450 likes | 591 Views
Europe Industry and Urbanization . 1750 - 1900. Unit Outline. Revolution in Industry Cause Impact (including social themes) Response Urbanization Realism and Romanticism . New Terms (write the down). Proletariat – Working class Bourgeoisie –
E N D
Europe Industry and Urbanization 1750 - 1900
Unit Outline • Revolution in Industry • Cause • Impact (including social themes) • Response • Urbanization • Realism and Romanticism
New Terms(write the down) • Proletariat – • Working class • Bourgeoisie – • Wealthy middle class that have accumulated wealth through working; use that wealth to invest in charter companies and joint-stock companies via the BOURSE, a kind of stock exchange.
Industrial Revolution? • Industrial – yes • Revolution – no • Not a violent, drastic change, BUT, it has larger effect on Europe (and that’s what we focus on in this class for the AP test) than the French Revolution
Industrial Revolution • Began in Britain (representative of other nations who will industrialize) • Spread elsewhere quickly via new communication and transportation • Four “factors of production” necessary for industrialization: • Land- • Labor- • Capital- • Entrepreneurship-
Agricultural Revolution (part II) • New crops (potatoes, corn) introduced (so what?) • Farmers rotated crops (so what?) • Enclosure movement privatized land (so what?) • New Machines and Fertilizers developed (so what?) • Why is this slide here?
Answer : Industrial and Agricultural Revolutions are Connected (can you figured out why?)
Technological Innovations of the “First” Industrial Revolution: Textiles, Railroads, Iron and Coal • Spinning Jenny • Water Frame • Cotton Gin • Steam Engine • Factory power • Steamships • Locomotives (marriage of iron and coal)
How and Why did the locomotive change society? • Drivers in here? Anyone?
Wait – there’s moreSecond Industrial Revolution • Age of steel – Bessemer’s process • Chemicals • Electricity • Petroleum • Hydroelectric power
Communication and Transportation Revolutions • Telegraph • Telephone • Lightbulb • Internal Combustion Engine • Radio • Airplane • Dynamite
And more(another scientific revolution) • Pasteurization • Vaccination • X-rays • Natural Selection • We could go on – but we won’t
More Improvements in Agriculture • Chemical fertilizers • Refrigeration, railroad transport • Canning (tin) • Mechanized threshers, reapers • (necessary in Britain and Germany where farm labor was scarce) • Farm cooperatives for small farmers to help them purchase new equipment and fertilizer
European Industry – A Comparison • Page 736 • Who took the lead in industry in 1750? • Who is in the lead in 1913? Why might this be? • What are the 3 leading European industrial cities by 1913? • Who were they in 1860?
New Leaders in Industry • Britain found it difficult to implement changes of the second industrial revolution into it’s established plants • British investors were wary of new innovations and new industries, and did not encourage scientific or technical education • Germany, on the other hand, being a late comer in the age of industry, built the most modern, efficient industrial plants and was eager to invest in new industries and education
Advanced industrial European nations that had a high standard of living, decent transportation, healthy, educated population: Great Britain France Northern Italy West side of Austria-Hungary Belgium Netherlands Germany Backward, non-industrialized Europe: Southern Italy East Austria-Hungary Russia Spain Portugal Balkan kingdoms The Great Economic Divide
What About The Middle Class? Social lines are no longer distinct or easily recognizable – The beginnings of MASS SOCIETY (Think: Mass Production = Mass Society)
Wealthy Elite – Aristocrats and Upper Middle Class • Consisted of industrialists, bankers, merchants and “plutocrats” (former aristocrats who invested in industry). 73% of millionaires in 1850 came from the aristocratic class, by 1900, only 27% will be aristocrats • Aristocrats and the wealthy upper middle class mingled – often marrying, with the upper class gaining “titles” and the aristocrats gaining cash
The New Middle Class • Make up about 20% of the population, 50-60% of the national wealth (old aristocracy makes up about 5%, 33% of the wealth, very poor working classses make up the rest – 75-80% of the population, less than 10% of the wealth) • Sharp divisions exited in the middle class • Upper middle class – successful industrialists, banking families • Upper middle class • Wealthy (multiple homes, noble lifestyles • Often married into the noble aristocracy • Solid middle class • Business professionals, moderately successful industrialists and merchants, engineers, doctors and lawyers • Comfortable, but not excessive, wealth • Lower Middle class • Small traders, shopkeepers and manufacturers, white-collar workers • Lack of income taxes on the wealthy meant a large gap between the wealthy and the poor
Pre-industry upper class Who What Where Why Pre-industry lower class Who What Where Why Industrial Age upper class Who What Where Why Industrial Age lower class Who What Where Why Social Consequences: “New” Social Classes
Middle Class Culture – How the Diverse Middle Class was Thinly United • Ate well (use of servants), housed well, dressed well – department stores carried cheaper clothing • Advanced education was growing expenses and was highly encouraged as a way to get ahead • CODE OF EXPECTED BEHAVIOR • Christian morality, hard work, discipline and personal achievement stressed • Emulated by the Aristocratic and Working classes
Era of the Middle Class • The family was the central institution - men worked outside the home and women, having fewer children and household servants, had more domestic leisure time which they were expected to use constructively: • British “Victorians” fostered the idea of family togetherness, such as the “family Christmas” and picnics • They participated in craft and music education to help them provide the proper home environment • In reality, however, women worked very hard to keep up the middle class “façade” • Ideas of the late 18th century promoted the idea of a long childhood and that their environment had a lot to do with their development; mothers were to oversee the proper development of children. New children's toys promoted education and traditional gender roles • Sons were expected to follow in their fathers footsteps, engage in sports to “toughen them up”, and other activities promoted their role in the military and character-building (boys scouts, for example) • Ideas of the middle class will be copied by others, especially the working class
Marriage and Family Patterns • For the working class, romantic love replaced long courtships and mercenary love by the mid-19th century • For middle class men, economics weighed heavily on the decision to marry therefore many married at an older age to wives much younger • Young ladies were well-supervised as parents schemed for the proper marriage • Young boys had considerable sexual experience by the time they were married (with maids, prostitutes) • Prostitution • Thinking of wives in terms of money, middle and upper class men also looked at working poor women the same way and used prostitutes before and after marriage • For working class women, prostitution was a stage of life, like domestic service, they engaged in before, but not after, marriage
Working Class Recreation and Leisure • Consumption of alcohol a favorite pastime • Seen as the curse of the modern age • Women engaged in social drinking with men • Heavy drinking seen as socially unacceptable by the upper working classend of the 19th century • Music Halls, Vaudeville Theaters (equivalent to middle class opera/theater) • Mixed audience • Themes of social (especially marital) comedy • Sports • Blood sports on the decline – replaced with spectator sports like soccer and racing • Gambling (encouraged literacy!) • Religious zeal of later 18th century carried over into the 19th century, however church attendance for the urban masses declines • Construction of Churches had slowed • Politically conscience urban working poor associated the church with the “old order” • Religion was seen as socially restrictive
Mid-Century Change • Illegitimacy explosion continued through 1850 (1 in 3 children were illegitimate) • After 1850 – more babies will be born to married women again (though many brides were pregnant) • The working classes economic conditions improve, men were more likely to marry • Cheap condoms and diaphragms were developed during the industrial age
Working Class Recreation and Leisure • Consumption of alcohol a favorite pastime • Seen as the curse of the modern age • Women engaged in social drinking with men • Heavy drinking seen as socially unacceptable by the upper working classend of the 19th century • Music Halls, Vaudeville Theaters (equivalent to middle class opera/theater) • Mixed audience • Themes of social (especially marital) comedy • Sports • Blood sports on the decline – replaced with spectator sports like soccer and racing • Gambling (encouraged literacy!) • Religious zeal of later 18th century carried over into the 19th century, however church attendance for the urban masses declines • Construction of Churches had slowed • Politically conscience urban working poor associated the church with the “old order” • Religion was seen as socially restrictive
Industry and Gender • Women and children made up a large population of workers in the factories • By 1850, jobs of husbands and wives became distinct “separate spheres”: • Men became wage earners in businesses and factories • Women stayed home to manage the household • The “family” economy of the cottage industry declined • Only poor families expected women to work outside the homes, and equal or well-paying jobs were not available • Women were subordinated to men in their homes and society • Women had few legal rights • Education discrimination was the norm
Women’s Work • After 1870, the growth of white collar jobs provided more opportunities for women, including secretaries, clerks, teachers, nurses • Rural, naïve working-class girls were sometimes drawn into prostitution for a short time, which was licensed and regulated by the government
Working Women • Following in the footsteps of Wollstonecraft (18th century), by the late 19th century middle-class feminist movements picked up speed • Campaigned for legal, professional and education rights • Working class women often joined Marxist, socialist movements to gain rights for the working class as a whole • Late 19th century success • 1882 – English women receive property rigs and more women had professional, white collar opportunities in the workplace • Working class women were also domestic servants • Dangers still evident (overwork, abuse) • Marriage prospects were better • Training ground for life as a wife and mother
At Home • “Cult of Domesticity” • Women pampered their husbands • Women tried to create a warm shelter for her family • This ideology was seen in the “Victorian Age” of England • Middleclass women had substantial control in the home • Women usually controlled money making and child-rearing decisions (both time-consuming) • Working outside the home was rejected by most women
Children • Mothers and fathers continued to bond with their children • Fewer children were born by parents because they wanted to adequately take care of them • Middle class families sought to limit the number of children to improve their economic position in society, as well as properly care for their children • Fewer children were sent to foundling homes • By 1870, couples averaged 4 children, by 1920 – 2 children
Factory System • efficiency (cough) • *division of labor • *interchangeable parts • new products (choke) • *more variety, cheaper! • BIG money (gag) • *mass production of goods • *mass wealth to be had at the expense of the workers
Conditions in Factories • Dark and polluted • Dangerous, especially to children • Monotonous work • Low (or no) pay • No benefits
New Economic/Social Philosophies(some you have seen before) • Adam Smith,in Wealth of Nations, proposed: • Influential “others” (enlightened aristocrats and middle class) proposed reform: • Blake • Wordsworth • Luddites • Friedrich Ingles, in The Condition of the Working Class, proposed: • Karl Marx, in The Communist Manifesto, proposed:
Opinion 1 – Reform the System Factory Act of 1833, Mines Act of 1824 Unionize Women’s suffrage Migration Opinion 2 – Abolish the System Socialism Revolution (more on that later) Outcome
Urbanization – A By-Product of Industrialization • Conditions – bad housing, lack of sanitation, infectious diseases, densely populated • Causes: • Pressure of growing populations and the absence of transportation • Government intervention was slow • ignorance
Population Growth • Between 1850 and 1880, population increase was due to a rising birthrate, however after 1880 it was due to a lower death rate • Medical discoveries and environment stand out as two main reasons • In the cities, population almost doubled in Britain and France, and almost tripled in Germany • Other demographic shifts include people emigrating: • out of poorly industrialized to industrialized regions • from Austria-Hungary due to minority persecution • from Russia due to religious persecution (Jews)
Reform • 1842 – Edwin Chadwick connects disease to filthy conditions in English cities • Public health laws become the responsibility of governments, clean water is a main goal of reform • Urban planning improves by 1850 • Napoleon III rebuilds France in 20 years – it becomes a model for other European cities • Wider streets • Walls were replaced by large boulevards with office buildings, opera houses, etc (attractive to the middle class) • Parks, museums • Improved sewer systems and aqueducts • Mass transit (street cars) allows for the development of better housing outside of the city
Romanticism • Emerged at the end of the 18th century • Challenged enlightened ideas preoccupied with reason (rejects Post-classical ideology/art), by emphasizing emotion, intuition, feeling and imagination as a source for knowing
Realism • Openly rejects Romanticism, preferring to deal with ordinary characters in real life rather than romantic heroes in unusual settings • Realism will be replaced later in the era by “Impressionism” (rejects Realism). • Define: • Romanticism, Realism and Impressionism • Research one artist for each era and print/copy a picture of one of their most famous (or your personal favorite) works. Write a short critique of the artwork, describing how it reflects Romanticism, Realism or Impressionism • Research one writer (each) of Romantic and Realist literature. List one piece of literature they wrote and what it was about. Write a short critique of the artwork, describing how it reflects Romanticism or Realism
Global Consequences : Industry and Imperialism (You Can’t Separate the Two) • Wanted: natural resources • Idea: Stealing is cheaper than dealing • Establish colonies and take resources without compensating the natives • While we’re at it – destroy the local culture, landscape and pollute the environment • Bring resources back to the factories at home • Make and then sell manufactured goods back to colonies and elsewhere • Make BIG BUCKS MORE ON THIS LATER
The Industrial Revolution Will IMPACT EVERYTHING! • Politically by…. • Socially by…. • Economically by.…