Chapter 23 The Age of Optimism, 1850–1880. p656 Industrial Growth and Acceleration After 1850, the “Second Industrial Revolution” – New sources of energy:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industrial Revolution
Advertisements

Ch.19.2 The Factory System SWBAT-Explain how mechanization of the Factory System impacted the work force and the role of women. Reading Notes Daily Quiz.
The Victorian Age The setting for Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Chapter 12 Review.
Life in the Emerging Urban Society
The Renaissance Abul Kalam Azad Senior Lecturer in Sociology, GED Northern university Bangladesh.
Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e
Realism & Naturalism Ms. Howell-Jones.
Copyright ©2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 12/e Chapter Ten: America’s Economic Revolution.
Unit 5: Industrialism and a New Global Age (1800 – 1914)
SETTING THE STAGE: EUROPE IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES.
Lecture 7 Technological Change and the Industrial Revolution What we mean when we say Capitalism.
Bringing Order to Industrializing Chaos.  To understand the connection between the Progressive movement and the time from which it came.  To explain.
Chapter 20 Section 2.  Urban populations grew quickly because of migration to cities from rural areas  Driven by a lack of jobs and a lack of land 
Age of Enlightenment Man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains. - Rousseau.
Changing Attitudes and Values
Warm Up Answer the following questions based on the Mass Society Timeline (p ): a. When did the Civil War begin in the United States? b. How many.
AP World History POD #19 – Revolutions in Europe Modern European Urbanization.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
WORLD HISTORY II Chapter 7: The Industrial Revolution Begins
CHAPTER 24 THE TRIUMPH OF THE MIDDLE CLASSES: WESTERN ECONOMIC, SCIENTIFIC, INTELLECTUAL, AND CULTURAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS,
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Results of Industrialization Europe, Intro Activity 1.Imagine all your teachers announced to you today that for this 9 weeks 1) no student.
Prerna Bhatia.  Industry driven revolutions occurred as Europeans increasingly employed machines to fashion an array of products  Shift to industrialization.
Copyright ©2003 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter Ten: America’s Economic Revolution Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation, 4/e.
Early Modern Europe Emerges The Islamic World, Discovery of the New World, and a Changing Europe.
Industrial Prosperity, Urbanization & Democracy Mr. Ermer World History Miami Beach Senior High.
Industrial Revolution and Society (1780s – 1830s) Chapter 12, Sections 1 and 4.
The Emergence of Mass Society  New Urban Environment  Growth of cities: by 1914, 80 percent of the population in Britain lived in cities (40 percent.
THE 19TH CENTURY Time for change. ECONOMIC CHANGE  Enclosure movement  Revolution in agriculture  Technological innovation and the Industrial.
The Industrial Revolution – Part I. Background Info After the French and American revolutions, a social revolution took place in England (Britain) After.
Ms. Susan M. Pojer and Miss Raia La Belle Epoque [ ]: “The Beautiful Era”
Cultural and Intellectual Influences Transformations  Developments in science and the arts  Consumer emphasis.
Discuss Exposition Reading “In 1900 Europeans had good reason to feel pleased with the recent past and confident about the future” Discuss and give specific.
Culture of Modernism Popular Culture in Europe Race and Nation
Life in the Emerging Urban Society, 1840–
The Industrial Revolution A NEW Type of Revolution.
ORIGINS OF SOCIOLOGY CSI – Gorski DEFINITION OF SOCIOLOGY  The study of the development, structure, and functioning of human society  Study.
Mass Society and Democracy The Second Industrial Revolution-New Products  New Products Substitution of steel for iron Electricity Telephone.
Chapter 24.  Since the Middle Ages, European cities had been centers of government, culture, and large-scale commerce.  Cities were also crowded, dirty,
The Industrial Revolution. What is the Industrial Revolution?  A shift in production from simple hand tools to complex machines and human and animal.
The Cold War Begins Dawn of the Industrial Age Section 1 Analyze why life changed as industry spread. Summarize how an agricultural revolution led to the.
Industrial Revolution Chapter 23. Section 1: Advances in Technology O One invention builds upon another O ELECTRICTY –Michael Farady O Electric Generator.
Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Competing Philosophies of the Industrial Revolution.
Sociological Theory Not as boring as it sounds!.
Alan Brinkley, American History 14/e
 The major changes in Western science and thought accompanied with the progression of urban society. › There were two main reasons why the developments.
Sociological Theory Say Something!. Say Something Read the information on the slide…whether it’s a picture or written word Say Something about what you.
Industrial Revolution. Major Causes Beginning in the 1700’s, large landowners dramatically improved farming methods Agricultural changes  agricultural.
A History of Western Society Eleventh Edition CHAPTER 22 Life in the Emerging Urban Society 1840–1914 Copyright © 2014 by Bedford/St. Martin’s John P.
A New Social Order Arises The Industrial Revolution altered the class structure in Western Europe. Some business owners entered the upper class. The middle.
Scientific Revolution. Dawn of Modern Science Ancient scholars could provide no information about new lands, people, animals Age of Exploration led scientists.
The Industrial Revolution Unit 2 Study Guide Chapter 9 Pages
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. Agriculture  Agricultural improvements drive industrial improvements  Crop rotation  Seed drill  Enclosure movement  Food.
CHAPTER 13 NOTES The Second Industrial Revolution.
Splash Screen.
Focus 11/14 The Industrial Revolution started with advances in the textile industry, but later expanded to the production of other goods. Other fields.
A Second Industrial Revolution:
FEBRUARY 27, 2017 Get out stuff for notes Industrial Revolution Test Corrections until Friday HW: Vocab due March 16.
Alan Brinkley, American History 15/e
Science and Society Science and the Church Conflicts
The Victorian Period
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution Part II
La Belle Epoque [ ]: “The Beautiful Era”
Mass Society and Democracy
Transportation, the Second IR, and Industrial Society
Transportation, the Second IR, and Industrial Society
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 23 The Age of Optimism, 1850–1880

p656

Industrial Growth and Acceleration After 1850, the “Second Industrial Revolution” – New sources of energy: petroleum and electricity – New products: chemicals, steel, aluminum – New types of consumption: department stores and mail-order – Expansion of credit and world trade – Science became a partner in industrial development Transportation and communications – Dramatic expansion of the railway – The Suez Canal (1869) and steamships – Refrigeration – Development of standardized postal systems – Expanding telegraph networks; invention of the telephone in 1879

p659

A Transforming Elite The declining importance of aristocracy – Landed wealth became less important with the rise of industry – Lines between aristocracy and upper middle class began to blur – Aristocracy nevertheless retained some prestige The rising middle class, or bourgeoisie – Industrial expansion benefitted entrepreneurs and managers – Growing complexity of society benefitted professionals A steadily growing number of occupations became “professionalized” Emphasis on education and qualifications rather than old-style patronage Lawyers, medical doctors, architects, engineers, scientists, teachers – A distinctively “Victorian” set of values Emphasis on self-control in public The “separation of the spheres” – Unlike the aristocracy, a class people lower down the social scale could aspire to join

p660

Workers and the Poor Confronting the problems of industrial development – Rising standards of living in general, but persistent poverty as well – Poverty generated anxieties among the elite Fears of worker agitation and popular violence Concerns about declining birthrates undermining national power – Government responses to poverty – Private and religious responses The key role of bourgeois women in charity work Pope Leo XIII and the idea of “social Catholicism” Changes in rural life – Changes in farming practices raise yields and reduce labor needs – Rural population shrank as urban population grew – Rural areas became more tightly knit into national markets – In Eastern Europe, the pace of change was much slower

p663

p664

p665

p666

p667

Urban Problems and Solutions Cities grew steadily in this period – Haussmann and the transformation of Paris – Making cities into effective sites of large scale production and consumption New public services – Developments to improve public health and safety The introduction of running water Gaslights and policing – Trams and underground railways

PARIS

p668

Education and the Growing Prestige of Science The rise of public education – After 1870, European nations increasingly offered free primary education – Secondary education expanded as well Generally limited to middle and upper classes Played an important role in making professionalization possible Rise of universities and the professionalization of science Positivism: the idea that scientific inquiry drives human progress Key scientific breakthroughs – Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution – Mendeleev’s periodic table – Advances in medicine: Pasteur and Lister

p669

The Impact of Science’s Prestige Creating “social sciences” – Leopold von Ranke and historical inquiry – Anthropology and the “science” of European superiority – Sociology, the science of society Religion challenged – The Catholic Church and its reactionary position after 1848 – Growing political challenges to Church authority The anti-Catholic position of the post-unification Italian Government Bismarck’s Kulturkampf The secularism of the French Third Republic – Growing intellectual challenges from science and the “positivist” world- view

p672

Culture in an Age of Change Modernism in the arts: embracing the new Painting and the challenge of photography – The Realists – The Impressionists Literature and the prestige of science – Realism and naturalism adapt the scientific ideal of dispassionate observation Gustave Flaubert and Emile Zola Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky – Some writers rejected the positivist world-view and its optimistic faith in progress Thomas Carlyle

p676

p679