Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

The Human Web: A Bird's-Eye View of World History

289

Citations

0

References

2003

Year

TLDR

World‑historical questions about how global frictions shape human interaction are increasingly urgent, and scholars argue that the evolving webs of ideas, goods, power, and money—from early agricultural communities to today’s electrified global network—provide a key framework for understanding these patterns. The book examines how father‑and‑son historians map the webs that have linked humans through cooperation and competition since antiquity.

Abstract

World-historical questions such as these, the subjects of major works by Jared Diamond, David Landes, and others, are now of great moment as global frictions increase. In a spirited and original contribution to this quickening discussion, two renowned historians, father and son, explore the webs that have drawn humans together in patterns of interaction and exchange, cooperation and competition, since earliest times. Whether small or large, loose or dense, these webs have provided the medium for the movement of ideas, goods, power, and money within and across cultures, societies, and nations. From the thin, localized webs that characterized agricultural communities twelve thousand years ago, through the denser, more interactive metropolitan webs that surrounded ancient Sumer, Athens, and Timbuktu, to the electrified global web that today envelops virtually the entire world in a maelstrom of cooperation and competition, J. R. McNeill and William H. McNeill show human webs to be a key component of world history and a revealing framework of analysis. Avoiding any determinism, environmental or cultural, the McNeills give us a synthesizing picture of the big patterns of world history in a rich, open-ended, concise account.