A Short History of Everything Global: Beginner's Guide to World History
MTA
A succinct, illustrated primer for newcomers covering major turning points, civilizations, and global interconnections from antiquity to the present
2nd Edition
*A Short History of Everything Global: Beginner's Guide to World History* provides a sweeping yet accessible overview of the human story, from our evolutionary origins in Africa to the interconnected digital landscape of the 21st century. Designed for newcomers, the book eschews dense academic jargon in favor of a clear, chronological narrative that highlights major turning points such as the Neolithic Revolution, the rise of river valley civilizations, and the profound intellectual shifts of the Axial Age. By focusing on global currents—migration, trade, and the spread of belief systems—rather than isolated national histories, the text illustrates how the Silk Roads, the Indian Ocean trade, and the Atlantic World forged the foundations of our modern reality.
The narrative dives deep into the rise and fall of great empires, from the Han and Roman eras to the "Gunpowder Empires" of the Ottomans and Mughals, while ensuring that the experiences of the Americas and Africa are integrated as central pillars of global development. Readers are guided through the transformative power of the Industrial Revolution, the ideological upheavals of the Enlightenment, and the devastating impact of the World Wars and the Holocaust. Bringing the story into the present, the book examines the end of colonial empires, the bipolar tensions of the Cold War, and the rapid acceleration of globalization driven by digital technology. This primer serves as an essential framework for understanding today’s planetary challenges—including climate change, pandemics, and inequality—as the latest chapters in a long, shared human journey.
This book is designed for students and curious newcomers seeking a concise yet comprehensive overview of world history. It is particularly beneficial for readers who want to understand the broad patterns of global interconnection—such as trade, migration, and technological exchange—rather than focusing on isolated regional narratives. It serves as an ideal primer for anyone looking to build a foundational framework of how the past has shaped today's interconnected global landscape.
January 1, 2026
73,793 words
5 hours 10 minutes
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