----- 全球史,全球化:世界各地的研究与实践
Introduction: Global History, Globally Sven Beckert (Harvard University, USA) and Dominic Sachsenmaier (Georg August University, Goettingen, Germany) Part 1: Regions 1. Global History in (Western) Europe: Explorations and Debates Gareth Austin (Cambridge University, UK) 2. Re-presenting Asia on the Global Stage: The Rise of Global History Study in East Asia Qingjia Edward Wang (Beijing University, China/Rowan University, Glassboro, New Jersey, USA) 3. Latin America and the Caribbean: Traditions of Global History Rafael Marquese and Joao Paulo Garrido Pimenta (both of University of Sao Paolo, Brazil) 4. African History and Global History: Revisiting Paradigms Omar Gueye (Cheikh Anta Diop, University, Dakar, Senegal) 5. Deconstructing Imperial and National Narratives in Turkey and the Arab Middle East Selcuk Esenbel and Meltem Toksoez (both of Bogazici University, Istanbul, Turkey) 6. The World History Project: Global History in North American Context Jerry H. Bentley (University of Hawai'i at Manoa, ) Part 2: Central Themes in Global History 7. New Perspectives on Workers and the History of Work: Global Labor History Andreas Eckert (Humboldt University Berlin, Germany) and Marcel Van der Linden (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands) 8. Scale, Scope, and Scholarship: Regional Practices and Global Economic Histories Kenneth Pomeranz (University of Chicago, USA) 9. Global Histories of Migration(s): Dialectics and Dialogic of Perspectives and Primacies Amit Mishra (University of Hyderabad, India) 10. The Challenge of the "Global" in Intellectual History Dominic Sachsenmaier (Georg August University, Goettingen, Germany) and Andrew Sartori (New York University, USA) Part 3: Problems in the Practice of Global History 11. Writing World History in Africa: Conditions, Stakes, and Challenges David Simo (University of Yaounde, Cameroon) 12. World History, Nationally: How Has the National Appropriated the Transnational in East Asian Historiography? Lim Jie-Hyun (Sogang University, Seoul, South Korea) 13. Writing the Globe from the Edges: Approaches to the Making of Global History in Australia Marnie Hughes-Warrington (Australian National University, Canberra, Australia) 14. Japanese Efforts to Overcome Eurocentric Paradigms in the Study of Global History Shigeru Akita (Osaka University, Japan) Index
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