1914 to Present
Major Developments
- Questions of periodization
- Continuities and breaks
- Most tumultuous eras in world history
- “age of extremes”
- Tons of democracies vs. extremist dictatorships
- Unprecedented prosperity vs. total poverty – income gap widens
- 1914 clearest demarcation line
- After war, nations fight everywhere for power and territory
- Empires weakened, monarchies toppled, new nations rose
- Last 100 years, most dramatic/tragic in recorded history
- “age of extremes”
- World Wars
- WWI
- Destroyed several empires
- Weakened all of Europe
- WWII – largest, bloodiest, costliest
- Ends European global mastery
- Interwar period
- Economic crisis – started by US
- Dictatorial regimes – Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia
- Totalitarian states wave of the future?
- Communism as alternative to capitalism
- Decolonization – Europe loses control of Africa, Asia, Pacific
- National liberation creates new nations
- Smooth and peaceful
- Attained by violence
- Turned into chaos
- National liberation creates new nations
- Political extremes
- Democratization
- Allow women to vote
- Most extreme dictatorial regimes
- millions imprisoned, abused, tortured, killed
- Democratization
- Modernization – toward postindustrial modes
- Developed world goes postindustrial
- Asia industrializes and mechanizes
- Economies
- Globalized, grown closer together
- Mass communication
- Computer technology
- Information and communications revolution
- Mass communication
- Globalized, grown closer together
- Closer together or further apart
- World closer together
- End of arms race, economic globalization, American pop culture
- Spread of mass communications/technology
- Pulling world apart
- Ethnic violence
- Extreme forms of nationalism
- Religious fundamentalism
- Fear of biological and chemical weaponry
- Growing tensions between China and the West
- Cooling of relations between US and Russia
- World closer together
- WWI
- Most tumultuous eras in world history
- Causes of changes from the previous period and within this period
- Great wars
- Cold War
- Power concentrated in two evenly matched superpowers – US and USSR
- Led to nuclear arms race
- Divided world into two camps – bipolar
- Reactions to Great Depression
- Degree of Modernization - Four basic tracks of 20th century changes
- Western Europe, United States, Canada – the West
- Stable democratization
- Economic prosperity
- Thorough urbanization
- Com mitment to social equality
- Creation of social welfare systems
- Scientific/technological achievements tremendous
- Postindustrial economies that emphasize services, consumerism, cutting-edge technology
- The Tigers – prosperous nations in Asia – Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Indonesia, Singapore
- Economic and technical modernization
- Urbanized greatly
- High degree/variety of social services
- Economies post-industrial and high-tech
- Japan equaled or surpassed the West
- Nominally democratic
- Slow to embrace/tolerate diversity and individualism
- Soviet Union and Eastern Europe
- Modernized economically, especially post WWII
- Urbanized and developed social welfare services
- Technological and scientific advancement
- Remained industrial – didn’t move to postindustrial
- Technological finesse – computers – cruder than West
- Political systems dictatorial and repressive
- After communism, difficult to move toward democracy/economic propser
- Developing nations – Asia, Africa, Middle East, Latin America
- Trying to attain advanced economic systems
- Considering representative government
- Some have made great progress
- Others mired in backwardness, poverty, civil war, dictatorship
- Most between two extremes
- People’s Republic of China the anomaly
- Geography, population, military capacity of major power
- Strong economy – growing fast
- Government authoritarian, social and economic progress uneven
- Technological and scientific achievement inconsistent
- Modern vs. Postmodern Era
- Modern era – industrialization, formation of nation-state
- Struggle for representative government
- Moving toward economic equality
- Postmodern Era
- Postindustrial and global forms of economic organization
- Multiculturalism
- Blurring of national lines
- Extreme form of individualism
- Takes for granted political/social freedoms won
- Usually ascribed to Western world
- Modern era – industrialization, formation of nation-state
- Western Europe, United States, Canada – the West
- Continuities and breaks