Each chapter ends with a Conclusion. List of Maps and Figures About
the Author Acknowledgments
Series Introduction: Connecting the Past and Present Introduction
Chapter 1. Reformation, Refugees, and the Creation of Europe The
Creation of Christendom The Collapse of Christendom and the Age of
Religious Wars The Creation of Europe Chapter 2. Colonialism,
Refugees, and the Invention of America The Invention of America
European Refugees in the Americas African Refugees in the Americas
American Refugees in the Americas Chapter 3. Nation-States and the
Refugee Crises of the Great War The Invention of Nation-States
Multiethnic Empires during the Rise of Nation-States The Refugee
Crises of World War I Refugees Crises after World War I Chapter 4.
Self-Determination, Decolonization, and Asia's Postwar Refugee
Crises The Emergence of Nationalisms in Colonial Palestine Refugee
Crisis in Israel/Palestine The Emergence of Nationalisms in
Colonial India Refugee Crisis in India/Pakistan Chapter 5. The Many
Africas and Refugee Crises in Algeria, Uganda, and the Great Lakes
Decolonization and the Refugee Crises of the Algerian War
Decolonization, Africanization, and the Expulsion of Uganda's
Asians Racialized Politics and Refugee Crises around Africa's Great
Lakes Conclusion Index
Jesse Spohnholz is Professor of History and Director of the Roots of Contemporary Issues program at Washington State University.
"Some of us love history for its own sake, but for most students
the contents of a college history course seem detached, unrelated
to their lives, even meaningless. Yet we are surrounded by the
legacy of history. Everything around us--policy, population,
culture, economy, environment--is a product of the actions and
activities of people in the past. How can we hope to address the
challenges we face and resolve contentious issues--inequality,
health,
immigration, climate change--without understanding where they come
from? The volumes in the Roots of Contemporary Issues series are
the tested products of years of classroom teaching and research.
They address
controversial issues with impartiality but not detachment,
combining historical context and human agency to create accounts
that are meaningful and usable for any student confronting the
complex world in which they will live."--Trevor R. Getz, San
Francisco State University
"This is a truly innovative series that promises to revolutionize
how world history is taught, freeing students and faculty alike
from the 'tyranny of coverage' often embedded within civilizational
paradigms, and facilitating sustained reflection on the roots of
the most pressing issues in our contemporary world. Students'
understanding of the importance of history and their interest in
our discipline is sure to be heightened by these volumes that
deeply
contextualize and historicize current global problems."--Nicola
Foote, Arizona State University
"Ruptured Lives delivers a clear, compelling, and well-written
human perspective on the origins, development, and implications of
refugee crises in world history."--Rebekah Klein-Pejsova, Purdue
University
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