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Title: Bellringer


1
Bellringer
  • Who wrote The Communist Manifesto?
  • Who were the bourgeoisie?
  • Who were the proletariat?

2
Chapter 18Mass Society and Democracy
3
The New Urban Environment
  • By the end of the 19th century, mass society had
    emerged, and the concerns of the majority
    working class were important.
  • This change coincided with the growth of cities.

4
The New Urban Environment
  • B/w 1800 1900 the population of London grew
    from 960,000 to 6,500,000.
  • Urban residents grew from 40 to 80 of the
    population
  • London

5
The New Urban Environment
  • Cities grew because of rural migration to urban
    centers.
  • Lack of jobs in the country and the improvement
    of living conditions in cities led to this rural
    migration.
  • Its all about the

6
The New Urban Environment
  • Following the advice of urban social reformers,
    city govt created boards of health to improve
    the quality of housing.
  • Medical officers and other officials inspected
    the buildings for public health hazards.

7
The New Urban Environment
  • Essential to public health of the modern European
    city were clean water and proper sewage systems.
  • A system of dams, reservoirs, aqueducts, and
    tunnels provided the water.

8
Social Structure of Mass Society
  • Even through the rising standard of living after
    1870, great poverty remained.
  • Also, several middle-class groups existed b/w the
    few rich and many poor.

9
The New Elite
  • A wealthy elite made up 5 of European society
  • Controlled up to 40 of the wealth
  • The aristocratic and upper middle class members
    of the elite were govt and military leaders.
  • Marriage sometimes served to unite these 2 groups.

10
The Middle Classes
  • The middle class included
  • Lawyers
  • Doctors
  • Members of civil service
  • Engineers
  • Scientist

11
The Middle Classes
  • Beneath the solid middle class was a lower middle
    class
  • Shopkeepers
  • Secretaries
  • Clerk

12
The Middle Classes
  • The European middle class was identified with
    certain values, which it preached to others
  • Hard work paid off with enough labor
  • Churchgoers moral way of doing things
  • This gave way to etiquette books such as The
    Habits of Good Society.

13
The Working Class
  • Made up 80 of European population.
  • Included
  • Skilled artisans
  • Semi-skilled laborers
  • Unskilled laborers day laborers domestic
    servants

14
Urban Worker
  • Life improved after 1870 due to
  • Reforms
  • Rising wages
  • Lower prices
  • Could even afford some leisure activities, and
    strikes were leading to 10 hour workdays and
    Saturday afternoons off.

15
The Experiences of Women
  • In 1800 family roles defined women.
  • Women were legally inferior to and economically
    dependent on men.

The good ole days!
16
New Job Opportunities
  • The Second Industrial Revolution opened the door
    to new jobs for women.
  • Many worked as low-paid, white collar workers.
  • Secretaries
  • Clerks
  • Typists

17
Marriage and Family
  • Throughout the 1800s marriage was the only
    honorable and available career for most women.
  • However, the birthrate did drop due to better
    economic conditions and birth control.
  • First birth control clinic opened in Amsterdam in
    1882.

18
Marriage and Family
  • Middle-class family fostered the idea of family
    togetherness.
  • Victorians created the family Christmas.
  • By the 1850s, Fourth of July celebrations in the
    U.S. had changed from wild celebrations to family
    picnics.

19
The Movement for Womens Rights
  • Modern feminism, the movement for womens rights,
    began during the Enlightenment.
  • The movement in the 1800s began with a fight for
    the right of women to own property.

20
The Movement for Womens Rights
  • Women sought access to universities and
    traditionally male fields of employment.
  • This was shown by the women leaders in various
    fields as you will see on the next few slides.

21
Amalie Sieveking
  • Entered the medical field by becoming a nurse.
  • Founded the Female Association for the Care of
    the Poor and Sick

22
Florence Nightingale Clara Barton
  • During the U.S. Civil War they transformed
    nursing into a profession of trained, middle
    class women in white

23
Emmeline Pankhurst
  • She and her daughters founded the Womens Social
    and Political Union.
  • Its members chained themselves to lampposts,
    pelted politicians with eggs, and smashed windows.

24
Pankhurst and Suffrage
  • Suffragists people who wanted the vote extended
    to all adults believed in the right of women to
    full citizenship in the nation-state.

25
Universal Education
  • U.E. was a product of mass society of the late
    19th century and early 20th centuries.
  • B/w 1870 and 1914 most Western governments began
    to set up state-sponsored primary schools.
  • Children 6-12 were required to attend.
  • States trained teachers
  • 1st female colleges were teacher-training
    institutes.

26
Universal Education
  • The reason for a commitment to public education
    was?????
  • INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • The chief motive for education?????
  • POLITICAL

27
Universal Education
  • Extending the right to vote called for a
    better-educated public.
  • Primary schools instilled patriotism.

28
Universal Education
  • Increased education increased literacy, or the
    ability to read. (Which is why you can read
    this!)
  • In countries where there was no universal
    education (Russia, Serbia for example) 80 could
    not read.
  • Increased literacy helped spread newspapers.

29
New Forms of Leisure
  • The leisure allowed by the Second Ind. Rev.
    entertained people and distracted them from the
    realities of their work lives.

30
New Forms of Leisure
  • Amusement Parks gave people new experiences and
    showed them new technology.
  • Team sports developed.
  • Public transportation allowed the working class
    to attend games and other leisure venues.

31
Review
  • 1. Cities grew because of rural migration to ___.
  • 2. Who made up 5 of European cities?
  • 3. What were the job opportunities for women in
    the Second Industrial Revolution?
  • 4. What was the movement for womens rights?
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