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36 Books That Changed the World
- Narrated by: Andrew R. Wilson, Brad S. Gregory, Charles Kimball, Daniel N. Robinson, Jerry Z. Muller, John E. Finn
- Length: 18 hrs and 41 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Certain works of literature, history, science, philosophy, political theory and religion offer powerful examples of how books can spark revolutions, birth great religions, spur scientific advancements, shape world economies, teach us new ways of thinking, and much more. And with this fascinating collection crafted from our extensive library of courses, you can now get a single course that represents 36 of our best lectures on literary works that changed the world.
In the company of an unparalleled roster of award-winning professors from a range of disciplines, you'll get fresh perspectives on books you only thought you knew - and intriguing introductions to some works you may not have known played key roles in getting us to where we are today. These include The Analects, the Liber Abaci, A Dictionary of the English Language, The Jungle, The Feminine Mystique, and more.
If you've taken another course with these professors before, get a reminder of just why you enjoyed them. And if you've never heard some of them before, who knows? You may just discover your next favorite Great Courses professor. More than that, you'll rediscover just how powerful the printed word can be. You'll also learn how the mark of a truly great book isn't that it just changes the lives of individual readers-but the lives of entire civilizations.
What listeners say about 36 Books That Changed the World
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- Anonymous User
- 13-12-2023
Very good but US slanted
Many excellent lectures, great material, however quite a number of books covered have much more importance to the US than to the rest of the world.
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- Anonymous User
- 22-08-2024
Beware! The lectures are disjointed
I have listened to the first three classes and it is not what I was used to from The Great Courses. The lectures are not stand-alone classes on the book to which they refer; instead, each seems to be one part of a larger set, thus there are unconnected references as well as assumed knowledge.
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