1 / 5

Radical Ideas and Early Socialism

Radical Ideas and Early Socialism. By Derek Siegal , Emily Ryan, and Melissa Titolo. Liberalism. Old tradition rejected Principle ideas were liberty and equality Alternative ideologies and tried to convince society to act to which they were very successful Equality before law

gryta
Download Presentation

Radical Ideas and Early Socialism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radical Ideas and Early Socialism By Derek Siegal, Emily Ryan, and Melissa Titolo

  2. Liberalism • Old tradition rejected • Principle ideas were liberty and equality • Alternative ideologies and tried to convince society to act to which they were very successful • Equality before law • Rights such as freedom of speech • Opponents favored laissez-faire • Businessmen favored the liberalism in the economy because it allowed them to do as they wish in their factories • Workers and peasants didn’t own enough property to vote

  3. Nationalism • Nationalism was a radical idea which came around the years of 1815 • Nationalism had its immediate origins in the French revolution and the Napoleonic wars • Early advocates of the “national idea” argued that each people had its own genius and its own cultural unity • Nationalism in the nineteenth century mostly manifested itself in language, history and territory • New communication needs promoted the creation of a new standardized national language which encompassed the entire country population through mass education • Nationalism was utilized meant bringing citizens together with emotionally charged symbols and ceremonies, such as independence holidays and patriotic parades. • Early nationalism developed a strong sense of “we” and “they”, this was caused by the nationalists’ adding two ingredients to their influence; a sense of national mission and a sense of national superiority.

  4. French Utopian Socialism • Socialism: new radical doctrine after 1815 beginning in France • Early French socialist thinkers were acutely aware that the political revolution in France, the rise of laissez faire, and the emergence of modern industry in Great Britain were transforming society. • Goals of socialism were to prevent selfish individualism and establish a new sense of community • The government should rationally organize the economy and not depend on constructive competition • Parasites: the court, the aristocracy, lawyers and churchmen • Doers: leading scientists, engineers, and industrialists • Charles Fourier wanted a socialist utopia consisting of the abolition of marriage, free unions based only upon love, and sexual freedom • The aspirations of French workers and socialists reinforced each other

  5. The Birth of Marxism Socialism • Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published The Communist Manifesto- bible of socialism • Marx ridiculed people who tried to appeal to the middle class and state to help the poor • Believed one class exploited the other • The bourgeoisie- the middle class • The proletariat- the modern working class • Karl Marx predicted the proletariat (workers) would overthrow capitalists in a violent revolution. • His ideas united sociology, economics, and all human history • Marx was “the last of the classical economists,” influenced strongly by David Ricardo and his “iron law of wages.” • Marx’s thinking built on the philosophy of Hegel

More Related