Chapter 24: Mass Society and Democracy Growth of Industrial Prosperity
The Second Industrial Revolution Bessemer Process Henry Bessemer Production of steel Cheaper and more efficient process Electricity Thomas Edison’s electrical lights Joseph Swan’s light bulb Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone Guglielmo Marconi’s radio waves
The Second Industrial Revolution Internal combustion engine Automobiles The Wright Brothers’ airplane Kitty Hawk, North Carolina 1903 Led to airlines beginning in 1919 Assembly line (Henry Ford) Manufactured goods more efficiently Instead of the people moving, the product moved down a conveyor belt Led to mass production (benefits?)
Organizing the Working Classes Karl Marx Communist Manifesto (1848) Industrial Revolution led to poor factory conditions Capitalism was the problem behind it Claimed all of world history is “history of class struggles” Battle between: Bourgeoisie (Middle Class Oppressors) Owned and ran everything Proletariat (Working Class Oppressed) Controlled and owned nothing Eventually this will lead to revolution and destruction of classes
Organizing the Working Classes Socialism Parties formed based on Marxist ideas German Social Democratic Party Wanted revolution to become one political party Competition for election into parliament Would allow for laws regarding working conditions to be passed However people were divided over how these parties should be run Some wanted true Marxists ideas and revolution Others wanted more peaceful methods (revisionists)
Chapter 24: Mass Society and Democracy Emergence of Mass Society
The New Urban Environment Movement in populations People moving to cities to find jobs Before they lived in country and farmed Led to need for improved housing and sanitation Europe in 1850 and 1890 England: 40% lived in cities (up to 60% in 1890) France: 15% lived in cities (up to 25% in 1890) Prussia: 10% lived in cities (up to 30% in 1890)
The New Urban Environment The Need for Sanitation All new buildings needed running water and internal drainage systems Creation of aqueducts and tunnels to bring in fresh water to cities Introduction of gas and electric heaters for hot water City officials required to frequently check buildings for hazards All used to combat diseases in the cities
Social Structure of Mass Society The New Elite Top 5% of the wealthy Controlled 30-40% of wealth in society Bankers, merchants, industrialists, aristocrats The Middle Class Made up of levels Top: doctors, lawyers, engineers, architechs Middle: shopkeepers, traders, farmers Lower: salesmen, phone operators, bookkeepers
Social Structure of Mass Society The Working Class Made up 80% of society Skilled workers, unskilled workers, poor farmers, sharecroppers As time goes by, they earn better wages, better work conditions, and shorter work days
Women’s Experiences Jobs Marriage and Family Second Industrial Revolution brought around job opportunities (secretaries, typists, salesclerks) Marriage and Family Women began having fewer children (Why?) Children began working at the age of 9 or 10 in working class families
Women’s Experiences Women’s Rights Feminism Rights fought for The movement for women’s rights Rights fought for Owning Property Most couldn’t own property until 1870 to 1900 Access to colleges Wanted to become doctors but mostly allowed to only be nurses Suffrage The right to vote Was not attained by the mass until after World War 1
Education Education Meant only for the elite at first, spread to other classes at the turn of the century Working class kids went to school up until the age of 12 or 13 The whole goal of education for the masses was to create better educated voters Secondary goal was to create skilled workers for the Industrial Revolution
Chapter 24: Mass Society and Democracy The National State and Democracy
Western Europe Political democracy Signs Great Britain Universal male suffrage Ministerial responsibility Political Parties Great Britain Established two-party system Liberals and Conservatives Established prime minister Voting rights: men over 21 and women over 30 (By 1918)
Western Europe Political democracy France 3rd Republic (1875) Republican constitution President and two house system Senate elected by high ranking officials Voters elected the lower house
Central and Eastern Europe Germany Established by Otto von Bismarck Two house system Lower house elected by voters Ministers of government reported to emperor not house Emperor Controlled army, foreign policy, and bureaucracy Austria-Hungary Established ministerial responsibility and two house system Emperor Francis Joseph ignored it all and did things his way
Central and Eastern Europe Russia Czar Nicholas II Began in 1894 Believed in absolute power of the czars Socialism growing in Russia with industrialization Revolt leads to changes 1905 Granted civil liberties Established the Duma (Congress) By 1907 was taking power away from Duma again
The United States Post Civil War 13th Amendment: Abolished Slavery 14th Amendment: Gave African Americans citizenship 15th Amendment: Protected voting rights By 1900 Richest nation in the world Top 10% had 70% of wealth Hawaii Seen as a productive colony Annexed in 1898 for its sugar fields and pineapples Spanish American War (1898) Gained Puerto Rico, Guam, and Philippines from Spain
Creation of Alliances Triple Alliance (1882) Triple Entente (1907) Germany Austria-Hungary Italy Triple Entente (1907) Great Britain France Russia
Chapter 24: Mass Society and Democracy Modern ideas and Uncertainty
Modernism 1870-1914 Rebellion against traditional style of art and literature Literature Addressed social problems Women in society Alcoholism Urban slums Symbolist writers True reality was the human mind Everything seen is just symbols of the mind
Modernism Painting Impressionism Postimpressionism Cubism Abstract Went to the outdoors for inspiration (Nature) Claude Monet Postimpressionism Art as a spiritual experience Vincent van Gogh (Starry Nights) Cubism Geometric designs in art Pablo Picasso Abstract Line and color only (Speaks to the soul) Wassily Kandinsky
Claude Monet- Japanese Bridge
Van Gogh- Starry Nights
Picasso- Houses on the Hill
Pablo Picasso- The Old Guitarist
Wassily Kandinsky-
Modernism Architecture Music Functionalism Igor Stravinsky Buildings should be functional not ornate Simplify buildings Louis H. Sullivan Music Igor Stravinsky The Rite of Spring (1913) Bold rhythms and expressive sound
Uncertainty in Science Marie Curie French Scientist Discovered element radium Gave off energy known as radiation Found within an atom Albert Einstein Theory of Relativity Space and time not absolute but relative to who is looking at it Matter is another form of energy Sigmund Freud Psychoanalysis Allows therapist to go deep into a person’s mind and unlock memories Helped to unlock repressed memories to help heal
Extreme Nationalism Social Darwinism Herbert Spencer Social progress came from the idea “survival of the fittest” Strong survive and weak die Social progress stresses helping the weak/poor Nations were in a “struggle for existence” Nations compete for resources Used to justify racism and discrimination
Extreme Nationalism Anti-Semitism Hostility towards Jewish people Dreyfus Affair French military officer accused of selling secrets Evidence showed otherwise Russia Pogroms Organized massacres of the Jewish people 25,000 emigrated from Russia Zionism Movement to create homeland for Jews in Palestine