[Answer Question]
HISTORY BOOKS IN GENERAL, AND WORLD HISTORY TEXTBOOKS IN PARTICULAR, share something in common with those Russian nested dolls in which a series of carved figures fit inside one another. In much the same fashion, all historical accounts take place within some larger context, as stories within stories unfold. Individual biographies and histories of local communities, particularly modern ones, occur within the context of one nation or another. Nations often find a place in some more encompassing civilization, such as the Islamic world or the West, or in a regional or continental context such as Southeast Asia, Latin America, or Africa. And those civilizational or regional histories in turn take on richer meaning when they are understood within the even broader story of world history, which embraces humankind as a whole.
In recent decades, some world historians have begun to situate that remarkable story of the human journey in the much larger framework of both cosmic and planetary history, an approach which has come to be called “big history.” It is really the “history of everything” from the big bang to the present, and it extends over the enormous, almost unimaginable time-scale of some 13.7 billion years, the current rough estimate of the age of the universe.1