gvenezia 's review for:

The Big History of Civilizations by Craig G. Benjamin
3.0

Craig Benjamin's "big history" is an interdisciplinary overview of the history of human societies (as opposed to traditional histories which focus on influential individuals and events). If you're familiar with the evolutionary history of humans and world history, you probably won't find any new information here, but the framing of the historical facts provides a generative perspective. Benjamin focuses more on gender relations, cultural evolution, environmental sustainability, cultural/economic exchange, social complexity, and geography than on specific people or events.

The two most surprising takeaways for me were (1) how much cultural exchange of ideas occurred even before globalization and (2) how frequently climate change and geography shaped the course of human history (which then inspired me to read Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel, which Benjamin cites on numerous occasions. Diamond rounds out Benjamin's intimated argument that societal development has largely been a collective enterprise, which has continually adapted to extreme climates and drastic climate change.)