Industrialization in Russia and Japan - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

Industrialization in Russia and Japan

Description:

Industrialization in Russia and Japan AP World History 614 Japanese/Western Differences Position of Western Women offended the Japanese Maintain inferiority of Women ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:176
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: LCSD73
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Industrialization in Russia and Japan


1
Industrialization in Russia and Japan
  • AP World History
  • 614

2
(No Transcript)
3
(No Transcript)
4
Setting the Stage
  • What is Russias role in the greater global
    context?
  • Intellectuals and politicians remain absorbed in
    fascination of the west
  • Political freedom, educational and scientific
    advances, cultural styles
  • Romanticism hits home in Russia with its
    combination of folklore and nationalism
  • Russian music composers begin to explore this
    idiom, and contribute to the wider musical scene

5
Setting the Stage
  • Alexander I Supported conservative ideologies at
    the Congress of Vienna.

6
Setting the Stage
  • Nicholas I 1825 Decembrist uprising by
    western-oriented army officers.
  • Nicholas becomes more repressive
  • Russia avoids the wave of revolutions which swept
    through Europe during the 1830s and 1848

7
Setting the Stage
  • Russia falls behind the west industrially.
  • 1854-1856 Crimean War fought on the Black Sea.
    Western forces damaged the Russian armies
    entrenched positions.
  • 1855 Alexander II is convinced that it is time
    for change!

8
(No Transcript)
9
Reform under Alexander II
  • For two decades, Russia engages in reform, based
    on Western standards.
  • 1861 Emancipation of the serfs-serfs got a piece
    of land they used to work.
  • Creates a large labor force
  • Zemstvoes local political councils regulating
    roads, schools, and other regional policies.
  • Literacy increases
  • Increased Womens rights

10
Industrialization
  • Trans-Siberian Railroad connected European
    Russia with the Pacific.
  • Stimulated iron and coal industries.
  • Export of grain to the West.
  • Factories began to spring up throughout Russia.

11
Trans-Siberian Railroad
12
Russian (radical) Reformers
  • Intelligentsia Russian term for articulate
    intellectuals as a class.
  • Wanted political freedom and deep social reform.
  • Wanted a different society than that in the west
    (which they saw as materialistic)
  • Anarchists desired an abolition to all forms of
    government.
  • Heated opposition to tsarist autocracy

13
By the 1880s
  • Russias railroad network had quintupled since
    1860
  • Modern Factories were in St. Petersburg and
    Moscow.
  • Influx of foreign interests under Count Sergei
    Witte, Minister of Finance from 1892-1903.
  • High tariffs to support Russian industry
  • Encourage western investors

14
The good, the bad, and well, thats it
  • The Good
  • By 1900, Russia surges to 4 in the world in
    steel production
  • Second only to the US in petroleum production and
    refining
  • The Bad
  • Russian factories were huge, but not up to
    western technical standards
  • Labor force was not highly skilled
  • Backwards agricultural production system
  • Largely illiterate peasant class which lacks
    capital
  • Lack of middle-class

15
Reformers
  • By the 1870s Alexander II is pulling back on
    reforms.
  • Censorship, dissidents arrested, etc.
  • Alexander II is assassinated by a terrorist bomb
    in 1881
  • Successors continue industrialization, but
    continue political repression as well.
  • Persecution of the Jewish minority.
  • Pogroms mass executions of Jews

16
Reformers
  • Socialism Marxist doctrine spreads from the West
    to Russia
  • Lenin claimed that a proletariat was developing
    worldwide due to the spread of international
    capitalism, in advance of growing
    industrialization.
  • Bolsheviks group of Russian Marxists, who formed
    the majority party.

17
Unrest
  • Working class unrest grows in the cities, aided
    by the undercurrents of socialism being pushed by
    the intelligentsia.
  • Russian workers radicalize much more than western
    counterparts
  • Unions, strikes
  • Become interested in the equality and freedom
    of Bolshevism
  • Russian government under Alexander III from
    1881-1894 remained stubbornly opposed to
    compromise

18
Nicholas II
  • Emperor from 1894-1918
  • The Last Imperial Emperor of Russia
  • Bad fortune was predicted by mystics after the
    Khadynka Tragedy during his coronation in 1896

19
Revolution!!
  • Russo-Japanese War 1904, Japan wins because
    Russia cant mobilize quickly.
  • Unleashes massive protest
  • Brutal repression was not well received, so
    reform follows.
  • Creation of a national parliament, the DUMA

20
Revolution!
  • Stolypin Reforms
  • Peasants gain greater freedom
  • Peasants can buy and sell land.
  • Kulaks wealthy peasant farmers who owned land
    and used hired labor
  • Nicholas II was unable to keep his promises of
    reform.
  • Unable to surrender the autocratic tradition

21
Looking Ahead!
  • Russia heads into WWI as an unstable nation on
    the brink of industrialization, and plenty of
    social pressure at home.
  • It must fight in WWI to preserve diplomatic ties
  • It must continue to protect its little Slavic
    Brothers
  • But, the homefront is riddled with problems
  • This will lead to one of the greatest (as in most
    influential) revolutions the world has ever seen!

22
1. Compare the ways in which industrialization
manifested itself in Japan and Russia.
23
2. Compare Japanese and Russian and Latin
American independence from the West.
24
JapanSetting the Stage
  • Tokugawa Shogunate Strict isolationism in Japan.
  • Feudal society between emperor, shogun, daimyo,
    and samurai
  • Ban on western books was repealed in 1720
  • Schools of Dutch studies throughout Japan around
    1850

25
Japan
  • 1853 American Commodore Matthew Perry arrives
    insisting that America gain the right to trade
    with Japan.
  • 1854 He returns and gains that right, and gains
    extraterritoriality

26
Japan
  • Bureaucrats saw no other possibility than to open
    Japan
  • Daimyo oppose this, as do many samurai.
  • They appeal to the emperor (long a religious and
    ceremonial figure), rather than the shogun
  • Samurai are split on their supportsome want
    change, others stress conservatism

27
Meiji Restoration
  • 1866 Japanese Civil War-Samurai forces defeat
    Shogunate forces and declare Mutsuhito, or Meiji
    (Enlightened One) the new emperor.
  • 1868 Meiji Restoration-A profound period of
    change in Japan that will guide Japan to becoming
    a world power into the 20th century

28
The Meiji State
  • Abolishes feudalism
  • Daimyo are replaced by nationally appointed
    prefects (district administrators)
  • Political power was centralized
  • Emperor and advisors enact economic and social
    change, quickly

29
Japan
  • Samurai travel to the West and US to learn about
    economic and political reform.
  • 1873-1876 Meiji Ministers enact true social
    revolution
  • 1876 Samurai class is abolished.
  • Constitution in 1889 establishes the Diet, or
    Parliamentary body
  • Could advise government, but not control it

30
The New Government
  • Modeled after the Germans
  • Emperor commanded the military directly and
    directly named his ministers
  • Western style clothing
  • Diet could pass laws, upon agreement of both
    houses, and pass budgets
  • Japanese government thus includes centralized
    Imperial Rule, combined with limited
    representative bodies copied from the West
  • Japan incorporated business leaders into its
    governing structure, while Russia defended its
    traditional social elite

31
Japanese Industrial Revolution
  • Create the conditions necessary for
    industrialization
  • New government banks funded growing trade and
    provide capital for industry
  • State-built railroads spread
  • Steamships connect the islands
  • Guilds and internal road tariffs are
    abolishedcreate a national market
  • Land Reform

32
Japanese Industrial Revolution
  • Ministry of Industry (1870)
  • Maintained supervision of foreign advisories
  • Set overall economic policy
  • Copied established western practices, but
    adaptation made it suitable for Japan
  • Zaibatsu Huge new industrial combines formed as
    a result of accumulation of capital.

33
Issues in Japanese Industrialization
  • Dependence on imports of Western equipment and
    raw materials.
  • Massive population growth
  • Supply of low-cost labor fuels class tensions
  • Education improves
  • Universal education system
  • Essential traditional moral education stressing
    loyalty to the Imperial House, love of country,
    filial piety, respect for superiors, faith in
    friends, charity towards inferiors, and respect
    for oneself.
  • Copied Western Fashion, hygiene, calendar, but
    not Christianity

34
Japanese/Western Differences
  • Position of Western Women offended the Japanese
  • Maintain inferiority of Women in the home
  • Standards of Japanese courtesy conflict with the
    West
  • Shintoism gains followers throughout this period

35
Japanese New Imperialism
  • Japan engages in imperialism at the turn of the
    20th century
  • Needs natural resources
  • Gives displaced samurai a way to exercise
    military talents
  • Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895)
  • Treaty of Shimonoseki April 17, 1895
  • China was forced to acknowledge the complete
    independence of Korea to cede the island of
    Taiwan, the Penghu Islands, and the Liaodong
    Peninsula in northeastern China to Japan and pay
    a large indemnity.
  • Concerned that the treaty would destabilize the
    colonial balance of power in East Asia, Russia,
    France, and Germany then forced a revision of the
    Treaty of Shimonoseki under which Japan had to
    renounce its claim to Liaodong.

36
Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905)
  • Russias growing strength in East Asia due to the
    construction of Trans-Siberian Railway threatened
    Japanese interests in Manchuria
  • Japanese win handily by 1905
  • Japanese take on Korea as protectorate in 1905
    and annex Korea in 1910

37
Friction in Japanese Society
  • Clash between traditional standards and the
    young, who were more interested in western
    standards.
  • Japans parliament often clashed with the
    Emperors ministers
  • Dissolve Diet, then re-elect
  • Assassinations

38
The Antidote to Cultural Insecurity
  • National loyalty and devotion to the Emperor
  • Nationalism was built on traditions of
    superiority, cohesion, and deference to rulers.
  • Justified sacrifice and struggle as part of the
    national mission to preserve independence and
    dignity in the world
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com