
Learn about the political, economic, social, and technological transformations in world history, with a special emphasis on global interactions.
This course presents a comparative overview of world history from the 17th century to the present. We examine the origins of major economic, political, social, cultural, and technological trends of the past 400 years and explore the impact of these trends on world societies. This material is structured chronologically and thematically, with each unit focusing on a significant historical subject. The units include primary-source documents and images that illustrate important overarching themes, such as the emergence of modern nation-states, the economic and technological interactions between Western and non-Western peoples, the changing social and cultural perceptions about religion and the state, and the development of physical and virtual networks of information exchange.
- Unit 1: What is History?
 - Unit 2: Trade in East Asia and the Indian Ocean
 - Unit 3: Early Modern Africa and the Wider World
 - Unit 4: The Islamic World
 - Unit 5: Foundations of the Atlantic World
 - Unit 6: Colonization and Economic Expansion
 - Unit 7: Revolutions in Europe and North America
 - Unit 8: Expansion in the Industrial Age
 - Unit 9: Life and Labor in the Industrial World
 - Unit 10: World War I
 - Unit 11: The Interwar Period
 - Unit 12: The Causes and Consequences of World War II
 - Unit 13: Cold War Conflicts
 - Unit 14: The Contemporary World and Ongoing Challenges
 
- Assess how global trade networks shaped the economic development of Asia, Europe, Africa, and the Americas during the 17th and 18th centuries;
 - Identify the origins of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation in Europe and assess the social and political consequences of these movements for the peoples of Europe;
 - Identify the origins of the Enlightenment and assess how its ideas led to political and social revolutions in Europe and the Americas;
 - Identify the origins of the Scientific and Industrial Revolutions and assess how they altered social, political, and economic life across the globe during the 18th and 19th centuries;
 - Compare how European imperialism affected the states and peoples of Asia, Africa, and the Americas in the 19th century;
 - Identify the origins of World War I and analyze how the war's outcome altered economic and political balances of power throughout the world;
 - Identify the origins of totalitarian political movements across the globe in the 1920s and 1930s and assess how these movements led to World War II;
 - Analyze how World War II reshaped power balances throughout the world and led to the emergence of the United States and the Soviet Union as global superpowers;
 - Assess how decolonization movements in the 1950s and 1960s altered political, economic, and social relationships between the United States, the nations of Europe, and developing countries throughout the world; and
 - Assess how the Cold War led to political and economic realignments throughout the world and how the growth of new global markets and systems of trade and information exchange shaped the 21st century.