Title: EUROPE AND AMERICA
1EUROPE AND AMERICA
- Forces for Change, 1890-1914
2Major Forces for Change
- More education for more people
- Industry overtakes agriculture
- Industrial growth prosperity and labor
- Shortened distances and faster communications
- Growth of scientific knowledge
- European empires
3UNITED STATES
- Resources of most of a continent
- Large and growing industry
- Peaceful neighbors (Canada and Mexico)
- Protected by oceans from other powers
- A tradition of neutrality in relation to the
nations of Europe
4Europe in 1914
Europe was divided by many nations, ethnicities
and ideas.
5The Great Powers
- Britain largest empire and navy
- Germany -- recently unified (1871) and ambitious
for colonies and navy - France Only republic, an issue with Germany
(war in 1870) - Austria Old empire, much divided by ethnic
differences, worried about SE Europe - Russia Fastest growing in industry and
population, major internal problems
6Alliances
- Germany is allied with Austria and Italy in the
Triple Alliance to check Russia and France - France and Russia allied in the Entente to check
Germany - Britain is not allied, but is worried about
Germanys growing navy and trade with rest of
world
7Victoria
TRADITIONAL LEADERSHIPS Queen Victoria, Britain,
1837-1901, by 1900 was the grandmother of many
European monarchs.
8George and Nick
George V, King of Britain in 1914
(right) Nicholas II, Tsar of Russia, in 1914
(left)
9Wilhelm
Wilhelm (William) II, the Kaiser of Germany, ca.
1910 first cousin to both Nicholas II and
George V
10Aristocracy
The Aristocracy controlled much of the wealth,
more of the power, in Europe
11Mass education
Mass education expanded opportunity for more
people
12Women and education
Women particularly benefited from larger school
expenditures literacy of woman more than
quadrupled from 1860-1900 in Europe, tripled in
U.S.
13Nationalism
Schools were important for teaching Nationalism
France, rather than Loraine, etc.
14Industry
Industrial growth meant greater production but
also major changes in society
15Middle Class
A rising middle class reflected the growth of a
nations economy
16Painting by Seurat
Middle class clerks, businessmen, sales force
more leisure time
17Consumer Goods
What only the wealthy once enjoyed, middle class
now had
18Peasants Van Gogh
Factory values exceeded agricultural wealth in
many countries
19Labor force
Industrial labor force major change in
societies that had been largely rural
20Child labor
Labor forces (such as this 1870s shoe factory)
contained adults and children poor families
resisted the enforcement of child labor laws
21Photography
Photography documented the hard lives of many
workers
22Riis
German immigrant Jacob Riis photos of poverty
in New York
23Social justice
Riis photos ran in newspapers and in his book,
prompting new efforts at social justice
24Poverty
There was still considerable poverty, and beggars
were common sights on the streets of major cities
and towns.
25Socialism
In 1891, Leo XIII, a conservative, issued the
Rerum Novarum a call for just wages and the
recognition of trade unions. Laborers called him
the Workers Pope.
26Marxism
Marxism called for the violent overthrow of
wealth and capitalism and the establishment of a
workers state.
27Socialism
Various forms of gradual socialism were
proposed in place of Marxism creating a better
society through political parties, voting and
government regulation of the state and the economy
28Military Costs
Marxists and socialists generally opposed war,
arguing that military costs prevented the
improvement of the economy.
British battleship, HMS Dreadnought
29Mass Communications
Politics was now influenced by mass
communications newspapers could alter public
opinion and government policies.
30Spanish-American War
31TR
The war in Cuba made a national hero (and
eventually president) of Theodore Roosevelt
32Trains
Modern armies could be speedily deployed by
trains and directed by telegraph
33Colonies modern technology enabled European
nations to control colonies around the world
U.S. had territories rather than colonies
34Titanic
Absolute faith in modern technology was seriously
shaken in 1912.
35Russo-Japanese war
In 1904, tensions between Russia and Japan (over
China) led to war.
36Russian defeat
Russias defeat in the war shocked the entire
world
37Modernity
Old ideas Authority derived from faith or
ancient wisdomBehavior a matter of good and
evilThe universe was a matter of mechanics
laws of motion New ideas Old wisdom is now
questioned, frequently discardedBehavior is a
matter of hidden, biological impulses The
universe is much more complex and chance plays
a a large part in it Does God play dice with
the universe?
38Darwin
Since the 1860s, Darwins theories of evolution
had frightened the traditional basis of western
religion.
39Freud
The research of Freud questioned the traditional
good-evil basis of behavior
40Laws of physical dynamics
Bohrs concept of the atom, Einsteins theory of
relativity, and the idea of quantum mechanics
made understanding the universe difficult
41SUMMARY
- The major nations of Europe are modern but the
pace of change has created much tension - Rivalries among powers are intense
- Social differences within nations are often
intensified by ethnic differences - Alliances exist that could trigger a widespread
war
42The Spark