Catholic Reform and the Counter-Reformation. 42. Catholic Spain and the Struggle for Supremacy. 43. Crown and Parliament in Tudor-Stuart England. 44. Religious War and the Ascendancy of the French Monarchy. 45. Patterns of Life in a Time of Upheaval. 46. The European Economy and Overseas Empire. 47. The Baroque Era. Part VI: THE OLD REGIME. 48. The Scientific Revolution and Western Thought. 49. Southern Europe: Spain, Italy, and the Mediterranean. 50. Absolute Monarchy: Louis XIV and the Divine Right of Kings. 51. England and the Rise of Constitutional Monarchy. 52. Central Europe and the Shifting Balance of Power. 53. The Baltic and Eastern Europe in Transition. 54. The Culture of the Old Regime. 55. Europe and the World Economy. 56. The Global Conflict: Wars for Empire. 57. European Society in the Eighteenth Century. 58. The Age of Reason. Part VII: THE MODERN AGE. 59. The Politics of Enlightenment: Europe and America. 60. The Industrial Revolution. 61. Revolution in France: Liberty, Terror, Reaction. 62. Europe in the Napoleonic Era. 63. Restoration and Resistance in the Age of Metternich. 64. The New Social Order: Workers, Women, and the Middle Class. 65. The Romantic Vision: Art and Culture in a Revolutionary World. 66. Thought and Action: The Revolutions of 1848. 67. The Liberal State: Domestic Politics in Britain and France. 68. Austria and Russia: Conservatism Entrenched. 69. Diplomacy and War: The Age of Nation Building. 70. Technology and the European Economy. 71. Middle-Class Values and Working-Class Realities. 72. Arts, Ideas, and Social Consciousness. 73. Politics and National Development in Europe, 1870–1914. 74. The Crisis of Empire in Eastern Europe. 75. Europe, the United States, and the World Economy. 76. The Drive for Empire: European Imperialism in Asia and Africa. 77. The Social Order Challenged. 78. Society in Transition: The Modernization of Europe. 79. Art and Science: The Modernist Revolution.