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Nationalism in the Developing World Mr. Ermer World History AP Miami Beach Senior High
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India British communication infrastructure connects far- flung Indian population British create educated class of Indian administrators Educated in European politics and values Indian National Congress (INC) & Muslim League Wilson’s Fourteen Points, Lenin’s proletariat uprising Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948) Ahisma (tolerance & nonviolence) Satyagnraha (truth and firmness) Government of India Act (1937) Creates institutions of self-governance Indian princes, Muslims make India Act unsuccessful Muhammad Ali Jinnah Proposed a two state solution to Indian independence
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1947: Partition of British India
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China 1912: Sun Yatsen declares China a republic Unstable because of warlords, poor economy, treaties Chinese nationalists encouraged by Wilson’s 14 Points Instead Treaty of Paris gives Japan more power in China May Fourth Movement Anti-imperialist student protests Chinese Communist Party (CCP) founded by Mao Zedong Sun Yatsen’s Three Principles Democratic government, Chinese unity, development Nationalist People’s Party CCP members join NPP Soviet Union lends assistance in organization of party Civil War 1925: Sun Yatsen dies, Chiang Kai-shek takes leadership Northern Expedition targets communists Establish Nationalist government in Nanjing Long March: Communist Red Army forced to remote area
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Japan After WWI, Japan considered a “Big Five Power” Supported early efforts at disarmament, peace Washington Naval Conference, Kellogg-Briand Pact Japanese economy suffers through 1920s Calls for expanded freedoms, political participation Conservatives block most movements Only expand suffrage to all men Military takes control of foreign policy Events in Eurasia, Chinese Civil War begin to undermine Japanese interests in Manchuria 1931: Japanese forces take control of Manchuria Mukden Incident Japanese establish Manchuko in Manchuria Japan dominates China, League of Nations protests Japan leaves League of Nations
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Japanese Expansion
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Africa WWI: Africans begin to fight back against Europeans Transition from self-sufficient economies to trade dependent economies Europeans invest heavily in infrastructure Taxes drive Africans into labor market Europeans control most means of production Cash crops and mineral wealth African Nationalism Educated “New Elite” African class emerges Jomo Kenyatta Appropriate European notion of the “Nation” Some look to precolonial societies for identity Some look to race for creation of unity Pan-Africanism
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Pan-Africanism
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Latin America New ideas begin to affect political climate University protests and Communist parties Concern for Indians and African-Americans Latin American economy export based Dependent on U.S. and European markets Dollar Diplomacy & the Roosevelt Corollary U.S. money and military intertwined in Latin America FDR’s Good Neighbor Policy U.S. signs “sweetheart treaties” trains local armies Good Neighbor Policy failures and successes Nicaraguan Civil War Lazaro Cardenas and PeMex Cultural Exchange and the GNP Carmen Miranda and the United Fruit Company
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