Dual Revolution
Instructions:
After watching the YouTube video and reading the assigned readings, please choose one of the topics below and discuss the topic accordingly. It is not necessary to respond to all of the questions in the thread topic; these questions are intended to help facilitate critical thinking about the topics and materials. The discussion should simply present a thoughtful response that addresses the main topic chosen.
Minimum word count: 300 words
Must include at least two direct quotations (with page numbers) from two different readings or other materials
YouTube lecture video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onrRmxxUNV4
Textbook link: https://b-ok.cc/book/21346061/1d82da (I used Adobe Digital Editions to open the download)
Please use the following sections in the book for the assignment:
Page 1-27: Chapter 1: Imperial Europe at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century
Page 34-38: Imperial Dreams, Imperial Realities
Rudyard Kipling, “The White Man’s Burden”
Lothar Von Trotha, “Proclamation to the Herero People…”
Page 43-47: Picture Essay: Europe’s Global Aura in an Age of Nationalism
Topics (choose only 1 to discuss)
Defining "modernity"
Top of Form
What does the term "modernity" mean? What were the defining characteristics of "modern" Europe around the beginning of the twentieth century? How is modern Europe different from Europe in earlier periods? How did Europeans come to view the world, history, and their place in it in new "modern" ways during the nineteenth centuryBottom of Form
"Dual Revolution"
Top of Form
The historian Eric Hobsbawm has argued that, in the late 1700s, the democratic revolution in France and the industrial revolution in Britain together formed a "dual revolution" that laid the foundations of modern European society. How did these two revolutions work together? In what ways might they have been opposed? Which of these revolutions, the political or the economic, do you think had the greatest impact on Europe and the world? Which effects were most significant? Who benefited from, or was hurt by, these modern changes in society?
The idea of "progress"
Top of Form
Is the idea of “progress” a particularly modern way of looking at the world? What kinds of progress did Europeans believe they were seeing around them at the beginning of the twentieth century? Was everyone optimistic, or might some have been apprehensive or even opposed to these changes? What could be some of the advantages or blind spots to this kind of progressive outlook?
Europe and the World
Top of Form
What was Europe's role in the world at the beginning of the twentieth century? How did Europeans view and interact with people in other parts of the world? What were some of the effects of these global interactions on European culture and society? Did Europe have a positive or negative impact on the world in this period?
War on the horizon
Top of Form
As we will see in the next unit, World War I broke out in 1914 with considerable enthusiasm among many Europeans who felt the war would have a swift and positive outcome. What trends and ideas popular in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Europe might have caused Europeans to embrace war? What might have laid the groundwork for the unprecedented death and destruction that, as we now know, was the actual result of this war?Bottom of Form
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Historian Eric Hobsbawm coined the term “dual revolution” to depict the fusion of the political changes of the French revolution and the economic and technological changes of the industrial revolution (Crafts, 2021, p.309). Various ideologies, including the need for democracy and liberalism, spread as a result of the French revolution. Consequently, this political ideology fused with the technological advancements resulting from the industrial revolution (Yates, 2022, p.282). Before the French revolution, individuals had always suffered due to the inequality caused by the division of social classes. Those in the lowest class lived in poverty and oppression, and the French revolution aimed at ensuring equality among individuals.
The major difference between the two revolutions is that, unlike in the industrial revolution, where the workers suffered a lot, they were well taken care of in the French revolution. During the industrial revolution, those in the lowest social class suffered a lot economically as they were forced to work with very dangerous machines (Djuve, 2020, p.924). The other major difference is th...
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