Studyspark Study Document

U's Modernization Term Paper

Pages:2 (559 words)

Sources:1

Subject:Government

Topic:Urbanization

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#88318395


Modernization, industrialization, and urbanization transformed the geographic and cultural landscape of America. One of the most visible changes to American society during the late 19th century came about in the form of race relations. Whereas slavery itself represented the antithesis of modernity, modern industrial technology fueled the slave-based cotton industry and further entrenched slavery in the American South. Whereas the North capitalized on modern industrial technologies to diversify its economy and create a more competitive and highly skilled labor force the South focused on the cotton gin almost exclusively. The South did not embrace the social, political, or philosophical tenets of modernization and this was a fundamental reason for the Civil War. Ultimately, modernization helped to dismantle the slave-based economy in the South, allowed African-Americans to enter the labor force, and created a more socially diversified nation.

The initial phase of modernization was tough on African-Americans. The cotton gin made the need for slavery worse, not better. Furthermore, the paternalistic slave-based agrarian economy depended on an immobilized and disempowered workforce. Even after the Civil War, the South resisted the call to modernize its culture and economy. Their conservative system was based on paternalism, in which workers remained disenfranchised and immobilized ("Industrialization and Dominant-Minority Relations," n.d.). Modernization, on the other hand, was based more on a free market system in which workers competed with each other for wages and status on a labor market. Whereas slaves were unable to leave their plantations and find jobs; free workers were.

The promise of freedom and empowerment caused a major social, political, and economic upheaval in the shape of the Great Migration of African-Americans from the South to the North. However, the industrialized economy depended not only on a mobile workforce but also a literate and semi-skilled one ("Industrialization and Dominant-Minority Relations," n.d.). Many African-Americans moving to the North lacked the skills with which to compete fairly on the open market. This led to considerable economic disenfranchisement and the ghettoization of the African-American communities.

The Civil War had represented a growing pain of modernization, which led to tremendous political, economic, and social upheavals in the United States. After the Civil War, the growing pains continued in the form of Jim Crow laws and other forms of institutionalized racism. One of the reactions to the Northern victory was Black Codes and the form of indentured servitude known as sharecropping. Another was the systematic prevention of…


Sample Source(s) Used

Reference

"Industrialization and Dominant-Minority Relations." Chapter 4. Retrieved online: http://www.sagepub.com/upm-data/13174_Chapter4.pdf

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Modernization in the United States and the

Pages: 3 (972 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Economics Document: #68789532

Modernization in the United States and the Global Community How does modernization manifest itself in U.S. society? Truly, modernization in the United States began in earnest with the inception of the Industrial Revolution in the late 19th and early 20th century. Accordingly, it would manifest in direct concordance with the imperatives of a laissez faire economy. The technological and commodity oriented production boom that, nearing the turn to the 20th century, instigated

Studyspark Study Document

Modernization of Russia and Japan

Pages: 2 (889 words) Subject: History - Asian Document: #10354370

Modernization of Russia and Japan Russia and Japan, were among the only dominant powers in Asia, still were states with declining feudal economics and feudal survivals in the middle of 19th century. Feudal system of relations prevented countries from a gradual and progressive development, made unable the development of market relations and establishment of equal opportunities for international trade. The growing class of businessmen or bourgeoisie in both countries felt those

Studyspark Study Document

Modernization in IT and Its

Pages: 8 (2672 words) Sources: 10 Subject: Transportation Document: #77409019

(Roach, 2002) The tourist associated IT bursts such as Advanced Traveler Information Systems -- ATIS entail the customer such as mobile passengers having tourist data digitally. The data may be constant of a previous record or flow of current data by real time. The subject matter may incorporate prices, routes, schedules, nobilities, time of arrival of the next vehicle, availability of particular location equipment. Data could be entailed on

Studyspark Study Document

U.S. Airline Industry Airline Industry Structure of

Pages: 10 (3159 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Transportation Document: #59198607

U.S. Airline Industry AIRLINE INDUSTRY Structure of the Industry Deregulation Act of 1978 US Airline Industry During the 1980s US Airline Industry During the 1990s The Next Decade for the U.S. Airline Industry Post 9/11 Bankruptcy Issue of Fuel Hurricane Katrina Future for the Global Airline Industry Airline Industry worldwide in general and United States in particular has played a central role in stirring the growth of the world economy. With USA appearing on the world map as one of the most

Studyspark Study Document

U.S. Role in Development of South Korean

Pages: 3 (1070 words) Sources: 5 Subject: History - Asian Document: #545992

U.S. Role in Development of South Korean Economy The end of the Second World War saw the division of the Korean Peninsula into two separate countries: North Korea, under the control of the Communists, and South Korea, under the control of the United States and it's allies. (Carter 2010) In June of 1950, the North Koreans, with Soviet support, invaded the South in an effort to re-unite the two countries in

Studyspark Study Document

U.S. History America As a

Pages: 5 (1328 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Economics Document: #83007411

Concurrently, while the agrarian sector and movements suffered from the effects of urbanization and the nation's laissez faire form of government, cities flourished as more and more economic progress happened in the area of industrialization. New technology allowed new industries to flourish; increased immigration made possible the increasing mandate of political groups and movements and policies that supported the path towards industrialization and urbanization. Railroads became a cause for faster

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".