Title: Was the Congress of Vienna Successful?
1Was the Congress of Vienna Successful?
First Bubbles- French Revolution
Rolling Boil- Napoleonic Wars- Bring Rev. to the
Rest of Europe
Water Traditional Conservative Europe
MetaphorTime
Fire Liberal Enlightenment Ideas
2Was the Congress of Vienna Successful?
Holy Alliance
Congress of Vienna
Censorship, etc
Carlsbad Decrees
3Reactions to Congress of Vienna
- Liberals, aka Classical Liberals, still exist
after French Revolution - What are Classical Liberals
- Liberal in relation to ancien regime
- Government should stay out of the economy, remove
legal barriers to liberty and equality, and
thats it ((in other words, capitalism is
liberal related to mercantilism) - Why called Classical?
- However, Classical Liberalism has lost its appeal
for many. Why? - Doesnt go far enough
- Classical liberalism helps the bourgeoisie grab
power from the aristocracy - But does nothing for Proletariat (other than move
them from the countryside to the city) - Classical liberalism seems to defend the worst
aspects of the French Revolution - Child labor, etc.)
- Failed in French Revolution
- More radical reformers are inspired by the
Socialism of the Reign of Terror period
4Utopian Socialism
- Utopia nowhere or the perfect society
- Focus on community, rather than the individual
- Inspired by the successful aspects of the radical
French Republic (bread of equality, etc.) - Socialist ideas govt sponsored full-employment,
no private property, full democracy, gender
equality, closer to equality of condition - Linked to France and especially Paris
- Utopians dreamed of these perfect societies, but
offered few road maps
5Engels (repeat)
- German academic whose father owned factories in
England - Engels visited the factories as a young man and
was appalled by the conditions there - 1844 The Condition of the Working Class in
England - He condemned the bourgeoisie as class criminals
for their exploitation - We are getting to the idea of class consciousness
- His work caught the attention of socialists
- Especially those who wanted a more scientific
socialism (later to be known as Communism) - Engels work in particular got the attention of a
German political philosopher named _____________ - Interestingly, Engels may have gotten a skewed
view of industrialization. Why? - England went first and made mistakes that other
nations didnt repeat
6Marxian Socialism
- Marx saw that early (Utopian) Socialism was too
fanciful - not firmly grounded in theory or reality
- begged the bourgeois for concessions they would
never grant - Wrote the Communist Manifesto
- Argued for a scientific form of Socialism
7Marxs- Simple Version
- history is the story of class struggle
- Aristocracy? Bourgeoisie Bourgeoisie ?
Proletariat - Political, legal, and economic systems protect
the class in power - Conservatism protected the aristocracy
- Capitalism and Classical Liberalism protect
Bourgeoisie - exploitation of the proletariat class
consciousness VIOLENT revolution - Why was class consciousness already growing?
- Believed that labor was the source of all
economic value but that private property allowed
capitalists to steal this value from workers - After Proletarian Revolution, abolish private
property end of historical class struggle
8Marxian Socialism A More Complicated Look
- Idea of history as a dialectical process (taken
from German philosopher Hegel) - Dialectic process means all of history was
constant tension leading to constant,
predictable, change - Hegel argued that there was always a dominant
societal model and an alternative model - The two fought it out until a new synthesis was
formed and the whole process repeated. - Marx added an engine to this dialectic economics
- In other words, the roots of the system is
always economic - Feudal society was set up to protect the rights
of the land owners (land equaled economic power) - Capitalist society was set up to protect the
rights of the factory owners (factory equaled
economic power) - Marx called the land and factories the Means of
Production - Abolish private property (no more individual
ownership of the Means of Production and you
end the historical dialectic
9Marxs Impact
- Secular religion
- included all of the dominant strains of thought
of the time period German philosophy, Utopian
Socialism, and Classical Economics (Capitalism) - it replaced religion
- (Marx rejected religion as the opiate of the
masses - Little noticed at first, but will become HUGE!
10Marxian Socialism Is Highly Radical
- Fills Conservatives and even Classical Liberals
with special dread. Why? - Let the Ruling Classes Tremble at a Communist
revolution. The Proletariat have nothing to lose
but their chains. They have a world to win.
WORKING MEN OF ALL COUNTRIES, UNITE! - Marx believed that the haves would never
willingly give up their privilege. They would
have to be killed in a violent revolution.
11Nationalism
- After 1st Hundred Years War- France and England
- after 2nd HYW- rest of Europe
- Definition ? hope to turn ethnic boundaries
(defined especially by language) into political
boundaries - Most early nationalists are liberals or moderate
socialists. Why does this make sense? - Liberalism- freedom and equality of an individual
- Nationalism is the freedom and equality of a
peopleeach people must be able to make their
pure voice heard - Why few conservative nationalists?
- Conservative monarchs rule over empires if these
people get nationalist ideas, then youve got
some problems - Nationalisms Dark Underbelly
- If we are prideful in our ethnicity, then ???
- Later, we will be introduced to conservative
nationalists and the !_at_ will hit the fan - National Socialism ? Nazism ? equality of
condition, but only for our people
12Romanticism
- the spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling
recollected in tranquility
13- German and English, which means it is religiously
attached to - Sturm and Drang Movement
14- Born out of Rousseau
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe
- Francisco Goya
- William Wordsworth
- Lord Byron
- Mary Shelley
- Victor Hugo
- Alexander Pushkin
- Washington Irving
- Ludwig van Beethoven
- Liszt
- Richard Wagner
15Characteristics
- Emotion
- Spontaneity
- Love of nature
- Desire to know the unknowable
- Fascinated with the bizarre and exotic
- Anti-materialist
- Intensely individualist
- bohemian
16A Break With Classicism
- Rejects Industrialization
17Beethovens Ode to Joy
18(No Transcript)
19Closely connected to Nationalism
- Why?
- Because. It is like Individualism applied on a
larger scale to culture - Seeks the unique essence of each culture
- Brothers Grimm and other folktales
20Possibly Wagner- Flight of the Valkeryies Here
21Clearing Up a Bit of Confusion
- Congress System
- Aka Concert of Europe
- Occasional meetings to guide peace
- Holy Alliance
- Russia, Austria, Prussia
- Enforces decisions of congress system
- No major European War until WWI