Erik Manarino
ESLR: 1, 4, 5
Chapter 29 Outline
Nationalism and Revolution Around the World
A. The Mexican Revolution
1.
The dictator Porfirio Diaz had ruled
2. Prosperity benefited wealthy landowners, business people, and foreign investors. But most Mexicans were peasants who lived in desperate poverty.
3. After the battles there were power struggles that followed. During these power struggles that followed, several radical leaders emerged. Among them was Francisco Villa.
B. Reforms
1. Nationalization or government takeover, of natural resources. The church land was made “ the property of the nation” the constitution set a minimum wage for workers.
2. At first, the constitution was just a set of goals to be achieved sometime in the future. But in the 1920s, as the government finally restored order.
3. The PRI started in 1929, when the government leaders organized what later became the institutional revolutionary party. It has dominated Mexican politics.
C. Rising Tide of Nationalism
1.
Economic nationalism, during the 1920s and 1930s, world events affected
Latin American economics. After World War I, trade fell off with
2. A tide of economic nationalism swept Latin American countries. They were determined to develop their own economics and end foreign economic control.
3. By the 1920s, an upsurge of national feeling led Latin American writers, artist, and thinkers to reject European influences. Instead they took pride on their own work.
D. The “Good Neighbor” Policy
1.
During and after World War I, investments by the
2.
During the Mexican Revolution, the
3.
During 1920s, anti-Americanism increased. In
II. Nationalist Movements in
A. Movements for change in Africa
1. During the early 1900s, more and more Africans felt the
impact of the colonial rule. In
2. They imposed a system of racial segregation that became known as apartheid. The goal was to ensure white economic power. Ando so they separated the whites from the blacks.
3. Other laws further chipped away at the rights of blacks. In one South African province, educated blacks who owned property had been allowed to vote in local elections.
B. Growing Self- Confidence
1. During the 1920s, a movement known as Pan- Africanism began to nourish the nationalist spirit.
Pan- Africanism emphasized the unity of Africans and
people of
2. Led by the African American W.E.B. DuBois, Pan- Africanists tried to forge a united front. DuBois organized the first Pan-African congress in 1919.
3. French speaking writers in
C.
Modernization in
1. Nationalism brought immense changes to the
2. Led by the determined and energetic Mustafa Kemal, Turkish nationalist over threw the sultan, defeated
western occupation forces, and declared
3. In a move that swept away centuries-old traditions, Ataturk replaced Islamic law with a new law code based on European models. He discarded the Muslim calendar.
D. Arab Nationalism and European Mandates
1. Arab nationalism blossomed after World War I and gave rise to Pan-Arabism. This nationalist movement built on the shared heritage of Arabs who lived in lands from the Arab.
2. Since Roman times, Jews had dreamed of returning to
3. At first, some Arabs welcomed the money and modern
technical skills that the newcomers brought with them, but as Jews poured into
the
III.
A. Moves toward
1. The tragedy at
2. To quiet nationalist demands, the British
promised
3. Since 1885, the congress party had pressed for
self-rule within the
B. Mohandas Gandhi
1.
Mohandas Gandhi went to
2.
Gandhi tried hard to fight against injustice in
3.
Gandhi was a great peaceful man and would do anything to help his
Indians as long as it was in a peaceful manner; he would go into fasting and
would not eat until every person from
C. The Salt March
1. To Gandhi, the government salt monopoly was an evil burden on the poor and a symbol of British oppression.
2. Even though natural salt was available in the sea, Indians were forbidden to touch it and they could only but salt sold by the government.
3. On March 12, Gandhi set out on a 240-mile march to the sea along with 78 of his followers and even though Gandhi himself was arrested, other kept collecting salt while he was in prison.
C. Looking Ahead
1.
While
2. While millions of Muslims responded to Gandhi’s campaigns. Tensions till rose among Hindus and Muslims, which often erupted to violence.
3. India was moving toward independence when a new world war exploded which was World War II where Britain outraged Indian leaders by postponing further action on independence and then bringing India into the war without consulting them.
IV.
Upheavals in
A. The
1. In 1911, in china, the Qing dynasty collapsed and Sun Yixian tried to rebuild china again, however, it made no progress leading chaos all over.
2. Because Sun Yixian did not have anymore confidence, he stepped down as president and let Yuan Shikai take over hoping that he would be able to restore order and create a strong central government.
3. On
B. Leaders for a New
1.
Jiang Jieshi took over
the Guomindang after Sun Yixian
died; he had received military training in
2. Mao Zedong believed that communists should seek support not among the small urban working class but among the large peasant masses.
3. Jiang Jieshi was still determined to destroy the communists and led the Guomindang in a series of extermination campaigns against them.
D. Japanese Invasion
1.
In 1931,
2.
In 1937, the Japanese attacked again- airplanes bombed Chinese cities;
highly disciplined and well-equipped Japanese troops overran eastern
3.
The bombing of
V. Empire of Rising Sun
A. Liberal changes of the 1920s
1. Political parties in
2. During WWI, the Japanese economy enjoyed phenomenal growth, and they, as a country, were doing very well.
3. However, the economy died down and grew more slower in the 1920s than at the
time since
B. The Nationalist Reaction
1.
In 1929, the Great Depression affected
2.
In
3.
In 1931, a group of Japanese army officers provoked an incident that
would provide an excuse to seize
C. Militarists in Power
1. By the early 1930s, ultranationalists were winning popular support for foreign conquests and a tough stand against the western powers.
2. To please these ultranationalists, it cracked down on socialists and ended most democratic freedoms.
4.