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Russia & Japan: Industrialization Outside the West. AP World History. Similarities. Maintained economic and political independence during the West’s century of power Prior experience of imitation Knew that learning from outsiders could be profitable and need not destroy their native cultures
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Russia & Japan: Industrialization Outside the West AP World History
Similarities • Maintained economic and political independence during the West’s century of power • Prior experience of imitation • Knew that learning from outsiders could be profitable and need not destroy their native cultures • Improved their political effectiveness during the 17th & 18 centuries • Used the state to sponsor changes (in the West change was initiated by private businesses)
Similarities • Expansionist • Literacy increases • Not much reform or industrialization the first half of 19th century • Tensions between traditionalists and reformist intellectuals • Extensive railroad network created • New parliaments created • Imitated West but retained identity • Centralized authoritarian states
Similarities • Pre World War I Russia and Japan were NOT equal to the West • Rise contributed to the growing sense of competition between established western powers
Russia • Process of industrialization undercut social stability • Tsarist empire improved political effectiveness • Prior experience of imitating Byzantium • Alliances after 1815 • Decembrist Uprising (1825) • Loss in Crimean War (1853-56) convinces leaders to reform (socially and militarily) • Emancipation of the serfs (1861)
Russia • Lacked a middle class • Low technical standards in factories • Lacked a highly trained labor force • Business people were not assertive in challenging aristocratic power • Rise of intelligentsia (like Lenin) • Workers were more radical than in the west
Russia • Expansionist (Black Sea, East Asia, Balkans(?) • Duma (parliament) • Rich in natural resources • Russo-Japanese War (1905)
Japan • Process of industrialization maintained greater social cohesion • Tokugawa shogunate improved political effectiveness • Prior experience of imitating China (religion, written language, etc) • Shogunate weakens • Japan becomes more secular
Japan • Rejection of Chinese medicine and culture • Commodore Perry uses military pressure to force trade (1853) • Period of isolation ends • New emperor proclaimed (1868) Meiji Restoration • Political changes went deeper than in Russia • Abolished feudalism (1871)
Japan • Samurai issues • Modernized army, navy, government banks, etc. • Land reform motivated production, new fertilizers, & new equipment • Centralized imperial rule • Expansionist & imperialist (Korea, Manchuria, Taiwan) – fueled economic needs, growing industrial and military strength, and population pressure • Rise of the ziabatsu • Japanese government maintained closer supervision of industrialization than Russia
Japan • Incorporated business leaders into its governing structure • Resource poor • Industrialization changed Japan more profoundly than Russia • Universal education system introduced • Government initiative dominated manufacturing (transportation and military) • Economic growth and careful government policy allowed Japan to avoid western domination • Labor organization was repressed
Japan • Diet (parliament) • Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) • Western haircuts, hygiene, calendar, & metric system • Nationalism was built on traditions of superiority, cohesion, deference to rulers, and tensions from rapid change • Nationalism helped them avoid a revolution • Leaders encouraged national loyalty and devotion to the emperor • Japan’s surge promoted a fear in the West of a new yellow peril