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Omtale fra Den Norske Bokdatabasen
In this work, the author sweeps aside the tidy separation between the enlightened first world United States and Canada, and less privileged Latin America. He shows us why it is impossible to understand the history of North, Central and South America in isolation. From the emergence of the first human civilizations through the arrival of Europeans and up to today, the land mass has been bound together in a complex web of inter-relationships - from migration and trade to religion, slavery, warfare, culture, food and the spread of political ideas. For most of human history, it was the South that dominated the North - and, as he argues in his conclusion, it might well again.
Omtale fra forlaget
In this work, the author sweeps aside the tidy separation between the enlightened first world United States and Canada, and less privileged Latin America. He shows us why it is impossible to understand the history of North, Central and South America in isolation. From the emergence of the first human civilizations through the arrival of Europeans and up to today, the land mass has been bound together in a complex web of inter-relationships - from migration and trade to religion, slavery, warfare, culture, food and the spread of political ideas. For most of human history, it was the South that dominated the North - and, as he argues in his conclusion, it might well again.
Forlag Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Utgivelsesår 2003
Format Innbundet
ISBN13 9781842127131
EAN 9781842127131
Serie Universal history series
Omtalt sted Amerika
Språk Engelsk
Sider 199
Utgave 1
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