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The Long 19th Century

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Title: The Long 19th Century


1
The Long 19th Century
  • 1789-1914

2
Dual Revolutions
  • Hobsbawm analyzed the early 19th century, and
    indeed the whole process of modernization
    thereafter, using what he calls the twin
    revolution thesis.
  • This thesis recognized the dual importance of the
    French Revolution and the Industrial Revolution
    as having given rise to modern European history,
    and through the connections of colonialism and
    imperialism all of world history.

3
Hobsbawm, The Age of Revolution
  • The great revolution of 17891848 was the triumph
  • not of liberty and equality in general, but of
    the middle class or bourgeois liberal society
  • not of industry as such, but of capitalist
    industry
  • not of the modern economy or of the modern
    state but of the economies and states in a
    particular region of the world

4
Hobsbawm, The Age of Revolution
  • But it is not unreasonable to regard this dual
    revolution the rather more political (French)
    and the industrial (British) revolution not so
    much as something which belongs to the history of
    the two countries which were its chief carriers
    and symbols, but as the twin crater of a rather
    larger regional volcano.

5
Industrial RevolutionEvolution or Revolution?
  • 1st Phase 1740-1860in Britain

6
Why Britain?
  • Lack of war/conflict within Britain
  • Vast market colonial system excess capital
  • Strong, sizeable Navy, merchant fleet
  • Access to ports Internal water trade routes
  • Favorable government policies
  • Private landownership enclosure acts
  • Mobile society labor force
  • Coal iron resources

7
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9
Spinning Jenny
10
Power Loom
11
Newcomen , then Watt
Steam Engine
12
Evolution
  • Proto-industrialization to factory system
  • Worker/employer relations imbalance in
    production
  • simple, common items (textiles) mass production
  • Big profits, unlike France luxury items
  • Automation spinning jenny, power loom, steam
    engine
  • Internal Improvements canals (Suez 1869),
    steamboats (trans-Atlantic 1838), railroads
  • Agricultural Revolution reaper thresher,
    steel-tipped plow (canning, refrigeration)
  • Rise of Corporations (easier to raise capital)

13
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15
Manchester
16
Impact
  • Population growth (poverty)
  • Vertical to horizontal stratification of society
  • New urban centers Manchester
  • Unsanitary, overcrowded, polluted, Child labor
  • Laissez Faire ideology among most middle class
    (unless favorable to business)

17
Impact on Economics Sociology
  • David Ricardo Iron Law of Wages
  • Thomas Malthus Food supply population growth
  • Herbert Spencer Social Darwinism

18
Ricardos Iron Law of Wages
19
Charles Darwin, from his autobiography. (1876)
  • "In October 1838, that is, fifteen months after I
    had begun my systematic inquiry, I happened to
    read for amusement Malthus On Population, and
    being well prepared to appreciate the struggle
    for existence which everywhere goes on from long-
    continued observation of the habits of animals
    and plants, it at once struck me that under these
    circumstances favourable variations would tend to
    be preserved, and unfavourable ones to be
    destroyed. The results of this would be the
    formation of a new species. Here, then I had at
    last got a theory by which to work".

20
Starting at 1750, 50 year intervals Measure in
Billions
21
Malthus, Essay on the Principle of Population
(1798)
  • In nature plants and animals produce far more
    offspring than can survive, and that Man too is
    capable of overproducing if left unchecked.
  • Concluded that unless family size was regulated,
    man's misery of famine would become globally
    epidemic and eventually consume Man.
  • Not popular among social reformers who believed
    that with proper social structures, all ills of
    man could be eradicated.

22
Social Darwinism
23
Reform?? The Condition of England Question
  • Aristocracy noblesse oblige
  • Social Gospel/Christian Socialism
  • Robert Owen Utopian Communities
  • Temperance Movements
  • 1st Phase reform (Sadler Commission, 1832)
  • Factory Act of 1833
  • Repeal of Combination Acts 1824
  • Jeremy Benthams Utilitarianism (late 18th C)
  • Socialism Karl Marx Frederich Engels (1848)

24
Jeremy Bentham
  • It is the greatest good to the greatest number of
    people which is the measure of right and wrong.
  • It is vain to talk of the interest of the
    community, without understanding what is the
    interest of the individual. Read more
    http//www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/j/jeremy
    _bentham.htmlixzz1nsOBW07S

25
On the Continent?
  • Britain had little competition until 2nd phase
  • Slow to change, picked up after 1860
  • Napoleonic wars
  • Poor transport
  • Fewer raw materials
  • Internal tools/tariffs
  • Investment ungentlemanly
  • Required more government involvement

26
Second Phase
  • mid 19th century , Technological Revolution
  • rapid growth of railroads, steel, steamships,
    electricity, chemicals, telecommunications
  • End of British leadership
  • US, Germany leadership
  • Japan, France, Low Countries
  • larger scale investment in more industries
  • beginnings of big corporations dominating
    industries, able to invest more money in new
    technology
  • capital industries which produce goods for other
    industries, not for consumers

27
Impact
  • What do the documents tell us about the impact
    industrialization had on
  • The people and politics of Europe?
  • The World?
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