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Learning Objectives
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Chapter 11 teaches students about:

  • The rise of industrial society within the capitalist system.
  • The innovations in agriculture, industry, and transportation that led to the industrial revolution that took place in Britain.
  • The social consequences of the industrial revolution.
  • The proliferation of doctrines and movements after 1815, most notably, laissez faire political economy, Romanticism, Classical Liberalism, Radicalism, Republicanism, Socialism, feminism, and nationalism.
  • The emergence of cultural nationalism as a program for political action, especially where people of the same nationality were subject to foreign rule.
  • The proliferation of doctrines after 1815, most notably, Conservatism and Humanitarianism.
  • The fear of revolution after Napoleon's defeat, which led to the entrenchment of reactionary policies.
  • The congresses of the Great Powers, which were the initial experiments with a system of international regulation by the European countries.
  • The seeming containment of the revolutionary forces unleashed by the French Revolution, some ten years after Napoleon's defeat.
  • The successful resurgence of nationalism and revolution in France, Belgium, and Poland after 1830.
  • The ambiguous impact of the Reform movement in Britain.
  • The golden age of the bourgeoisie and their influence upon Europe, especially Britain.
  • The estrangement of labor during the bourgeois age, and the rapid spread of socialism among the working classes.
  • The growing divide between Western Europe's liberalism and Eastern Europe's autocratic monarchies.







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