Test Bank for Worlds Together Worlds
Apart with Sources, 2nd AP Edition Elizabeth Pollard
Full download at: https://testbankbell.com/product/test-bank-for-worldstogether-worlds-apart-with-sources-2nd-ap-edition-elizabeth-pollard/
Description:
The most accessible textbook built around the AP® World History curriculum
The most globally integrated book in the field, Worlds Together, Worlds Apart is unmatched in helping students draw clear comparisons and connections across time and place. A new AP® part structure and strong chapter pedagogy supports student comprehension and close reading skills. The Second AP® Edition offers even more opportunities for students to practice the historical thinking skills and reasoning processes with an AP® World History Skills Handbook and AP®-style questions and writing prompts throughout the book. Additional practice is provided online with our interactive History Skills Tutorials and Norton InQuizitive for History―the popular, award-winning, adaptive quizzing tool. About the Author
Elizabeth Pollard, lead author of Volume 1 (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is associate professor of history at San Diego State University. Her research investigates women accused of witchcraft in the Roman world and explores the exchange of goods and ideas between the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean in the early centuries of the Common Era. Her pedagogical interests include digital humanities approaches to Roman history and witchcraft studies as well as the impact of global perspectives on teaching, learning, and writing about the ancient Mediterranean.
Clifford Rosenberg, lead author of Concise Edition Volume 2 (Ph.D., Princeton University) is associate professor of European history at City College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. He specializes in the history of modern France and its empire and is the author of Policing Paris: The Origins of Modern Immigration Control between the Wars. He is working now on a book about the spread of tuberculosis between France and Algeria since the mid-nineteenth century.
Robert Tignor, general editor emeritus (Ph.D., Yale University) is professor emeritus and the Rosengarten Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Princeton University and the three-time chair of the history department. With Gyan Prakash, he introduced Princeton’s first course in world history thirty years ago. Professor Tignor has taught graduate and undergraduate courses in African history and world history and has written extensively on the history of twentiethcentury Egypt, Nigeria, and Kenya. Besides his many research trips to Africa, Professor Tignor has taught at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria and the University of Nairobi in Kenya.
Alan Karras, lead media author and author of the Worlds Together, Worlds Apart AP Edition (Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania) is the associate director of International and Area Studies at the University of California at Berkeley and has previously served as chair of the College Board’s test development committee for world history and as co-chair for the College Board’s commission on AP history course revisions. The author and editor of several books, he has written about the eighteenth-century Atlantic World and, more broadly, global interactions that focus on illicit activities like smuggling and corruption. An advocate of linking the past to the present, he is now working on a history of corruption in empires, focusing on the East India Company.
Jeremy Adelman, lead author of Volume 2 (D.Phil., Oxford University) has lived and worked in seven countries and on four continents. A graduate of the University of Toronto, he earned a master’s degree in economic history at the London School of Economics (1985) and a doctorate in modern history at Oxford University (1989). He is the author or editor of ten books, including Sovereignty and Revolution in the Iberian Atlantic (2006) and Worldly Philosopher: The Odyssey of Albert O. Hirschman (2013), a chronicle of one of the twentieth century’s most original thinkers. He has been awarded fellowships by the British Council, the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and the American Council of Learned Societies (the Frederick Burkhardt Fellowship). He is currently the Henry Charles Lea Professor of History and the director of the Global History Lab at Princeton
University. His next books will be Latin America: A Global History and Earth
Hunger: Markets, Resources, and the Need for Strangers.
• ISBN-10 : 0393668606
• ISBN-13 : 978-0393668605
Table contents:
Chapter 1: The Rise of Universalizing Religions, 300–600 CE
Chapter 2: New Empires and Common Cultures, 600–1000
Part 1: Becoming “The World,” c. 1200–1450
Chapter 3: Becoming “The World,” 1000–1300
Chapter 4: Crisis and Recovery in Afro-Eurasia, 1350–1500
Part 2: A Changing World Order, c. 1450–1750
Chapter 5: Contact, Commerce, and Colonization, 1450–1600
Chapter 6: Worlds Untangled, 1600–1750
Chapter 7: Cultures of Splendor and Power, 1500–1780
Part 3: An Imperial and Industrial World, c. 1750–1900
Chapter 8: Reordering the World, 1750–1850
Chapter 9: Alternative Visions of the Nineteenth Century
Chapter 10: Nations and Empires, 1850–1914
Chapter 11: An Unsettled World, 1890–1914
Part 4: A Globalizing World, c. 1900 to the present
Chapter 12: Of Masses and Visions of the Modern, 1910–1939
Chapter 13: The Three-World Order, 1940–1975
Chapter 14: Globalization, 1970–2000
Epilogue:2001–The Present
Further Readings