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Growth of Industrial Prosperity. New ProductsSubstitution of steel for ironElectricity, internal combustion engineNew PatternsIncreased industrial productionGermany replaces Britain as industrial leaderEurope's two economic zonesToward a World EconomyEconomic developments, transportation revolution (marine transport and railroads)Products from all over the worldEurope dominated world economy with surplus of manufactured goods, markets, capital, industries, and military might.
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1. The Emergence of Mass Society in the Western World
2. Growth of Industrial Prosperity New Products
Substitution of steel for iron
Electricity, internal combustion engine
New Patterns
Increased industrial production
Germany replaces Britain as industrial leader
Europes two economic zones
Toward a World Economy
Economic developments, transportation revolution (marine transport and railroads)
Products from all over the world
Europe dominated world economy with surplus of manufactured goods, markets, capital, industries, and military might
3. The Spread of Industrialization The Spread of Industrialization
Russia Sergei Witte
35,000 miles of railroad track, growth of steel and coal industry, providing of worlds oil
Japan
Government financed industries, built railroads, bought foreign experts to train Japanese in industrial techniques
Developed industries in tea, silk, armaments, and shipbuilding
4. Women and Work New Job Opportunities
Women did low-wage work at home in sweatshops to support families
Second industrial revolution created new jobs for women
Clerks, typists, secretaries, file clerks and sales clerks, teachers, nurses
Offered freedom from domestic patterns
5. Industrial Regions of Europe at end of 19th C
6. Organizing the Working Class Marxist Theory
Karl Marx (1818-1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820-1895), The Communist Manifesto
History is that of class struggles
Overthrow the bourgeoisie
Eventually there would be a classless society
Socialist Parties
German Social Democratic Party (SPD), 1875
Reichstag worked to pass legislation to improve conditions of workers
4 million votes in 1912 elections in Germany
Second International
Revisionists
Revolutionary socialism
Trade Unions
Workers in factories in Britain organized with 4 million union members in 1914
7. The Emergence of Mass Society New Urban Environment
Growth of cities: by 1914 80 percent of the population in Britain lived in cities (40 percent in 1800); 45 percent in France (25 percent in 1800); 60 percent in Germany (25 percent in 1800); and 30 percent in eastern Europe (10 percent in 1800)
Migration from rural to urban
Improving living conditions
Boards of health set up
Clean water into the city
Expulsion of sewage
Housing needs
V.A. Huber
British Housing Act, 1890, allowed town councils to construct cheap housing for workers
8. The Social Structure of Mass Society The Elite
5 percent of the population that controlled 30 to 40 percent of wealth
Alliance of wealthy business elite and traditional aristocracy
The Middle Classes
Upper middle class, middle middle-class, lower middle-class
Professionals
White-collar workers
Middle class values in the Victorian period
The Lower classes
80 percent of the European population
Agriculture
Skilled, semi-skilled, unskilled workers
9. A Middle-Class Family
10. The Experiences of Women Marriage and the Family
Difficulty for single women to earn a living
Most women married
Birth control
Female control of family size
Middle-class family
Men provided income and women focused on household and child care
Fostered the idea of togetherness
Victorian ideas
Working-class families
Daughters work until married
1890 to 1914 higher paying jobs made it possible to live on the husbands wages
Material consumption
11. Movement for Womens Rights Fight to own property
Access to higher education by middle and upper-middle class women
Access to jobs dominated by men: Teaching, nursing
Demand for equal political rights
Most vocal was the British movement
Emmeline Pankhurst (1858-1928), Womens Social and Political Union, 1903
Suffragettes
Support of peace movements
The New Woman
Bertha von Suttner
12. Education in an Age of Mass Society In early 19th century reserved for elites or the wealthier middle class
Between 1870 and 1914 most Western governments began to offer at least primary education to both boys and girls between 6 and 12
State teacher training schools
Reasons:
Needs of industrialization
Need for an educated electorate
To instill patriotism
Compulsory elementary education created a demand for teachers, most were women
Natural role of women
13. Leisure in an Age of Mass Society
Created by the industrial system
Transportation systems meant:
Working class could go to amusement parks, dance halls, beaches, and team sporting activities
14. The National State Tradition and Change in Latin America
Exportation of foodstuffs to Europe and the United States
Importation of finished goods
Overall situation:
Largely rural
Former slaves and Indians on the bottom
Growth in the middle sectors of society
Looked to the United States
Working class expanded
Growth of the working class led to industrialization
Industrialization led to the growth of unions
Elites still had the political influence
15. Political Change in Latin America Large landowners took a more direct interest in politics
Land owners might support dictators to ensure their interests
Porfirio Diaz, ruled Mexico from 1876 1910
Francisco Madero came to power
Demands for agrarian reform led by Emiliano Zapata
The United States becomes the power in the west.
16. Rise of the United States Shift to an industrial nation, 1860-1914
By 1900 out produced Britain in steel
Urbanization
By 1900, the US was the worlds richest nation, but:
9 percent of population owned 71 percent of the wealth
Unsafe working conditions, work discipline and cycles of high unemployment led to unions
The American Federation of Unions formed
Progressive Era
Reform
Theodore Roosevelt (1901-1909) Woodrow Wilson, 1913-1921
17. United States as a World Power Annexation of Samoan Islands, Hawaiian Islands
Acquisition of Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines from the Spanish-American War
18. Growth of Canada Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick 1870
Manitoba, British Columbia 1871
William Laurier, 1896
19. Western Europe: The Growth of Political Democracy Britain
Two-party parliamentary system
By 1918 all males, over 21 could vote; women over 30
By 1900 the emergence of the Labor Party
Social Reforms that followed
National Insurance Act, 1911
France
Constitution of 1875; the Third Republic formed
Bicameral legislature, universal male suffrage, president, premier the leader of government
Coalition governments had to be formed to stay in power
Italy
Industrial north and poverty-stricken south
Turmoil of labor and industry
20. Central and Eastern Europe: Persistence of the Old Order Germany
Lower house, Reichstag, elected by universal male suffrage
Ministers responsible to the emperor
Emperor commanded the armed forces and controlled foreign policy
Emperor William II, 1888-1918
Demands for democracy
Movement to block democracy
Austria-Hungary
Dual Monarchy
Emperor Francis Joseph, 1848-1916
German minority
Problems of ethnic groups
21. Russia Assassination of Alexander II in 1881
Alexander III, 1881-1894, felt reform was a mistake
Nicholas II, 1894-1917, wanted to rule with absolute power
Growth in Marxist Social Democratic Party
Revolt in 1905
Defeat of Russians by Japanese in 1904-1905
Results of antigovernment rebellions
23. Europe in 1871
24. International Rivalries and the Winds of War Bismarck made alliances to preserve the new German state
Bismarck removed by William II in 1890
Resulting alliance system
Triple Alliance Germany, Austria, Italy
Triple Entente, 1907 Britain, France, Russia
Crisis in the Balkans
By 1878, Greece, Serbia, and Romania were independent
Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina under Austrian protectorate
Bulgaria under Russian protectorate
Austria annexes Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1908
Serbian protest, Russian support of Serbia
Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913
25. Toward the Modern Consciousness: Intellectual and Cultural Developments A New Physics
Westerners and the mechanical conception of the universe
Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
Theory of relativity
Energy of matter is equivalent to its mass times the square of the velocity of light
Sigmund Freud and the Emergence of Psychoanalysis
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
Human behavior determined by the unconscious, past experience, and internal forces
Repression begins in childhood
26. The Impact of Darwin: Social Darwinism and Racism Darwins ideas applied to human society
Houston Stewart Chamberlain (1855-1927)
Modern-day Germans the only pure successors of the Aryans
Anti-Semitism
In nineteenth century many Jews left the ghetto and became assimilated into the cultures around them
Anti-Jewish parties
72 percent of worlds Jewish population lived in eastern Europe
Movement to the United States and Palestine
Theodor Herzl (1860-1904)
Zionism
27. Palestine
28. Culture of Modernity Symbolists
Poetry, influenced by the ideas of Freud
Views
Art
Impressionism
Camille Pissarro (1830-1903)
Berthe Morisot (1841-1895)
Post-Impressionism - Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890)
Photography - George Eastman 1888
Cubism - Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Visual reality - Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944)
29. Discussion Questions What were the main ideas of Karl Marx, and what role did they play in politics and the union movement in the late 19th C and early 20th C?
What is meant by the term mass society, and what were its main characteristics
What intellectual and cultural developments in the late 19th C and early 20th C opened the way to a modern consciousness?