The Human Web: A Bird's Eye View of World History (review)

D. Davis
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

One of the gratifying developments in the historical profession in the past two decades has been the reestablishment of world history as a worthwhile field of study, writing, and teaching. The expansion of traditional concern for Western civilization, the interaction of other cultures within the worldwide human story, and the accelerated interest in globalization, along with the insights of the historical, natural, and physical sciences—all have produced a movement that is gaining increasing momentum. William McNeill, author of the widely used volume The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community (University of Chicago Press, 1963) and more than a dozen other monographs on aspects of world history, hinted at the themes in the present volume in his retrospective essay in the 1991 reprinting of the above-mentioned classic. Now he is joined by his son, a distinguished environmental historian, and together they survey fourteen millennia of human history in describing and explaining the relationships of human groups within their natural and cultural contexts. The thesis of the work is that webs of influence linking human beings in relationships are central to human development, since they continually involve the communication of ideas and information. This affects future human behavior that, in turn, fuels the “ambition to alter one’s condition to match one’s hopes” (4). The authors believe that the “first worldwide web” began as a loose network about 12,000 years ago. An introduction explains the characteristics of webs—combinations of cooperation and competition, development of communication for mutual survival, growing influence upon history, and the effect of human development on the earth’s own history. Eight chapters then develop and support the thesis that a worldwide web is not a new concept but a reality that has cyclically evolved with human history. They deal with the earliest period of human development (up to 11,000 B.C.E.), the growth of food production (11,000–3,000 B.C.E.), Old World civilizations (3500 B.C.E.–200 C.E.), the growth of Old World webs and America (200–1000 C.E.), “Thickening Webs” (1000–1500), the extension of a worldwide web (1450–1800), foundations for the modern world (1750–1914), and modern strains affecting the web (1890 to the present). A final brief chapter provides informed personal reflections on long-range prospects by each of the authors. The substantive chapters are well outlined, with useful headings and subheadings, and are broken into digestible subsections. Furthermore, they each finish neatly with a succinct conclusion that keeps one on track when surveying such a vast array of concepts so quickly. Fifteen maps and five tables enhance the text. An extensive ten-page bibliographic essay of further readings reviews current studies for each of the chapters. A reasonable index concludes the work. The work is a unique blending of socioeconomic, cultural, and physical elements that integrates trends in agriculture, migration, urbanization, climate, and industrialization—to name a few of the many variables considered. Together they illustrate how regional and national influences contribute to the web by interweaving one culture with another. Although libraries receive virtually no mention as such, readers of this journal will appreciate the authors’ general emphasis on communication and specific coverage of literacy, printing, universities, and information technology in a work of such sweeping scope. Two sections in particular illustrate this. “Information and Communication” treats the printing press as a means of spreading religious and cultural ideas throughout
人类网络:世界历史的鸟瞰图(回顾)
在过去的二十年里,历史学界令人欣慰的发展之一是将世界史重新确立为一个值得研究、写作和教学的领域。传统上对西方文明的关注不断扩大,世界范围内人类故事中其他文化的相互作用,以及对全球化的加速兴趣,以及对历史、自然和物理科学的见解——所有这些都产生了一种运动,这种运动正在获得越来越大的动力。被广泛使用的《西方的崛起:人类社会史》(芝加哥大学出版社,1963年)和其他十几本关于世界历史方面的专著的作者威廉·麦克尼尔在1991年重印上述经典的回顾文章中暗示了本卷的主题。现在,他的儿子,一位杰出的环境历史学家加入了他的团队,他们一起调查了一万四千年的人类历史,描述和解释了人类群体在自然和文化背景下的关系。这项工作的论点是,连接人际关系的影响网络是人类发展的核心,因为它们不断涉及思想和信息的交流。这影响了人类未来的行为,而这种行为反过来又激发了“改变自身状况以满足自己希望的野心”(4)。作者认为,“第一个全球网络”始于大约1.2万年前的一个松散网络。引言部分解释了网络的特点——合作与竞争的结合、为共同生存而发展的交流、对历史日益增长的影响以及人类发展对地球自身历史的影响。接下来的八个章节发展并支持了这一论点,即全球网络不是一个新概念,而是随着人类历史的周期性发展而形成的现实。它们涉及人类最早的发展时期(直到公元前11000年),粮食生产的增长(公元前11000 - 3000年),旧世界文明(公元前3500 -公元200年),旧世界网络和美洲的增长(公元200-1000年),“增厚网络”(1000-1500年),全球网络的扩展(1450-1800年),现代世界的基础(1750-1914年),以及影响网络的现代压力(1890年至今)。最后一个简短的章节提供了每个作者对长期前景的明智的个人反思。实质性的章节有很好的概述,有有用的标题和副标题,并分为易于理解的小节。此外,它们都以简洁的结论整齐地结束,使人们在如此快速地研究如此大量的概念时保持在正轨上。十五幅地图和五张表格加强了文本。一个广泛的十页参考书目的进一步阅读文章回顾当前的研究,为每一章。一个合理的指标结束了工作。这项工作独特地融合了社会经济、文化和自然因素,整合了农业、移民、城市化、气候和工业化的趋势——这只是考虑的众多变量中的一小部分。它们共同说明了地区和国家的影响如何通过将一种文化与另一种文化交织在一起而对网络做出贡献。虽然图书馆几乎没有被提及,但这本杂志的读者会欣赏作者在如此广泛的工作中对交流的普遍强调和对识字、印刷、大学和信息技术的具体报道。有两个部分特别说明了这一点。“信息与传播”将印刷机视为传播宗教和文化思想的手段
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