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A Great Acceleration of Technological Innovation Use of new energy sources - (steam engines, petroleum engines) Britain - output increased some fiftyfold in the period 1750–1900 Greatest breakthrough was the steam engine Agriculture was transformed
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Why Europe??? Small, highly competitive states European rulers allies w/ merchants - as opposed to china It was in governments’ interest to encourage commerce and innovation In Venice and Holland, merchants controlled the state - Quest for the products and ideas of Asia - Competition with Indian cotton cloth manufacture - Popularity of other Asian goods prompted imitation
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Steam Engine
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Why Britain Britain was the most commercialized of Europe’s larger countries - small farmers had been pushed out (enclosure movement) - market production fueled by a number of agricultural innovations - guilds had largely disappeared Supply of industrial workers with few options British aristocrats were interested in commerce British commerce was worldwide - Royal Navy protected a large merchant fleet
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Why Britain British political life encouraged commercialization and economic innovation - policy of religious toleration (established 1688) - British government imposed tariffs to protect its businessmen - it w as easy to form companies and forbid workers’ unions - unified internal market, thanks to road and canal system - patent laws protected inventors’ interests - checks on royal authority gave more room for private enterprise
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Why Britain Emphasis of the Scientific Revolution was different in Great Britain - on the continent: logic, deduction, mathematical reasoning - in Britain: observation and experiment, measurement, mechanical devices, practical applications - in Britain, artisan/craftsman inventors were in close contact with scientists and entrepreneurs
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Why Britain The British Royal Society (founded 1660) took the role of promoting “useful knowledge” - publicized information on recent scientific advances Britain had plenty of coal and iron ore Britain was not devastated by the Napoleonic wars Social change was possible without revolution
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The First Industrial Society There was a massive increase in output in Britain - rapid development of railroad systems - increase was in mining, manufacturing, and services - agriculture became less important by comparison Vast transformation of daily life - it was a traumatic process for many - different people were affected in different ways Aristocracy Declined - urban wealth became more important Businessmen and Bankers became elites
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The Middle Class Upper middle class: some became extremely wealthy, bought into aristocratic life Middle class: large numbers of smaller businessmen and professionals - politically liberal - stood for thrift, hard work, rigid morals, and cleanliness
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The Middle Class Samuel Smiles, Self-Help (1859): individuals are responsible for their own destiny Middle-class women - moral centers of society - managers of consumption (rise of “shopping”) - rising “ideology of domesticity”
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Samuel Smiles – Self Help
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The Laboring Classes Suffered the most and benefited the least By 1900, London was most populous in the world - vast overcrowding - inadequate sanitation and water supplies - epidemics - few public services or open spaces - little contact between the rich and the poor
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The Laboring Class Work Conditions - long hours, low wages, and child labor were typical for the poor - monotony of work, direct supervision, discipline - industrial work was insecure - many girls and young women worked Women usually left outside paid employment when they married but often continued to earn money in cottage industries
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Factories
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Social Protest among the Laborers “Friendly Societies,” of artisans, for self-help were common Other skilled artisans sometimes wrecked machinery and burned mills Some joined political movements, aimed to enfranchise working-class men Trade unions were legalized in 1824 - growing numbers of factory workers joined them - fought for better wages and working conditions - at first, upper classes feared them
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Ideology of Socialism Spreads Karl Marx (1818–1883) laid out a full ideology of socialism - human history is a history of class struggle - a growing hostility between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat - argued that capitalism can never end poverty Foretold a future (communist) golden age when industrial technology would serve the whole community - socialist ideas were attractive among more radicals - even more attractive in Germany - but the British working class was not overtly revolutionary by then
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Karl Marx
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British Social Conditions Conditions improved for workers in the second half of the 19 th century - wages improved - cheap imported food improved diets - infant death rates fell - male workers gradually got the vote - sanitary reform cleaned up cities - even some urban parks were established However, vast inequalities still remained
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Industrialization Spreads By 1900, industrialization spread to USA, Russia and Japan Women received lower wages than men - accused of taking jobs from men Establishment of trade unions + socialist movements French Industrialization – slower Germany focused on heavy industry and huge companies
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Industrialization in the USA Began small with factories in New England? - Lowell mills After the civil war industrialization grew - from 1865-1914 became most industrialized in world Mass Production / Interchangeable Parts - Ford, Carnegie, Rockefeller (self-made) Culture of consumption – Sears Catalogs
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Henry Ford
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Social Divisions Emerged in USA Growing gap between rich and poor, slums emerge Growing protest from lower class - erupted in violence (Ford and Pinkertons) Socialism did not become popular in USA - Unions were conservative - Better quality of life than in Europe - Middle class aspired for white collar jobs “Populists” denounced corporate interests “Progressives” – “fix” the social problems
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“The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair
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Russian Industrialization Russia was an Absolute Monarchy It had more control of the state than anywhere in the western world 1900 – no political parties, no elections, no Parliament In Russia – the state and not society initiated change Peter the Great (1689-1725) – “Transformation from above” Catherine the Great (1762-1796) – tried to Europeanize Russian culture and intellectual life The state freed the serfs in 1861
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Catherine the Great
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Russian Industrialization Russian industrialization launched in 1890’s - focused on railroads and heavy industry Industry focused in a few major cities with huge companies This generated a Marxist militant labor movement A growing middle class grew a hatred of Russia’s deep conservatism Russian working class radicalized quickly - harsh conditions - no legal outlet for grievances - large scale strikes, sabotage
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Marxist Socialism in Russia Marxist Socialism appealed to educated Russians and gave them hope Russian Social-Democratic Party formed 1898 - workers education, unions, revolutionary thought 1905 – major rebellion, workers went on strike - formed “soviets” – representative councils - mutiny in military (appointed officers) Brutally suppressed by tsar, but tsar forced to make reforms - constitution, unions, created Duma Ultimately revolution breaks out during WWI, led by Lenin
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Bolshevik Revolution
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Industrialization in Latin America Only modest experiments in industry It did not transform societies Non-industrialized societies still felt the impact of Europe and North America after independence
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Latin American Independence Took a long time, was very destructive 18 separate countries formed International Wars hindered development of new nations - Mexico lost vast territories to the United States (1846–1848) - Paraguay was devastated by war (1864–1870) Political life was highly unstable “caudillos” – military strongmen, often gained power
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An Independent Latin America Independence = little change to social life - slavery was abolished (though not until late 1880s in Brazil and Cuba) - most legal distinctions between racial categories were abolished - but creole whites remained overwhelmingly in control of productive economic resources - small middle class allowed social mobility for a few - the vast majority were impoverished
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Latin America in the Second Half of the 19 th Century Greater stability, integration into global economy Rapid growth of exports to industrialized countries - exported food products and raw materials - imported textiles, machinery, tools, weapons Major investments from Europe and USA in Latin America
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Latin American Industrialization Trying to become like Europe - rapid population increase - rapid urbanization - actively sought European immigrants Few people benefited from the export boom - upper-class landowners did very well - middle class grew some - over 90 percent of the population was still lower- class
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The Export Boom Export Boom did not cause successful industrialization - little internal market for manufactured goods - rich had little incentive to invest in manufacturing - governments supported free trade, so cheaper and higher-quality foreign goods were available than could be made at home - economic growth was dependent on Europe and USA - some have regarded it as a new form of colonialism - the case of the “banana republics” under pressure from the United States - repeated U.S. military intervention
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Banana Republic
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Towards Democracy? Only in Mexico did conditions provoke a nationwide revolution - overthrow of the dictator Porfirio Díaz (1876–1911) - major, bloody conflict (1910–1920) - huge peasant armies - transformed Mexico New Constitution (1917) - universal suffrage - land redistribution - disestablishment of the Catholic Church - minimum wage
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