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AP WORLD HISTORY – PERIOD V (1750-1900) WEEK 22 Week of February 8th-12th. Chapters 16 & 17 Responses due to turnitin.com by 11:59pm, 2-21-15 World History Concepts for the Week: Enlightenment ideas from thinkers such as Locke, Rousseau, as well as the ideas of advocates of the social gospel influenced many people to challenge existing notions of social relations, which contributed to the expansion of rights as seen in expanded suffrage, the abolition of slavery, and the end of serfdom. Beginning in the 18th century, peoples around the world such as Germany and Italy, developed a new sense of commonality based on language, religion, social customs, and territory called nationalism. These newly imagined national communities linked this identity with the borders of the state, while governments used this idea to unite diverse populations. Demand for women’s suffrage and an emergent feminism challenged political and gender hierarchies, reflected in documents such as Olympe De Gouges’s “Declaration of the Rights of Women and the Female Citizen”. Industrialization, which resulted from several factors such as geographic distribution of resources, accumulation of capital, and improved agricultural productivity, fundamentally changed how goods and services were produced. The development and spread of global capitalism led to a variety of responses as workers in industrialized states organized to improve working conditions, limit hours, and gain higher wages while some promoted alternative visions of society such as Marxism. The ways in which people organized themselves into societies also underwent changes in industrialized states due to the restructuring of the global economy including new social classes, family dynamics, and gender roles. Migration in many cases was influenced by changes in demography in both industrialized and unindustrialized societies that presented challenges to existing patterns of living. Vocabulary for 3x5 Cards: Abolition, Social Gospel, nationalism, Olympe de Gouges, industrialization, Royal Navy, Proletariat, Marxism, settler colonies, trans-Siberian railroad Monday, February 8th. Read from “The Abolition of Slavery” on page 798 to “Nations and Nationalism” on page 801. Prompt: Analyze three causes of the abolition of slavery, explaining how each cause contributed to the end of the slave trade. Use and underline the following terms in your answer: Abolition, Social Gospel, Enlightenment Tuesday, February 9th. Read from “Nations and Nationalism” on page 801 to 811. Prompt: Compare and contrast nationalism versus feminism using three analytical categories. Use and underline the following terms in your answer: nationalism, Olympe de Gouges Wednesday, February 10th. Read from page 827 to “The First Industrial Society” on page 835. Prompt: Analyze three causes explaining why Europe (starting with Britain) was the first area to industrialize. Use and underline the following terms in your answer: industrialization, Royal Navy Thursday, February 11th. Read from “The First Industrial Society” on page 835 to “Europeans in Motion” on page 844. Prompt: In what ways did Marxism represent a reaction to the social changes the resulted from industrialization? Use and underline the following terms in your answer: Bourgeoisie, Proletariat, Marxism Friday, February 12th. Read from “Europeans in Motion on page 844 to “Variations on a theme: Industrialization in the United States and Russia”. Prompt: Analyze three causes of European migration during the period 1750-1900. Use and underline the following terms in your answer: settler colonies, trans-Siberian railroad Glossary: Abolition: Movement within European-influenced “Western” nations advocating for the freeing of existing slaves along with eliminating the global slave trade. Social Gospel: Movement among protestant churches, mostly in the northern states of the United States, to apply Christian humanist values to the issues of the time including abolition of slavery. Nationalism: A shared belief in and identification with a society or group who share a common language, religion, social customs, or territory. Olympe de Gouges: Thinker and political activist who, during the French Revolution, asserted that women deserved equal rights as men in her “Declaration of the Rights of Women and the Female Citizen”. Executed during the radical phase of the revolution by the Committee for Public Safety led by Maximilian Robespierre for being a counterrevolutionary. Industrialization: Process by which an economy increased manufacturing through mechanization, banking practices that provide capital, and organization of national or imperial resources to provide raw materials for production. Royal Navy: British royal Navy used to protect British merchant ships, facilitate migration within the empire, and enforce British law (e.g. the 1809 prohibition of maritime slave trade). Proletariat: The working class in cities who provided the labor for factories. Marx believed the proletariat would violently revolt against the factory owners (and bourgeoisie class as a whole) and establish a socialist utopia. Marxism: Ideology first articulated by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels which interprets the history of human civilization as the exploitation of the poor and powerless by the elite and powerful. Posits an inevitable revolution following industrialization resulting in the overthrow of the bourgeoisies and establishment of a dictatorship of the proletariat. Settler colonies: Colonies within empires that became destination for permanent immigration from imperial core countries, e.g. Australia and New Zealand. Trans-Siberian railroad: Railway established by the Russian monarchy which allowed for quick movement of people and goods from Moscow to the Eastern borders of the empire and facilitated Eastward Expansion.