Global and Transnational History
The approaches that decenter the nation-state by tracing connections, comparisons, and flows of people, goods, and ideas across regions and around the world.
Definition
Global and transnational history are approaches that take connection, circulation, and comparison across and beyond national boundaries as their primary frame, rather than treating the nation-state as the default unit of historical analysis.
Scope
This topic covers the development of global, world, and transnational history from the late twentieth century: their critique of methodological nationalism and Eurocentrism, the methods of comparison and connection, and concepts such as connected histories, entanglement, and the analysis of networks and circulations across borders.
Core questions
- How can historians write history that is not bounded by the nation-state?
- What is the difference between comparative, connected, and entangled histories?
- How does global history confront the problem of Eurocentrism?
- What are the limits of scale, language, and archive that global approaches face?
Key theories
- Connected histories
- Subrahmanyam argued that early-modern regions usually studied in isolation were in fact linked by circulations of people, ideas, and goods, calling for histories that follow these connections across conventional boundaries.
- Critique of methodological nationalism
- Global and transnational historians challenge the assumption that the nation is the natural container of historical processes, foregrounding flows and networks that cross or precede national borders.
History
Building on older world-historical and world-systems traditions, global and transnational history expanded rapidly from the 1990s amid intensifying globalization and postcolonial critique. Works such as Bayly's account of the making of the modern world and Subrahmanyam's connected histories established connection and comparison as central methods.
Debates
- Does global history reproduce Eurocentrism?
- Critics worry that global narratives can re-center European categories and chronologies even while claiming to transcend them, prompting debate over how to write genuinely decentered history.
Key figures
- Sebastian Conrad
- C. A. Bayly
- Sanjay Subrahmanyam
- Jürgen Osterhammel
- Kenneth Pomeranz
Related topics
Seminal works
- conrad2016
- bayly2004
- subrahmanyam1997
Frequently asked questions
- How does global history differ from world history?
- World history often surveys the whole human past, while global history more specifically analyzes connections, comparisons, and circulations, and is methodologically critical of the nation-state as a default frame.
- What are 'connected histories'?
- It is Sanjay Subrahmanyam's term for histories that trace the real links — of trade, migration, and ideas — between regions usually studied in isolation, especially across early-modern Eurasia.