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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan Daly (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.317kg ISBN: 9781138774810ISBN 10: 1138774812 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 03 July 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'In this invaluable primer, Jonathan Daly brings together the most influential arguments from the last half century of anglophone scholarship on the perennial question: what led to the rise of the West? Students will get reliable summaries of the diverse views of more than a dozen prominent historians (and historical sociologists) - and in prose often more readable than the original texts.' Professor John McNeill, Georgetown University, USA 'In this invaluable primer, Jonathan Daly brings together the most influential arguments from the last half century of anglophone scholarship on the perennial question: what led to the rise of the West? Students will get reliable summaries of the diverse views of more than a dozen prominent historians (and historical sociologists) - and in prose often more readable than the original texts.' Professor John McNeill, Georgetown University, USA Although faculty often incorporate books they have read into courses they teach, never before has this reviewer wanted to develop a course around a particular text until reading Daly's Historians Debate the Rise of the West. Presenting various historical theories examining the rise of the West in world history and its corollary of why not China, Daly (Univ. of Illinois at Chicago) writes an excellent volume of such diverse theories as the uniqueness of Western culture, the development of world systems and geographic imperatives, and the importance of East Asia as a determinant of the West's rise without trying to force students into accepting one theory over another. Daly's easy writing style, straightforward presentation of various theories, and inclusion of maps, notes, and further reading materials make this a text worth having. Summing up: Essential. K. Lynass, University of Maryland in CHOICE What makes this ... excellent, amply detailed and well organized set of crib notes especially valuable is that students will be able to navigate a very big field, and it should encourage them to do more than merely dip into Braudel, Pomeranz et al. Nicholas Doumanis, Australian Journal of Politics and History The book provides a valuable concise overview, which this reviewer wishes had been around when he first became intrigued by this fascinating topic. Eric Mielants, Journal of World History Historians Debate the Rise of the West provides an indepth consideration of important scholarship pertaining to the West's current dominant global position ... Importantly, Daly does not favor one particular reason why the West rose; rather, he covers a multitude of works-often contrasting with each other-that explain the current global power structure. Sarah Nicklas, H-World, H-Net Review In Historians Debate the Rise of the West, historian Jonathan Daly systematically accomplishes his goal of presenting the research and analysis of a broad array of contemporary academics who had endeavored to demystify Western ascendancy. David M. Carletta, Anglican and Episcopal History 'In this invaluable primer, Jonathan Daly brings together the most influential arguments from the last half century of anglophone scholarship on the perennial question: what led to the rise of the West? Students will get reliable summaries of the diverse views of more than a dozen prominent historians (and historical sociologists) - and in prose often more readable than the original texts.' Professor John McNeill, Georgetown University, USA 'In this invaluable primer, Jonathan Daly brings together the most influential arguments from the last half century of anglophone scholarship on the perennial question: what led to the rise of the West? Students will get reliable summaries of the diverse views of more than a dozen prominent historians (and historical sociologists) - and in prose often more readable than the original texts.' Professor John McNeill, Georgetown University, USA Although faculty often incorporate books they have read into courses they teach, never before has this reviewer wanted to develop a course around a particular text until reading Daly's Historians Debate the Rise of the West. Presenting various historical theories examining the rise of the West in world history and its corollary of why not China, Daly (Univ. of Illinois at Chicago) writes an excellent volume of such diverse theories as the uniqueness of Western culture, the development of world systems and geographic imperatives, and the importance of East Asia as a determinant of the West's rise without trying to force students into accepting one theory over another. Daly's easy writing style, straightforward presentation of various theories, and inclusion of maps, notes, and further reading materials make this a text worth having. Summing up: Essential. K. Lynass, University of Maryland in CHOICE Author InformationJonathan Daly is Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His publications include Autocracy under Siege (1998), The Watchful State (2004), and The Rise of Western Power: A Comparative History of Western Civilization (2014). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |