How the World Made the West
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Buy Now for £17.69
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Narrated by:
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Alix Dunmore
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By:
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Josephine Quinn
About this listen
Bloomsbury presents How the World Made the West by Josephine Quinn, read by Alix Dunmore.
A Guardian, Financial Times, New Statesman, The Rest is Politics and Waterstones Highlight for 2024
'Quinn has done a lot more than reinvent the wheel. What we have here is a truly encyclopaedic and monumental account of the ancient world' THE TIMES
'A work of great confidence, empathy, learning and imagination' RORY STEWART
'Bold, beautifully written and filled with insights . . . Extraordinary' PETER FRANKOPAN
'One of the most fascinating and important works of global history to appear for many years' WILLIAM DALRYMPLE
The West, the story goes, was built on the ideas and values of Ancient Greece and Rome, which disappeared from Europe during the Dark Ages and were then rediscovered by the Renaissance. But what if that isn’t true?
In a bold and magisterial work of immense scope, Josephine Quinn argues that the real story of the West is much bigger than this established paradigm leads us to believe. So much of our shared history has been lost, drowned out by the concept – developed in the Victorian era – of separate ‘civilisations’.
Moving from the Bronze Age to the Age of Exploration, How the World Made the West reveals a new narrative: one that traces the millennia of global encounters and exchange that built what is now called the West, as societies met, tangled and sometimes grew apart. From the creation of the alphabet by Levantine workers in Egypt, who in a foreign land were prompted to write things down in their own language for the first time, to the arrival of Indian numbers in Europe via the Arab world, Quinn makes the case that understanding societies in isolation is both out-of-date and wrong. It is contact and connections, rather than solitary civilisations, that drive historical change. It is not peoples that make history – people do.
A brilliant world history
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Necessary change of mindset
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However there is an annoyance, the mid sentence bibliography quote. Your listening to it, imagining the scene and then get distracted by someone from Cambridge page such and such etc al!! maybe they could've been saved till the end. (This is not a reflection on the narrator)
Worth listening too
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My niggling issue with the books are that I feel the author has some personal bias against Europe and Christianity. When describing the the use of slaves throughout the book, there always seemed to put extra emphasis when the 'west' used slavery than when the 'east' used slavery. I noticed the same when with Christian and Muslim empires, maybe it was just me but it really stuck out to me.
Even with that in mind and very educational book that I would 100% recommend.
really enjoyed the book but have some nigglings issues
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Very interesting but a lot to unpack
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