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Remaking the West 1870-1900 Motives For Empire, 1880-1914  Political Motives  Cultural Motives  Economic Motives  Take up the White Man's burden-Send forth the best ye breed-Go bind your sons to exile To serve your captives' need; To wait in heavy harness, On fluttered folk and wild-Your new-caught, sullen peoples, Half-devil and half-child. Take up the White Man's burden-In patience to abide, To veil the threat of terror And check the show of pride; By open speech and simple, An hundred times made plain To seek another's profit, And work another's gain. Take up the White Man's burden-The savage wars of peace-Fill full the mouth of Famine And bid the sickness cease; And when your goal is nearest The end for others sought, Watch sloth and heathen Folly Bring all your hopes to nought.  Take up the White Man's burden– No tawdry rule of kings, But toil of serf and sweeper-The tale of common things. The ports ye shall not enter, The roads ye shall not tread, Take up the White Man's burden-Go mark them with your living, Have done with childish days-And mark them with your dead. The lightly proferred laurel, Take up the White Man's burden-- The easy, ungrudged praise. Comes now, to search your And reap his old reward: manhood The blame of those ye better, Through all the thankless years The hate of those ye guard-Cold, edged with dear-bought The cry of hosts ye humour wisdom, (Ah, slowly!) toward the light:-"Why brought he us from bondage, The judgment of your peers! Our loved Egyptian night?" Take up the White Man's burden-Ye dare not stoop to less-Nor call too loud on Freedom To cloke your weariness; By all ye cry or whisper, By all ye leave or do, The silent, sullen peoples Shall weigh your gods and you. India and the New British Empire, 1750-1870  More direct method of rule in response to the American Revolution  British East India Company  Raj and Rebellion, 1857  British Bureaucracy and Elite Institutions  Sepoy Mutiny  British Government seizes control The Scramble for Africa  1880: Europe controls 10% of African continent  1900: only Ethiopia and Liberia remain independent  West Africa  France  Britain  Spain  South Africa  Britain  Belgium  Germany Scramble for Africa  Bismarck and Imperial powers decide in 1884:  Borders of colonial states  Who can have what?  Methods of control  Treatment of indigenous groups Political and Social Ramifications  Indigenous Resistance  Ethiopia and Italy  Disruption of Indigenous life  Remaking African Culture “New Imperialism” and Crisis  Britain  Rhodes and the Transvaal 1896  Boer War, 1899-1902  Spanish American War, 1898  Loses Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Philippines  Italy  Ethiopia, 1896 “New Imperialism” and Crisis  First Moroccan Crisis  Wilhelm II in Tangiers, March 1905  The Bosnian Crisis  Annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austria-Hungary, October 1908  Serbia seeks aid from Russia, Austria-Hungary from Germany  Second Moroccan Crisis  German “Panther” sent to port at Agadir, July 1911  Sparks fear in Britain, anger in France  France subsequently establishes a full protectorate over Morocco THE GREAT POWERS IN EUROPE  Germany  Rapid industrialization and modernization after unification  Bismarck extends vote to all adult males  weakens the middle-classes  introduces socialist legislation to pre-empt socialist politicians  essentially an authoritarian regime  emperor at the helm  Parliament/military filled with upper-middle-class, aristocratic leaders  brought a new balance of power to the Continent  strengthened the cause for imperial ventures THE GREAT POWERS IN EUROPE  France  French found new competition with/second place power position to Germany difficult  Political and cultural conflicts develop, including the Paris Commune, another revolution  political division between monarchists and republicans on the national stage THE GREAT POWERS IN EUROPE  Great Britain  Increased suffrage by 1884  almost all males had the right to vote and could do so democratically  Had difficulty extending resources and infrastructure to the empire in both the isles and abroad  feared the growing economic strength of the U.S. and Germany in the late 19th Century  Russia and Austria-Hungary  Both weakened by nationalism  very ethnically diverse empires  Russia remained economically “backwards”  Stays authoritarian  Alexander’s successors resist all forms of social change  Russia’s weakness (politically, economically, militarily) exposed in Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05  Austro-Hungarian Empire deeply divided along ethnic lines  efforts to maintain empire by force in Balkans creates political tension in Russia that would have disastrous effects (the reason for the outbreak of WWI) THE GREAT POWERS IN EUROPE  The United States  late 19th Century a period of dramatic economic/social growth  Immigrants poured into the country, fueling industrialization  40 million between 1880 and 1920  By 1900 is the world’s leading industrial power  absence of government intervention and immigration The West Outside of Europe The Challenge of Social Change in the Wider West  Immigration  Between 1500 and 1760, African slaves had accounted for the vast majority of “immigrants” in the western hemisphere  In the 19th Century, Europeans (Irish, German, Italians, Slavs, Russians, and Jews) accounted for the majority of new immigrants  Asian immigration increased significantly in the United States  Despite the tremendous benefits that immigrants brought, hostility/discrimination toward immigrants increased  At best, the “immigrant question” was addressed by state efforts to force immigrants to abandon their own culture and assimilate  At worst, immigrants were met with vicious, discriminatory laws and violence (Dawes Act in the U.S., pogroms in Russia and eastern Europe) Uncle Sam’s Lodging House “Can I come in?” …I ‘spose you can; there’s no law to keep you out. American Imperialism  Colonial Experiences of “imperialism”  Monroe Doctrine-1823  European powers must not meddle in the affairs of any developing nations in the Western Hemisphere  1866-US in Mexico and Latin America  1867-Purchase of Alaska  1898-Annexation of Hawaii  1898-Spanish-American War    Cuba Guam Philippines o White-Man’s Burden American Imperialism  The United States approached imperialism in several ways:  Cultural imperialism  Political imperialism  Economic imperialism  For the documents, assess the following as a group:  Which mode of imperialism does each group member’s document(s) represent?  What imperial actions is the US engaging in/being accused of?  How is US imperialism like/unlike European modes of empire?  If your group were to write an essay on American versus European imperialism, what would the main argument be?  What would your key pieces of evidence/quotes be?  Japan  Japan had little contact with the outside world until the 1850s  Japanese leaders began embracing western institutional ideas  The new Meiji government modeled their system on imperial Germany  encourage rapid industrialization  Japanese expansion into Asia fueled parallel imperialism in the East  Japan subordinate to western claims on Asia  forced to give up imperial gains (China) when success threatened western dominance over trade markets The West Outside of Europe