1 / 20

Industrialism and global capitalism

Industrialism and global capitalism. Key Concept 5.1. Key Concept 5.1.

altsoba
Download Presentation

Industrialism and global capitalism

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. Industrialism and global capitalism Key Concept 5.1

  2. Key Concept 5.1 • Industrialization fundamentally altered the production of goods around the world. It not only changed how goods were produced and consumed, as well as what was considered a “good,” but it also had far-reaching effects on the global economy, social relations, and culture. Although it is common to speak of an “Industrial Revolution,” the process of industrialization was a gradual one that unfolded over the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, eventually becoming global.

  3. Textile Industry • Flying Shuttle- weave cloth 2x as fast as a person • Need more thread • spinning jenny- could spin 8 spindles of thread at once • Spinning jenny still needed highly skilled laborers • Water frame- low skill needed, stronger thread, faster • Raw cotton separated using the cotton gin • This created the factory system (1)

  4. Introduction to Industrial revolution • The Industrial Revolution was one of the most significant elements of Europe’s modern transformation • Initial period 1750-1900 • Drew on the Scientific Revolution • Utterly transformed European society • Pushed Europe into a position of global dominance • Was more fundamental than any breakthrough since the Agricultural Revolution • Where are we now? • Beginning of a movement leading to worldwide industrialization? • Stuck in the middle of a world permanently divided between rich and poor countries? • Approaching the end of an environmentally unsustainable industrial era?

  5. Key Concept 5.1 I • Industrialization fundamentally changed how goods were produced • But how did we get to that point?

  6. Factors that led to Industrial Revolution • Europe’s location on the Atlantic Ocean (2)

  7. Factors that led to Industrial Revolution • Geographical distribution of coal, iron, and timber (3-5)

  8. Factors that led to Industrial Revolution • European demographic changes (6) • England: • Guilds largely disappeared • Growing population • Aristocrats interested in commerce • British worldwide commerce already • Politics encouraged commercialization and economic innovation • Religious tolerance • Tariffs • Easy to form companies and forbid workers’ unions • Unified internal market • Patent laws • Checks on royal authority

  9. Factors that led to Industrial Revolution • Urbanization/Private Property (7/9) • Enclosure Movement • Improved agricultural practices

  10. Factors that led to Industrial Revolution (8)

  11. Factors that led to Industrial Revolution • Abundance of Rivers and Canals (10) • Unified internal markets

  12. Factors that led to industrial revolution • Access to foreign markets (11)

  13. Factors that led to industrial revolution • The accumulation of capital (12) • Entrepreneurs combined capital, raw materials, labor and ideas to make profit

  14. Machines • The development of machines made it possible to exploit vast new resources • Machines • Steam engine (13) • Internal combustion engine (14) • Fossil Fuel energy (15) • Oil • Coal

  15. New sources of Energy • Biological “old regime”- human/animal power; burning biomass (wood/wax) • Biological “new regime”- fossil fuels- coal/oil/gas • Deforestation in England led to greater use of coal • Steam Power made it possible to exploit the energy stored in the fossil fuels • Greatly increased the energy available to human societies

  16. Factory System • Concentrates production in one place (materials, labor) (16) • Located near the sources of power (rather than labor or markets) • Requires a lot of capital investment (factory, machines, etc) • Textile Factory Workers in England:

  17. Factory System • Rigid schedule • 12-14 hour day • Dangerous conditions • Mind-numbing monotony • Specialization of Labor (17)

  18. Spread of Industrialization (18) England Russia

  19. Spread to United States • Slower that Northern Europe • Fewer laborers • Lack of capital • British craftsmen started cotton textile industry in New England in 1820s • Heavy iron and steel industries in 1870s • Rail networks developed in 1860s; integrated various regions of United States

  20. Second Industrial Revolution • 1870-1914 (19) • 1st Industrial Revolution dominated by trial and error • Figured out what worked, but no real understanding of how they worked • e.g. power machinery without understanding thermodynamics • 2nd defined by science • More efficient steam engines • Electricity- telegraph, understanding of physics of electrical impulses, AC Current (22) • New methods of steel production made steel stronger and cheaper leading to steel becoming the fundamental material of industry (20) • Chemistry- German leaders- understanding of chemistry- new dyes, explosives, fertilizers, rubber, pharmaceuticals (21) • American System of manufacturing- complex products made from mass-produced individual components- precision machinery (23)

More Related