1 / 87

AKS 46: Russian Revolution, Asian Nationalism, and Rise of Fascism

AKS 46: Russian Revolution, Asian Nationalism, and Rise of Fascism. Chapters 30 and 31 Pages 864 – 919. Impact of War on… Science & Technology. Albert Einstein German-born physicist - completely changed physics w/ ideas about space, time, matter, & energy Theory of Relativity:

kevlyn
Download Presentation

AKS 46: Russian Revolution, Asian Nationalism, and Rise of Fascism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AKS 46:Russian Revolution, Asian Nationalism, and Rise of Fascism Chapters 30 and 31 Pages 864 – 919

  2. Impact of War on…Science & Technology • Albert Einstein • German-born physicist - completely changed physics w/ ideas about space, time, matter, & energy • Theory of Relativity: • As moving objects neared speed of light, space & time became relative (they change)

  3. Impact of War on…Science & Technology • Automobiles: • Created new manufacturing jobs • Expanded recreational travel • Led to growth of suburbs

  4. Impact of War on…Science & Technology • Airplanes: • Improvements  commercial passenger service & international air travel • 1927 – Charles Lindbergh 1st solo flight across Atlantic • 1932 – Amelia Earhart 1st female solo flight

  5. Impact of War on…Science & Technology • Radios: • Expanded audiences for news, plays, sporting events • Helped connect the world

  6. Impact of War on…Art & Literature • Artists Rebelled: • Rebelled against traditional paintings • Didn’t recreate realistic objects • Pablo Picasso: • Founded cubism – broke objects into geometric shapes

  7. Impact of War on…Art & Literature • Friedrich Nietzsche • German philosopher – reason, democracy, & progress are empty ideas – influenced… • Existentialism: • No universal meaning to the world – each person gives life meaning through own actions Nice whiskers!!

  8. Impact of War on…Society & Social Thinking • Sigmund Freud: • Psychologist – theory about human mind, thought much of human behavior was irrational (urges & desires in unconscious mind) • Weakened faith in reason

  9. Impact of War on…Society & Social Thinking Ex: Abbot & Costello • Movies: • Hollywood; became popular escapes from daily hardships • Music: • Jazz – energetic & fit freedom of times • Women: • Abandoned restrictive clothing & argued they should be equal to men

  10. Warm-Up

  11. Russian RevolutionCauses: • Policies of Czars • Autocratic • Harsh measures • Resistance to change inflamed masses • Industrialization & Economic Growth • Poor working conditions, low wages, child labor • Low standard of living, lack of political power • Gap b/w rich & poor  civil unrest

  12. Russian RevolutionCauses: • Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905): • Russia’s losses sparked unrest at home • revealed czar’s weaknesses • led to revolt in middle of war

  13. Russian RevolutionCauses: • “Bloody Sunday”: • provoked strikes & violence across country • forced Czar Nicholas II to promise more freedom • created the Duma - Russia’s 1st parliament First session of the Duma 

  14. Russian RevolutionCauses: • World War I: • revealed weaknesses of czarist rule & military leadership • destroyed morale of Russian soldiers mutinied, deserted, & ignored orders

  15. Russian RevolutionCauses: • March Revolution: • forced Czar Nicholas II to abdicate throne due to problems caused by WWI • Led by Bolsheviks under Lenin • Romanov family executed – shows radicalism of Bolsheviks • Duma set up provisional gov’t • Headed by Kerensky – stayed in war – big mistake! Kerensky   Lenin

  16. Russian RevolutionNov. 1917 Bolshevik Revolution • Toppled provisional gov’t • Gave power to Bolsheviks

  17. Russian RevolutionNov. 1917 Bolshevik Revolution Effects: • Treaty of Brest-Litovsk • Peace treaty w/ Germany – ends WWI for Russia

  18. Russian RevolutionNov. 1917 Bolshevik Revolution Effects: • Civil War • Begins b/w Red & White armies • Red = Bolsheviks • White = All opposed to Bolsheviks • Effects: • Millions of deaths (fighting, famine) • Showed Bolsheviks able to seize & maintain power • Crushed opposition to Bolshevik rule

  19. Russian Revolution • Leon Trotsky: • helped negotiate Treaty of Brest-Litovsk • commanded Red Army during civil war

  20. Russian RevolutionLenin: • Background: • Influenced by Marx • led Bolshevik revolution w/ Trotsky & restored peace & order • Karl Marx: • ideas formed basis of revolutionary gov’t • Believed proletariat (working class) would revolt

  21. Russian RevolutionLenin: • New Economic Policy: • Peasants sell surplus crops • Some private ownership • As a result, economy slowly recovered

  22. Russian RevolutionLenin: • Political Reforms: • Organized Russia into Republics (renamed U.S.S.R.) • Centralized power, unified country • Bolsheviks renamed Communist Party

  23. Russian RevolutionStalin: • Name means… “Man of Steel”

  24. Warm-Up

  25. Social ClimateLife in Great Depression • Millions lost their jobs • Many made their homes in shacks • Local gov’t & charity provided free food out of soup kitchens

  26. Economic Climate U.S. has flawed economy - why? • Uneven distribution of wealth • Overproduction by business & agriculture • Lessened demand for consumer goods

  27. Economic Climate Post-War German Inflation-How Come? • Gov’t printed money for war expenses & reparations  devaluing the mark to the point where people needed wheelbarrows full of money to buy food

  28. Political ClimateProblems with Postwar Democracies • Many citizens of new democracies had little experience with representative gov’t • Some countries had many political parties • This made effective gov’t difficult • Led to formation of coalition gov’ts that often unraveled

  29. Political ClimateEx: Weimar Republic (Germany) • Lacked strong democratic tradition • Multiple political parties • Germans blamed Weimar gov’t, not military leaders, for country’s military defeat & humiliation at Versailles

  30. Economic Climate Oct. 29, 1929 – U.S. Stock Market Crashes • Believing prices would drop, investors tried to sell high-priced stocks that they had bought on margin • Nobody wanted to buy

  31. Economic ClimateDepression in U.S. • Unemployment rates ↑ • Industrial production, prices, wages ↓ • Businesses failed • Individuals lost savings when banks closed • Farmers lost their land

  32. Economic ClimateDepression Worldwide • Some countries had war debts – dependent on American loans, investments • Worried American bankers demanded repayment for loans • American investors withdrew $ from Europe • American market for imported goods dropped sharply – America had overproduced • Raising of tariffs  decrease in world trade & market demand

  33. ResultsSocialist Gov’t Success • Relied on tradition of cooperative community action & gov’t-sponsored public works programs to keep people employed & producing • Raised pensions for elderly & benefits for those in need

  34. ResultsBritish National Gov’t • Passed high protective tariffs • Increased taxes • Regulated currency • Lowered interest rates to encourage industrial growth

  35. ResultsFrance – Popular Front • Economic crisis  Political instability • Leaders feared growth of antidemocratic forces

  36. ResultsAnd…. Rise of Totalitarian Governments (Fascism)

  37. Warm-Up

  38. ItalyMussolini Becomes Popular – Why? • Italians disappointed by terms at Versailles • Distressed by social unrest, rising inflation, high unemployment • Mussolini promised to rescue Italy, revive economy, rebuild military • Founded Fascist Party, rapidly gained popularity as economic conditions worsened

  39. ItalyResult • Mussolini publicly criticized the gov’t • Fascists promoted campaign of terror • Gained support of middle classes, industrial leaders, aristocracy

  40. ItalyMussolini in Charge – How? • King Victor Emmanuel III invited him to join gov’t • Why? – b/c the king decided Mussolini was the best hope for his dynasty to survive

  41. ItalyResult • Abolished democracy • Outlawed all political parties but his Fascist party • Imposed censorship • Had opponents jailed • Outlawed strikes • Made allies of industrialists & large landowners

  42. Warm-Up

  43. GermanyHitler Becomes Leader of Nazi Party – Why? • He was a successful organizer & speaker

  44. GermanyResult • Nazis became a growing political force

  45. GermanyHitler Tried for Treason – Why? • Mussolini marched on Rome – inspired Hitler & Nazis to try to overthrow gov’t & seize power in Munich • He failed!

  46. GermanyResult • Went to jail – wrote Mein Kampf • Book set forth his beliefs & goals for Germany

  47. GermanyHitler Named Chancellor – Why? • Depression hit – German economy collapsed • Civil unrest broke out • People looked to Hitler for strong leadership • Conservative leaders, believing they could control Hitler, advised von Hindenburg to name Hitler chancellor

More Related