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The Advent of the “Isms”

The Advent of the “Isms”. Section 11.53. The Age of Isms. Decembrist revolt. Mines Act. Congress of Vienna. Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1818. Liberalism, Romanticism, Nationalism, Conservativism, Socialism, & Marxism. Corn Laws Repealed.

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The Advent of the “Isms”

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  1. The Advent of the “Isms” Section 11.53

  2. The Age of Isms Decembrist revolt Mines Act Congress of Vienna Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1818 Liberalism, Romanticism, Nationalism, Conservativism, Socialism, & Marxism Corn Laws Repealed July Revolution February Revolution (France) 1815 1820 1825 1830 1838 1842 1846 1848 (Springtime of Peoples) Congress of Verona, 1822 Chartists Movement -March Days (Austria) -Frankfurt Assembly • -Reform Bill of 1832 • Factory Act 1833 • Poor Law of 1834 Peterloo Massacre (1819) Congress of Troppau (1820) Burschenschaft formed Carlsbad Decrees issued (1817) Ten Hours Act (1847)

  3. Introduction • From the period of 1815 to 1848 the use of new words to describe economic, social, and political ideas grew • Liberalism(1819), radicalism (1820), socialism (1832), conservatism (1835), nationalism and communism (1840s) • Suggests that ideas were being made more systematic • Development of the social sciences • Analyze society as a whole • Competing with other ideologies • Leading to the conscious espousal of a doctrine in competition with other doctrines

  4. Conservatism • Basic Tenets • A reaction against liberalism • Alternative to the violence and terror of French Revolution • Supporter of restoration of “legitimate” monarchs • Support came from nobility , peasants, early romantics • Loved order, stability, tradition, and religion • Hated notion of a Revolution (change) • Society is organic • Reject idea of social contract • History and God were sole sources of legitimate power • Rejected idea of natural rights • Every people is different • Believed in hierarchical society • Some were born to rule • Hero • Edmund Burke- Reflections of the Revolution in France

  5. Reflections of the Revolution in France • "I cannot [...] give praise or blame to anything which relates to human actions, and human concerns, on a simple view of the object, as it stands stripped of every relation, in all the nakedness and solitude of metaphysical abstraction. Circumstances [...] are what render every civil and political scheme beneficial or noxious to mankind. Abstractedly speaking, government, as well as liberty, is good; yet could I, in common sense, ten years ago, have felicitated France on her enjoyment of a government (for she then had a government) without inquiring what the nature of that government was? [...] Can I now congratulate the same nation upon its freedom? Is it because liberty in the abstract may be classed amongst the blessings of mankind, that I am seriously to felicitate a madman, who has escaped from the protecting restraint and wholesome darkness of his cell, on his restoration to the enjoyment of light and liberty? [...] I should, therefore, suspend my congratulations on the new liberty of France until I was informed how it had been combined with government, with public force, with the discipline and obedience of armies, with the collection of an effective and well-distributed revenue, with morality and religion, with the solidity of property, with peace and order, with civil and social manners. All these (in their way) are good things, too, and without them liberty is not a benefit whilst it lasts, and is not likely to continue long.

  6. Isms Roundtable Activity • In groups of 4 create a chart that lists the roots, key characteristics, and heroes of each ism.

  7. “Classic” Liberalism • Rooted in Enlightenment • Believed that the individual is a self-sufficient being • The ism of the middle class & bourgeoisie • Favored written constitution • Reject republicanism (universal male suffrage) • Love Lockean notions of the right of rebellion, and natural rights • Favored Smithian Laissez-faire economics • Favored balance of power, free trade, Education • Heroes: Locke, Smith, Philosophes, Ricardo, Malthus

  8. Romanticism • Rooted in Plato, Rousseau and Kant • Plato-innate ideas • Rousseau- Emile’s praise of childhood, and nature • Kant- rejected Locke’s notion of tabula rasa in favor of categorical imperative • Innate subjective sense of what is good and beautiful • A reaction against the Enlightenment, rationalism, classicalism, & liberalism • Favored imagination & spontaneity over classical rules (art & literature) • Highpoint from 1780s-1848 • Feeling & emotion over reason • Mucho amour for the medieval times & nature • Rejected notion of “progress” & universal laws • said each historical period & people were unique, organic, and different • At the forefront in fighting slavery, industrial evils Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows, John Constable Neuschwanstein Castle

  9. Wanderer Looking over a Sea of Fog (1815 • Caspar David Friedrich 1774 – 1840) century German Romantic painter

  10. French Utopian Socialism • Rooted in a reaction to the evils of the Industrial Revolution, Renaissance (Sir Thomas More) & French Rev (Convention) • Believed in government economic planning • Hated cutthroat, selfish, individualistic and chaotic capitalism • Private property should be regulated or abolished • Count Henri de Saint-Simon (1760-1825) • Proposed that the “Doers” or Captains of Industry (scientists, engineers, industrialists) should plan the economy • Public should own the means of production • Public works projects, investment banking • Parasites (monarchs, aristocracy, Church) should step aside • Charles Fourier (1772-1837) • Proposed small units (phalansteries) containing 1,620 people • communal societies where people worked at what they were interested in • Total emancipation for women • Saw marriage as another form of prostitution

  11. French Utopian Socialism • Louis Blanc (1811-1882) • Organization of Work (1839) • proposed social workshops (state supported manufacturing centers) where workers labor for themselves without the intervention of private capitalists • Robert Owen (1771-1858) • Industrialist and cotton lord of Manchester • Appalled by conditions of mill-workers • Created a model community • High wages • Reduced hours • Corrective against vice (drunkenness) • Schools • Housing • Stores • paternalistic capitalism turned him into a social reformer

  12. Nationalism • A raised level of consciousness of a particular peoples’ traditions, history, land, language, culture that say they should be joined together in a nation • Glued mostly by a “fixed” language & Romanticism • Linguists & scholars had begun to fix national languages through journals, books, newspapers • Rejected Congress of Vienna and its principle of “legitimacy” • Favor idea of popular sovereignty • Although certain minorities came to dominate national character (Hungary) • Proponents promoted • idea of nationalisms economic and administrative efficiency • A nation, like a person, is free & a creation of God • Religious figure • Poland as the crucified Christ

  13. Nationalism Continued • Most influential in Germany • Herder –Father of German Nationalism • Ideas on the Philosophy of the History of Mankind (1784) • Volksgeist – “Spirit of the People” • common people is where national character existed • Rejected Enlightenment idea of progress • said each nation should develop their own way and avoid distortions by outside influence • didn’t think that German culture was better but different • J. G. Fichte • Closed Commercial state (1800) • outlined a totalitarian system in which the state planned and operated whole economy in isolationist fashion, thus protecting national character • Address To The German Nation, 1807 • there was an ineradicable German spirit, primordial, to be kept pure at all costs, inner moral universe • German spirit is better than others

  14. Nationalism Continued • Father Jahn: • known as Turnvater Jahn, or the "father of gymnastics" • organized a youth movement (political gymnastics clubs) • did calisthenics for Fatherland, made fun of aristocrats in French costumes, suspicion of foreigners (Jews, internationalists), IE things that might corrupt the purity of German Volk • 1810- "Poles, French, priests, aristocrats and Jews are Germany's misfortune." • Organized book burnings • Grimm’s Fairy Tales • In search of the Volk • Cinderella, Hansel and Gretel • Friedrick List • Advocated Zollverein (free trade zones within German states

  15. Scientific “Marxist” Socialism • Based on philosophy of Karl Marx (1818-1883) & Friedrich Engles (1820-1895) • Brutal and militant revolutionary vision of how the working class would defeat bourgeiosie • Based inversely on Wilhelm Hegel’s philosophy • German nationalistic philosophy who said history is the story of Dialectic Ideals • irrespirable tendency for human mind to move forward by the creation of opposites (dialectic • Dialectic Materialism –explains all human history • All change comes through the clash of antagonistic elements • Historical development is the result of conditions created by the interaction of such forces • Economic causation to all human history/Class struggle • All human history is a story of a struggle over material (resources) between haves and have nots • Monarch v. Nobility • Nobility v. Bourgeoisie • Bourgeoisie v. Proletariat

  16. Scientific “Marxist” Socialism • Theory of Surplus Value • the “stolen” portion of the value of the product the proletariat labored over • The profit of the capitalist • Inevitability of Communist State • Believed that history is scientific (predictable) • Capitalism contains the seeds of its own destruction • Bourgeoisie will exploit the proletariat until class consciousness rises & workers destroy capitalism in favor of a Dictatorship of the Proletariat • A classless society • Work according to one’s ability, take according to one’s needs • Communist Manifesto (1848) • A call for revolution • The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. Workers of the world unite! • “..let the ruling classes tremble at a communist revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Workingmen of all countries, unite!”

  17. Congress of Vienna • Napoleon Defeated by 1814 • many questions remained unanswered.. • Quadruple Alliance • Russia, Austria, Prussia, and Great Britain • “First Treaty of Vienna” • restored the French boundaries of 1792 • Restored the Bourbon dynasty • No indemnity • Defensive Measures • established Prussia as a "sentinel on the Rhine" • Prussia got land on Rhine • created Kingdom of the Netherlands • a new kingdom out of Belgium and Holland. • balance of power- • believed that an international equilibrium of political and military forces would preserve peace in Europe.

  18. Congress of Vienna • Sticky Points • Polish-Saxon Question • Prussians and the Russians demanded Saxony and Poland • compensation threatened the balance. • Castlereagh, Metternich, and Talleyrand forced Russia and Prussia into a compromise whereby Russia got part of Poland and Prussia received two-fifths of Saxony

  19. Congress or Metternich System • Intervention and repression • Under Metternich, Austria, Prussia, and Russia led a crusade against liberalism. • They formed a Holy Alliance to check future liberal and revolutionary activity. • When liberals succeeded in Spain and in the Two Sicilies, these powers intervened to restore conservatism. • Metternich's policies also dominated the German Confederation--through which the Carlsbad Decrees were issued in 1819. • These decrees repressed subversive ideas and organizations in the 38 German states • Read German Gynasium

  20. Metternich and Conservatism • Metternich represented the view that the best state blended monarchy, bureaucracy, and aristocracy. • He hated liberalism, which he claimed stirred up the lower classes and caused war and bloodshed. • Liberalism also stirred up national aspirations in central Europe, which could lead to war and the breakup of the Austrian Empire. • The empire, which was dominated by the minority Germans, contained many ethnic groups, including Hungarians and Czechs, which was a potential source of weakness and dissatisfaction.

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