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James Belich

    James Belich ist ein Historiker und Akademiker, dessen Schriften sich auf die Neuinterpretation der neuseeländischen Geschichte des 19. Jahrhunderts, insbesondere der Neuseelandkriege, konzentriert haben. Seine Forschungen über die Beziehungen zwischen Māori und Pakeha haben Anerkennung gefunden. Er ist Professor für Geschichte und seine Arbeit untersucht die Komplexität historischer Interpretationen und Konflikte. Sein aufschlussreicher Ansatz bietet eine neue Perspektive auf entscheidende historische Ereignisse.

    Replenishing the Earth
    The World the Plague Made
    • In 1346, a catastrophic plague struck Europe, halving populations and causing immense suffering, yet it also sparked unprecedented cultural and economic renewal. This history reveals how the bubonic plague transformed labor, trade, and technology, paving the way for Europe’s global expansion. The author explores the paradox of Europe's rise following the Black Death, illustrating how the plague, despite its devastation, doubled per capita resources. With fewer people, disposable incomes increased, leading to heightened demand for luxury goods like silks, sugar, and spices. This surge in demand prompted European expansion, facilitated by labor scarcity that accelerated the adoption of water and wind power, as well as gunpowder. Innovations such as water-powered blast furnaces and heavily armed galleons emerged rapidly in response to these pressures. A new "crew culture" of "disposable males" developed to operate these advancements. By situating Western Europe's ascent within a global context, the narrative highlights how the empires of the Middle East and Russia also thrived post-plague, revealing the interconnectedness of European expansion with Chinese and other global influences.

      The World the Plague Made2022
      3,7
    • Replenishing the Earth

      The Settler Revolution and the Rise of the Angloworld

      • 586 Seiten
      • 21 Lesestunden

      Why are we speaking English? This work uncovers a "settler revolution" from the early nineteenth century that spurred the explosive settlement of the American West and the British West, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. Between 1780 and 1930, the number of English speakers surged from 12 million to 200 million, alongside a dramatic increase in wealth and power. This phenomenon was not due to racial or cultural superiority, but rather a confluence of historical changes: a rise in mass migration, a shift in attitudes toward emigration, a settler "boom mentality," and the late development of non-industrial technologies on frontiers. This revolution, combined with the Industrial Revolution, transformed settlement into a dynamic force, leading to the rapid growth of cities like Chicago and Melbourne. When settler booms eventually collapsed, a new pattern emerged. Connections between Anglo-wests and their metropolises—London and New York—tightened, as staple products and ideas flowed between them. This "re-colonization" reinforced the ties that helped shape Greater America and Greater Britain into superpowers. While the "Settler Revolution" also occurred in places like Argentina, Siberia, and Manchuria, it was the Anglophone settlers who most effectively integrated frontier and metropolis, providing the material power that defined global leadership for the past 200 years. This narrative reshapes our unders

      Replenishing the Earth2009