K. M. Dunton
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The Opium Wars and Sino-Japanese Wars
- The History of the Conflicts That Ended China’s Standing as a World Power
- De: Charles River Editors
- Narrado por: Martin Taylor
- Duración: 4 h y 38 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
The 19th century saw the rise of one of the largest, most powerful empires of the modern era. The sun never set on the British Empire, whose holdings spanned the globe, in one form or another. Its naval supremacy linked the Commonwealth of Canada with the colonies in South Africa and India, and through them, trade flowed east and west.
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Soporific and Mechanical Voice
- De K. M. Dunton en 10-16-23
- The Opium Wars and Sino-Japanese Wars
- The History of the Conflicts That Ended China’s Standing as a World Power
- De: Charles River Editors
- Narrado por: Martin Taylor
Soporific and Mechanical Voice
Revisado: 10-16-23
I was interested in the subject, but the performance was so bad that I kept tuning it out. I kept going back to try to catch it again, but I finally gave up halfway through.
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A History of Russia: From Peter the Great to Gorbachev
- De: Mark Steinberg, The Great Courses
- Narrado por: Mark Steinberg
- Duración: 18 h y 45 m
- Grabación Original
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
It's difficult to imagine a nation with a history more compelling for Americans than Russia. Before the collapse of the Soviet Union, this was the nation against which we measured our own nation's values and power and with whom war, if it ever came, could spell unimaginable catastrophe for our planet.Yet many Americans have never had the opportunity to study Russia in depth, and to see how the forces of history came together to shape a future so different from the dreams of most ordinary Russian people, eager to see their nation embrace Western values of progress, human rights, and justice.
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Not story-telling but history-telling at its best
- De Shah Alam en 10-22-13
Good overall, but choice of focus a bit odd
Revisado: 04-04-21
I enjoyed this title overall, as I do most of The Great Courses series. The narrator's delivery was a bit idiosyncratic but not distractingly-so, and he is clearly very knowledgeable and passionate about the subject matter.
However, the amount of time dedicated to certain subjects seemed out of sync with the subjects' relative importance and interest. For example, spend entire individual lectures (30 min each) on roughly 4 separate unsuccessful uprisings was interesting; spending some 2 hours on the slow rise and change of early socialism within the intelligentsia was a bit much. 2 full hours on the state of life between 1905-1917 was likewise a bit long. Conversely, only 30 minutes was spent on everything from 1945-1985! De-Stalinization, a topic which could almost make up a course itself, was given barely a passing mention. It ended up feeling like the author had been given a particular amount of time for the course and, upon getting to the Great War, realized he had run out of time and needed to speed through everything that came after. Because this section came last, it left me more frustrated at the end of the course than I would have liked.
I would love to see another version of this course in which the 1945-onward period could be treated with the same attention and pace as the roughly 200 years that came before it.
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