11/10/25 - 11/12/25 Second Industrial Revolution. New Imperialism, World War I
Second Industrial Revolution (1850-1914)
Geographical Focus: Germany and United States
Key Innovations: Electricity, steel, chemicals, petroleum, heavy industry
Transformational Revolutions:
Communication / information revolution
Transportation revolution
Chemical revolution
Research & Development (R&D) in universities
Social / Cultural Implications:
Workers' rights: rise of unions
Rise of middle class
New opportunities for women
New ideologies: Communism / socialism vs. Survival of the fittest (business, nation, race)
Context: Industrialization + military revolution + new ideologies = New Imperialism
Regional Differences: Eastern Europe less industrialized
Later Development: Russian industrialization under Stalin (1930s-1940s)
New Imperialism (1850-1914)
Preconditions:
Military & industrial revolutions
Technological advancements: Iron-hulled ships with guns, repeating rifles & machine guns, medicine
Process: Rapid transformation of colonies into permanent possessions
Types of Rule:
Outright rule
Protectorates
Spheres of influence
Reasons for Imperialism:
Explorers / independent agents
Missionary impulse: Civilize "primitive cultures" (racism)
Economic incentives
Political motives (national prestige)
Major Colonizers: England, France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Spain, United States
Popular Support: Very popular across all segments of Western civilization, including working class and socialists
20th Century Developments
Intellectual Developments:
Increased secularization / skepticism
Profound questioning / rejection of traditional Greco-Roman / Judeo-Christian understanding of man
Social / Cultural Developments:
Virulent racism / ethnic warfare
Multiculturalism
Religious Developments:
Loss of faith in organized Christianity in Europe / US (especially in mainline Protestant churches)
Technological Advances:
Great hopes / science in service to humanity
Better standard of living / prolonged life span
Eugenics
Increased lethality of war
Economic Developments:
Profound economic change / dislocation
International economy
Political Developments:
Virulent nationalism, new nations
International organizations (e.g., United Nations, later in the century)
Bloodshed / Utopia and Terror
World wars, genocide, totalitarian regimes
Century of the Common Man
Mass Society:
Democracy and technology
Cash nexus / capitalism
Standardization and uniformity replace individuality
Mass politics: Universal suffrage, universal literacy, media rule, tyranny of the majority
Mass culture: Media / standardization, common set of cultural references, sports (passive and purchased)
Utopia and Terror (Dr. Vegas Liulevicius)
Utopia: Perfect society on earth
Terror: Violence against civilians for political purposes
Ideology: Links utopia and terror, justifies terror for a future utopia
Means to Achieve Utopia (via Terror):
Masses: Alienated man, crowd psychology
Machines: Propaganda / bureaucracy
Mobsters: Ruling elite / illegal means
Master plans: Ideologies / comprehensive vision of future
Wilhelm II (William II) (1888-1918)
German emperor
Policy: Germany's "place in the sun"
Key Actions:
Let Bismarck go (1890)
Let Reinsurance Treaty with Russia lapse
Supported Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
Antagonized France:
First Moroccan Crisis (1905): Championed Morocco's freedom
Second Moroccan Crisis (1911)
Antagonized England:
Von Tirpitz built a large navy
Encouraged Boers during the Boer War
World War I Statistics
Mobilized: 65 million
Battle Deaths: 8 – 10 million
Civilian Deaths: 6.6 million
Wounded: 21 million
"Lost Generations" (Battle Deaths by Nation):
France: 1.3 million
England: 0.9 million
Russia: 1.7 million
Germany: 1.8 million
Austria: 0.9 million
Treaty of Versailles (1919)
Territorial Changes:
Alsace-Lorraine returned to France
Rhineland demilitarized and occupied by allies
Saar coalmines to France for 15 years, then plebiscite
German Disarmament:
Army restricted to 100,000 long-term soldiers
4,000 officers
No general staff
No tanks, planes, subs, heavy ships
Article 231 (War Guilt Clause): Germany forced to accept full responsibility for the war
Reparations: Germany forced to pay an unspecified amount of reparations
Russian Revolutions (1917)
First Revolution (March 1917)
Provisional Government:
Conservative Parliamentary
Continued the war
Failed to address social and economic problems
Weak control; armed the soviets in factories
Second Revolution (November 1917)
Dissension in Provisional Government
Government armed soviets' Red Guards
Provisional Government depended on support of soviets
Lenin took over soviets
Slogans: "Peace, land, bread," "All power to the soviets"
Military joined soviets
Bolshevik coup on November 6 against Winter Palace
Lenin in charge
Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924) (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov)
Advocated violent revolution / revolution in an agrarian society
Revolution led by an elite vanguard
Founded the Bolsheviks
Led the November Revolution / Bolshevik coup
Led Russia during the Civil War / War Communism
Introduced the New Economic Policy (NEP)
Dynamic leader / loved by many people
Suspicious of Stalin
Joseph Stalin (1879-1953)
"Man of Steel"
Ruthless Party bureaucrat
Dictator from 1929
Key Policies/Actions:
Socialism in One Country
Industrialized Russia with Five-Year Plans
Collectivization of farms (1928-1933), resulting in 5 – 7 million deaths
Purges (1936-1938)
Nazi-Soviet Pact (1939)
Cold War (his later role in)
Stalin's Five-Year Plans
Forced industrialization of Russia
First Plan (1928-1932)
Eliminate private property
Concentrate on heavy industry and transportation
Quantity over quality
Only partial success
Second Plan (1933-1937)
Focused on heavy industry
Reasonable quotas
Increased iron and steel production
Third Plan (1938-1942)
Interrupted by war
By 1939, USSR was 3rd in world industrial production
Stalin’s Purges (1936-1938)
Driven by Stalin's paranoia
Liquidation of perceived enemies
Elimination of prominent Soviet officials and military leaders
Tool: NKVD (Soviet secret police)
Public show trials in Moscow
Chain incriminations
Decapitation of the military (weakened military on the eve of WWII)
Emboldened Hitler
Estimated 9-10 million killed / exiled / imprisoned
Interwar Period Literature (Themes of Pessimism)
Aldous Huxley: Brave New World (1932) – future inhuman world
Ernest Hemingway:
The Sun Also Rises (1926) – lost postwar generation
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940) – Spanish Civil War
Erich Maria Remarque: All Quiet on the Western Front (1929) – anti-WWI novel
Oswald Spengler: The Decline of the West (1918) – Western civilization in final stage of collapse
Franz Kafka: The Trial (1924) – victimization in a totalitarian society
Thomas Mann: The Magic Mountain (1924) – decline of bourgeois society
D. H. Lawrence: Women in Love (1920) – dismissal of human needs of coal miners
George Orwell: The Road to Wigan Pier (1937) – lives of English coal miners
John Steinbeck: The Grapes of Wrath (1939) – Dust Bowl America
Eugenics
Definition: Greek for "good birth"
Origin: Idea from Plato's Republic
Sir Francis Galton (1820-1911):
British statistician, biologist, psychologist
Aim: Improve genetic qualities of population in health, intelligence, moral character
Method: Solve social problems by regarding them as biological
Influence: Influenced Darwin's Descent of Man (1871)
Two Forms:
Negative: Sterilization, euthanasia
Positive: Selective breeding, sperm banks
Popularity: Popular worldwide across the political spectrum; popular in the US
US Context (1910-1950):
US academia embraced it at high school and college levels
Reinforced racial segregation and immigration restrictions
Approximately people involuntarily sterilized in the US
Weimar Republic (1918-1933)
Tradition of liberalism
Parliamentary government
Chronic Instability: 20 governments
Presidency: Seven-year terms; Field Marshal von Hindenburg was the last president and held contempt for the republic
Lack of legitimacy between the upper class and military
Saddled with the shame of the Versailles Treaty
Financial difficulties due to reparations and depression
Article 48: Permitted rule by decree
Fascism
Etymology: From Italian fascio, meaning union
Difficult to describe; a complex ideology
Opposed: Socialism, liberalism, communism, conservatism, egalitarianism, materialism, democracy
Core Characteristics:
Cult of an authoritarian leader
Intense nationalism
Importance of mythical past and symbols
Violence is positive
Masculine ideology (women's place in the home)
Exaltation of youth
Conditions Supporting Fascism: Lower class support, national defeat, transition to democracy, economic hardship
Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)
Founded Italian Fascism
Motto: "Everything within the state, nothing against the state, nothing outside the state"
Political opportunist: used alliances to gain power
Organizations: Fascio di combattimento (Blackshirt paramilitary organization)
Prime Minister in 1922; fomented disorder to justify dictatorship to restore order
Title: Il Duce from 1926-1945
Never completely dominated Italy
Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)
Austrian / Loner / corporal in WWI
Leader of the Nazi party
Charismatic speaker
Political opportunist
Focused on the shame of Versailles / "stab in the back" myth
Anti-Semitism / Final Solution
Sought Lebensraum (living space) in the east
Began WWII in Europe
Believed himself to be invincible
Two Disastrous Mistakes:
Attacking Russia
Declaring war on the USA
Key Events Leading to WWII (1931-1939)
1931: Japan invades Manchuria
1933: Hitler becomes Chancellor; Germany withdraws from the League of Nations; Germany withdraws from the Geneva Disarmament Conference
1935: Luftwaffe announced; German conscription / rearmament; Anglo-German Naval Pact; Personal oath to Hitler (soldiers swore loyalty)
1935: Mussolini invades Ethiopia
1936: Rhineland reoccupied; Rome-Berlin Axis established; Anti-Comintern Pact (Germany & Japan)
1937: Hossbach Conference; Japan invades China
1938: Anschluss (annexation of Austria); Munich Conference
1939: Occupation of Prague; Pact of Steel; Nazi-Soviet Pact; September 1 – Germany invades Poland (beginning of WWII)