UNIT 7

UNIT 7: 19TH CENTURY PERSPECTIVES AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS

7.1 CONTEXTUALIZING 19TH CENTURY PERSPECTIVES AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS

Unit 7: Learning Objective A

Explain the context in which nationalistic and imperialistic sentiments developed in Europe from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.4 European states struggled to maintain international stability in an age of nationalism and revolutions.

KC-3.4.II The breakdown of the Concert of Europe opened the door for movements of national unification in Italy and Germany as well as liberal reforms elsewhere.

KC-3.4.III The unification of Italy and Germany transformed the European balance of power and led to efforts to construct a new diplomatic order.

KC-3.5 A variety of motives and methods led to the intensification of European global control and increased tensions among the Great Powers.

KC-3.5.II Industrial and technological developments (e.g., the second industrial revolution) facilitated European control of global empires.

KC-3.6 European ideas and culture expressed a tension between objectivity and scientific realism on one hand, and subjectivity and individual expression on the other.

KC-3.6.II Following the revolutions of 1848, Europe turned toward a realist and materialist worldview.

7.2 NATIONALISM

THEMATIC FOCUS National and European Identity NEI

Definitions and perceptions of regional, cultural, national, and European identity have developed and been challenged over time, with varied and often profound effects on the political, social, and cultural order in Europe.

Unit 7: Learning Objective B

Explain how the development and spread of nationalism affected Europe from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.3.I.F Nationalists encouraged loyalty to the nation in a variety of ways, including romantic idealism, liberal reform, political unification, racialism with a concomitant anti-Semitism, and chauvinism justifying national aggrandizement.

KC-3.3.I.G While during the 19th century western European Jews became more socially and politically acculturated, Zionism, a form of Jewish nationalism, developed late in the century as a response to growing anti-Semitism throughout Europe.

KC-3.4.II.B A new generation of conservative leaders, including Napoleon III, Cavour, and Bismarck, used popular nationalism to create or strengthen the state.

KC-3.4.II.C The creation of the dual monarchy of AustriaHungary, which recognized the political power of the largest ethnic minority, was an attempt to stabilize the state by reconfiguring national unity.

Nationalists: § J. G. Fichte § Grimm Brothers § Giuseppe Mazzini § Pan-Slavists Anti-Semitism: § Dreyfus affair § Christian Social Party in Germany § Karl Lueger, mayor of Vienna Zionists: § Theodor Herzl

7.3 NATIONAL UNIFICATION AND DIPLOMATIC TENSIONS

THEMATIC FOCUS I National and European Identity NEI

Definitions and perceptions of regional, cultural, national, and European identity have developed and been challenged over time, with varied and often profound effects on the political, social, and cultural order in Europe.

Unit 7: Learning Objective C

Explain the factors that resulted in Italian unification and German unification.

KC-3.4.II.A The Crimean War demonstrated the weakness of the Ottoman Empire and contributed to the breakdown of the Concert of Europe, thereby creating the conditions in which Italy and Germany could be unified after centuries of fragmentation.

KC-3.4.III.A Cavour’s diplomatic strategies, combined with the popular Garibaldi’s military campaigns, led to the unification of Italy. KC-3.4.III.B Bismarck used Realpolitik, employing diplomacy, industrialized warfare, weaponry, and the manipulation of democratic mechanisms to unify Germany.

THEMATIC FOCUS II States and Other Institutions of Power SOP

European states and nations developed governmental and civil institutions from 1450 to the present to organize society and consolidate political power, with a variety of social, cultural, and economic effects.

Unit 7: Learning Objective D

Explain how nationalist sentiment and political alliances led to tension between and among European powers from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.4.III.C After 1871, Bismarck attempted to maintain the balance of power through a complex system of alliances directed at isolating France.

KC-3.4.III.D Bismarck’s dismissal in 1890 eventually led to a system of mutually antagonistic alliances and heightened international tensions. KC-3.4.III.E Nationalist tensions in the Balkans drew the Great Powers into a series of crises, leading up to World War I.

ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES Bismarck’s alliances: § Three Emperors’ League § Triple Alliance § Reinsurance Treaty Nationalist tensions in the Balkans: § Congress of Berlin in 1878 § Growing influence of Serbia § Bosnia-Herzegovina annexation crisis (1908) § First Balkan War § Second Balkan War

7.4 DARWINISM, SOCIAL DARWINISM

THEMATIC FOCUS Technological and Scientific Innovation TSI

Scientific and technological innovations have increased efficiency, improved daily life, and shaped human development and interactions, having both intended and unintended consequences.

Unit 7: Learning Objective E

Explain how Darwin’s theories influenced scientific and social developments from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.6.II.B Charles Darwin provided a scientific and material account of biological change and the development of human beings as a species, and inadvertently, a justification for racialist theories that became known as Social Darwinism.

7.5 THE AGE OF PROGESS AND MODERNITY

THEMATIC FOCUS Technological and Scientific Innovation TSI

Scientific and technological innovations have increased efficiency, improved daily life, and shaped human development and interactions, having both intended and unintended consequences.

Unit 7: Learning Objective F

Explain how science and other intellectual disciplines developed and changed throughout the period from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.6.II.A Positivism, or the philosophy that science alone provides knowledge, emphasized the rational and scientific analysis of nature and human affairs.

KC-3.6.III In the later 19th century, a new relativism in values and the loss of confidence in the objectivity of knowledge led to modernism in intellectual and cultural life.

KC-3.6.III.A Philosophy largely moved from rational interpretations of nature and human society to an emphasis on irrationality and impulse, a view that contributed to the belief that conflict and struggle led to progress. KC-3.6.III.B Freudian psychology offered a new account of human nature that emphasized the role of the irrational and the struggle between the conscious and subconscious.

KC-3.6.III.C Developments in the natural sciences, such as quantum mechanics and Einstein’s theory of relativity, undermined the primacy of Newtonian physics as an objective description of nature.

ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES Philosophers who emphasized the irrational: § Friedrich Nietzsche § Georges Sorel § Henri Bergson Scientists who undermined the notion that Newtonian physics provided an objective knowledge of nature: § Max Planck

7.6 NEW IMPERIALISM: MOTIVATIONS AND METHODS

THEMATIC FOCUS I Interaction of Europe and the World INT

Motivated by a variety of factors, Europe’s interaction with the world led to political, economic, social, and cultural exchanges that influenced both European and non-European societies.

Unit 7: Learning Objective G

Explain the motivations that led to European imperialism in the period from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.5.I European nations were driven by economic, political, and cultural motivations in their new imperial ventures in Asia and Africa.

KC-3.5.I.A European national rivalries and strategic concerns fostered imperial expansion and competition for colonies.

KC-3.5.I.B The search for raw materials and markets for manufactured goods, as well as strategic and nationalistic considerations, drove Europeans to colonize Africa and Asia, even as European colonies in the Americas broke free politically, if not economically.

IKC-3.5.I.C European imperialists justified overseas expansion and rule by claiming cultural and racial superiority.

THEMATIC FOCUS II Technological and Scientific Innovation TSI

Scientific and technological innovations have increased efficiency, improved daily life, and shaped human development and interactions, having both intended and unintended consequences.

Unit 7: Learning Objective H

Explain how technological advances enabled European imperialism from 1815 to 1914.

KC-3.5.II.A The development of advanced weaponry ensured the military advantage of Europeans over colonized areas.

KC-3.5.II.B Communication and transportation technologies facilitated the creation and expansion of European empires.

KC-3.5.II.C Advances in medicine enabled European survival in Africa and Asia.

ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES Ideas of cultural and racial superiority: § “The White Man’s Burden” § Mission civilisatrice § Social Darwinism Advanced weaponry: § Minié ball (bullet) § Breech-loading rifle § Machine gun Communication and transportation technologies: § Steamships § Telegraph § Photography Advances in medicine: § Louis Pasteur’s germ theory of disease § Anesthesia and antiseptics § Public health projects § Quinine

7.7 IMPERIALISM’S GLOBAL EFECTS

THEMATIC FOCUS Interaction of Europe and the World INT

Motivated by a variety of factors, Europe’s interaction with the world led to political, economic, social, and cultural exchanges that influenced both European and non-European societies.

Unit 7: Learning Objective I

Explain how European imperialism affected both European and nonEuropean societies.

KC-3.5.III Imperial endeavors significantly affected society, diplomacy, and culture in Europe and created resistance to foreign control abroad.

KC-3.5.III.A Imperialism created diplomatic tensions among European states that strained alliance systems.

KC-3.5.III.B Imperial encounters with non-European peoples influenced the styles and subject matter of artists and writers and provoked debate over the acquisition of colonies.

 KC-3.5.III.C Especially as non-Europeans became educated in Western values, they challenged European imperialism through nationalist movements and by modernizing local economies and societies.

ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES Diplomatic tensions: § Berlin Conference (1884–1885) § Fashoda crisis (1898) § Moroccan crises (1905, 1911) Participants in the imperialism debate: § Pan-German League § J. A. Hobson’s and Vladimir Lenin’s anti-imperialism § Congo Reform Association Responses to European imperialism: § Indian Congress Party § Zulu Resistance § India’s Sepoy Mutiny § China’s Boxer Rebellion § Japan’s Meiji Restoration

7.8  19TH CENTURY ARTS

THEMATIC FOCUS Cultural and Intellectual Developments CID

The creation and transmission of knowledge, including the relationship between traditional sources of authority and the development of differing world views, had significant political, intellectual, economic, cultural, and social effects on European and world societies.

Unit 7: Learning Objective J

Explain the continuities and changes in European artistic expression from 1815 to 1914.

 KC-3.6.I Romanticism broke with Neoclassical forms of artistic representation and with rationalism, placing more emphasis on intuition and emotion.

KC-3.6.I.A Romantic artists and composers broke from classical artistic forms to emphasize emotion, nature, individuality, intuition, the supernatural, and national histories in their works.

KC-3.6.I.B Romantic writers expressed similar themes while responding to the Industrial Revolution and to various political revolutions.

KC-3.6.II.D Realist and materialist themes and attitudes influenced art and literature as painters and writers depicted the lives of ordinary people and drew attention to social problems.

KC-3.6.III.D Modern art, including Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, and Cubism, moved beyond the representational to the subjective, abstract, and expressive and often provoked audiences that believed that art should reflect shared and idealized values, including beauty and patriotism.

ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES Romantic artists: § Francisco Goya § Caspar David Friedrich § J. M. W. Turner § John Constable § Eugène Delacroix Romantic composers: § Ludwig van Beethoven § Frédéric Chopin § Richard Wagner § Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Romantic writers: § Johann Wolfgang von Goethe § William Wordsworth § Lord Byron § Percy Shelley § John Keats § Mary Shelley § Victor Hugo Realist artists and authors: § Honoré de Balzac § Honoré Daumier § Charles Dickens § George Eliot  (Mary Ann Evans) § Gustave Courbet § Fyodor Dostoevsky § Jean-François Millet § Leo Tolstoy § Émile Zola § Thomas Hardy

Modern artists: § Claude Monet § Paul Cézanne § Henri Matisse § Edgar Degas § Pablo Picasso § Vincent Van Gogh

7.9 CAUSATION IN 19TH CENTURY POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES

Unit 7: Learning Objective K

Explain the influence of nationalist and imperialist movements on European and global stability.

KC-3.4 European states struggled to maintain international stability in an age of nationalism and revolutions.

KC-3.4.II The breakdown of the Concert of Europe opened the door for movements of national unification in Italy and Germany as well as liberal reforms elsewhere.

KC-3.4.III The unification of Italy and Germany transformed the European balance of power and led to efforts to construct a new diplomatic order.

KC-3.5 A variety of motives and methods led to the intensification of European global control and increased tensions among the Great Powers.

KC-3.5.II Industrial and technological developments (e.g., the second industrial revolution) facilitated European control of global empires.

KC-3.6 European ideas and culture expressed a tension between objectivity and scientific realism on one hand, and subjectivity and individual expression on the other.

KC-3.6.II Following the revolutions of 1848, Europe turned toward a realist and materialist worldview.