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Ch. 25 Section 3 & 4.

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Presentation on theme: "Ch. 25 Section 3 & 4."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ch. 25 Section 3 & 4

2 Section 3 Revolutionary Chaos in China
As central authority collapsed in China, rival Nationalist and Communist Party forces briefly joined together in ranks. The two groups split after a Nationalist massacre of Communists.

3 The Nationalists, led by Chiang Kai-shek, founded a new Chinese republic in 1928.
The Communists, led by Mao Zedong, went into hiding in the cities. Mao's plans, however, were for a revolution led by peasants. In 1933 Mao's forces used guerrilla tactics to break through Nationalist lines closing in on them.

4 They then began the Long March to the last surviving Communist base.
Chiang had plans for land reform and a Western-style constitutional government.

5 To make Western ideas acceptable, he blended them with Confucian themes.
Although he did achieve some meaningful reforms, Chiang's support came mainly from the rural gentry and the urban middle class; his reforms did little to redistribute wealth.

6 Section 4 Nationalism in Latin America
American investors directly controlled many Latin American industries beginning in the 1920s. Latin American nationalists claimed that U.S. investments propped up the regions' dictators. The Great Depression weakened regional economies and led to the creation of government-run industries, since Latin Americans could not afford many imported goods.

7 Industrialization became a core government project.
Economic crisis and instability prompted military leaders to overthrow the elected governments—which were dominated by small elites—and to establish authoritarian regimes. Dictators sometimes gained an urban following by promising better factory conditions. Industrialization became a core government project.

8 In Mexico, a single-party state dominated society.
Fascist symbols and nationalist slogans were used amid harsh political repression. In Mexico, a single-party state dominated society. The popular Depression-era leader Lázaro Cárdenas nationalized foreign-owned oil companies and redistributed land to Mexican peasants. Artists helped build national identity in many Latin American countries.

9 Works Cited


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