쉐도잉 연습: Unit 9 Review: Globalization (1900-PRESENT) (AP World History: Modern) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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All right AP World History crew, let's do this.
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All right AP World History crew, let's do this.
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We're about to tackle a super high yield review of Unit 9,
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Globalization, covering 1900 all the way to today.
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So if you're cramming for that big exam in May,
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you have definitely come to the right place.
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Let's dive in and make sure you're ready to crush this part of the course.
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So, right off the bat,
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why should you care about this unit?
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Simple, it's about 8 to 10% of your entire AP exam.
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Now that might not sound like a ton,
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but think of it this way.
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These are some of the most gettable points you're going to see.
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Nailing this unit is a huge boost to your final score.
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So what is globalization really?
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When you boil it all down,
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Unit 9 is about one single massive story.
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It's the story of how our world got so connected.
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We're talking about a crazy acceleration in technology,
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in economics, in culture that totally changed the game for everyone on the planet over the last hundred years or so.
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Okay, so here's our game plan.
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We're going to break it down.
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First, we'll look at the engine behind all this connection, the technology.
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Then we'll jump into the global marketplace that it created.
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From there, we'll check out how ideas and culture started spreading like wildfire.
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And we'll wrap it all up by looking at the big picture,
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what's actually new, and what's just,
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well, more of the same old story.
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Let's get into it.
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First up, the engine of connection.
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Look, if you want to understand globalization in the 20th century,
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you have to start with technology.
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It's the absolute core of the story.
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These new inventions didn't just make the world feel smaller,
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they wove us together in ways that were literally unimaginable before.
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And as you'll see, that brought some amazing progress,
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but also a whole new set of problems.
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The big idea here is that we basically conquered distance.
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Think about it.
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Back in the 1920s, you have the radio.
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Suddenly, a leader like FDR can talk to the entire nation at once with his fireside chats.
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Fast forward to the 60s and its television.
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Now, the Vietnam War isn't some far away thing,
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it's right there in your living room every night.
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And then, BAM!
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The internet hits in the 90s and just throws out the entire rulebook on how we communicate.
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Each step collapsed the space between us.
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Okay, this is one of my favorite parts because it's about something you never think of as world-changing.
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A simple metal box.
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The shipping container.
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Seriously, before the 1950s loading a ship was a chaotic, expensive mess.
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But once they standardized the container, everything changed.
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It became ridiculously cheap and fast to move goods around the world.
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And that is what allowed companies to say,
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hey, why don't we make our stuff over there where labor is cheaper?
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It completely redrew the economic map of the world.
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And it wasn't just communication and trade.
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Technology totally revolutionized our health.
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You've got antibiotics like penicillin,
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which meant getting a bacterial infection was no longer a likely death sentence.
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We developed vaccines that practically wiped out killer diseases like polio like polio.
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And then there's birth control,
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the pill, which in the 50s gave women a level of control over their lives that fundamentally changed societies everywhere.
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But here's the catch, and this is super important for your essays,
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it was a total double-edged sword.
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Sure, we got better at fighting old diseases,
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but being so connected also meant new diseases could spread across the globe in a flash.
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Sound familiar?
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Think of the 1918 flu or, you know, COVID-19.
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Meanwhile, you still had diseases of poverty like malaria hanging around in poorer regions.
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And as we started living longer,
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we face new challenges like Alzheimer's.
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So pro tip for the exam,
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whenever you talk about technology,
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always, always discuss the good and the bad.
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It's a perfect complexity point.
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And of course, there was a huge environmental price tag for all this progress.
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More people and more factories meant we needed more resources.
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So forests were cleared for farms at an alarming rate.
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We burned tons of fossil fuels,
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which led to horrifying air pollution,
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like the Great Smog in London in 1952 that literally killed thousands.
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This was the beginning of the big modern debates about pollution,
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deforestation, and eventually climate change.
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Okay.
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So we've got the tech.
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Now let's follow the money.
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How did all these new connections reshape the world's economy?
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We're moving into the global marketplace where a whole new economic system took over,
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creating massive wealth for some and a whole lot of anger from others.
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So the dominant economic idea that really takes hold in the late 20th century is something called neoliberalism.
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It sounds complicated, but the core idea is pretty simple.
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Less government, more free market.
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The thinking was, if you just let businesses compete with fewer regulations,
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everyone will be better off.
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This was the playbook for leaders like Ronald Reagan in the U.S and Margaret Thatcher in the U.K.
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They pushed hard for deregulation, privatization, and lower taxes.
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And this new system led to a massive reshuffling of jobs around the world.
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You started to see a new division of labor.
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On one side, you had the developed countries,
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the so-called knowledge economies, like the US or Finland,
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focusing on things like software, finance, and design.
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And on the other side,
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all those manufacturing jobs, making clothes,
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electronics, you name it, moved to places like Vietnam or Mexico,
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where the labor was a lot cheaper.
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Remember the shipping container?
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This is where it really comes into play.
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Yeah, so not everyone was cheering for this new global setup.
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A huge pushback started to build the anti-globalization movement.
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Their argument was pretty straightforward.
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This whole system is rigged.
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They said it puts corporate profits ahead of everything else.
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Workers' rights, environmental protection, you name it.
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They saw a world of rising inequality and exploitation.
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And that simmering anger just boiled over in 1999.
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In Seattle, during a meeting of the World Trade Organization,
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the streets just exploded.
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You had this incredible mix of people,
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Union workers, environmentalists, students, all coming together to protest.
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They literally shut the city down.
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The battle for Seattle, as it was called,
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was a massive wake-up call that showed the world there was a real,
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powerful, and organized opposition to this new global order.
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Okay, we've talked tech, we've talked money,
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but globalization is also about what's inside our heads,
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our ideas, our music, our values.
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So next up, we're diving into this world of shared ideas.
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We're going to look at global culture,
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the rise of human rights,
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and the big international groups we created to try and manage this brand new interconnected planet.
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Man, culture just started flying everywhere.
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And yeah, for sure, American culture was a huge export.
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Think Hollywood movies and Coca-Cola being everywhere.
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But, and this is key,
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it wasn't just a one-way street.
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Not at all.
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You have India's Bollywood pumping out more movies than Hollywood.
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You have K-pop from South Korea taking over the world,
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thanks to things like social media.
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And then you have these massive global events like the Olympics or the World Cup that billions of people watch together.
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It's a much more complex mix than just Americanization.
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This era also saw people coming together across borders to fight for change.
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A huge starting point was the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights back in 1948.
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This was a radical idea that every single person on Earth has certain basic rights,
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no matter what.
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And that idea became the fuel for so many other movements.
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The fight for women's rights went global.
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The push to end apartheid in South Africa,
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led by figures like Nelson Mandela, became a worldwide cause.
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You also see global movements for environmentalism,
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like Greenpeace, and for economic justice,
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like the Fair Trade Movement.
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So with all this connection,
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you need some referees, right?
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That's where institutions like the United Nations come in.
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And the UN has done some really important stuff.
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It's a place for countries to talk instead of fight,
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and its agencies like UNICEF do amazing humanitarian work,
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but it's also got some major flaws.
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The biggest one is the Security Council,
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where just five countries have veto power,
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which can basically paralyze the whole organization.
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And because of that, the UN has failed tragically at times,
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like its inability to stop the genocide in Rwanda in 1994.
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Alright, let's bring it all home.
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This is probably the most important skill for the AP exam,
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continuity and change over time.
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So we've had this crazy century of globalization.
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The big question is, what's fundamentally different about the world now?
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And what's just the same old story and new clothes?
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The changes are massive, right?
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We can talk to anyone, anywhere, instantly.
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Our economies are tangled together like never before.
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We have global institutions like the UN.
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But look at what stayed the same.
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That big economic divide between the rich countries of the global north and the poorer countries of the global south?
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That's still very much a thing.
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A hangover from the age of empires.
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We definitely still have wars and conflict.
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And for all the talk of a global culture,
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people are fiercely protective of their local traditions and identities,
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sometimes even more so because of globalization.
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So if you remember one thing from Unit 9, make it this.
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The world is more connected than ever before,
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for better and for worse.
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That's the whole story.
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It's created incredible opportunities and wealth,
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but it's also made us vulnerable to new problems,
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made old inequalities even worse,
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and created totally new reasons to fight.
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It's messy, it's complicated, and that's the point.
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And that brings us to the big final question,
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the one that history always leaves us with.
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As our world keeps getting more and more tangled together,
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how do we deal with all these challenges?
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How do we fix the inequality
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and handle all these competing interests to build a future that's actually sustainable and fair for everyone?
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There's no easy answer, but that's what thinking like a historian is all about.
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Alright, that's it for Unit 9.
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Good luck on that exam, you've got this.
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Thank you.
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이번 레슨에 대하여

이번 레슨에서는 1900년부터 현재까지의 세계화에 대해 학습합니다. 세계화는 기술, 경제, 문화의 발전으로 인한 상호 연결성을 탐구하는 것으로, 이 수업을 통해 우리는 세계가 어떻게 연결되었는지를 이해할 수 있습니다. 이 단원을 통해 배운 내용은 AP 시험에서 8~10%를 차지하므로 매우 중요합니다. 따라서 이 기회를 통해 영어 실력을 향상시키고, 발음 교정에도 도움을 줄 것입니다.

주요 어휘 및 구문

  • 세계화 (Globalization) - 국가와 문화가 서로 연결되는 과정
  • 기술 (Technology) - 발전한 기계와 시스템
  • 경제 (Economics) - 자원과 재화의 생산 및 분배
  • 문화 (Culture) - 한 사회의 관습과 가치
  • 시장 (Marketplace) - 거래가 이루어지는 장소
  • 통신 (Communication) - 정보 전달의 방식
  • 운송 (Shipping) - 물품을 이동시키는 과정
  • 원거리 (Distance) - 물리적으로 떨어져 있는 상태

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