Who is afraid of global history?
Ambitions, pitfalls and limits of learning global history
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25365/oezg-2009-20-2-2Keywords:
Debating and teaching global history, researching global and world historyAbstract
This essay debates the present state of global history from four angles: defining global history, debating global history, teaching global history, and researching global history. My comments and suggestions reflect my own experiences, but also configure and support the choices I make in my teaching and research missions. We are witnessing new, global shifts as the centuries-long hegemony of European and Western societies and theories are increasingly challenged. This urges us to broaden and deepen the paths of global history. This is an essential task since the topics that we are dealing with have never been bigger, the questions we are tackling have never been more important, and the stakes have never been higher.