Historical Ideologies - AP European History

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Question

What is the seminal Enlightenment work of Mary Wollstonecraft?

Answer

Mary Wollstonecraft was one of the founding voices of the feminist movement. She argued that women were not naturally inferior to men and pushed to have men and women recognized as equals. A Vindication of the Rights of Women was published in 1792. Letters on the French Revolution was published in 1790 by Edmund Burke. "Ode on the Peace" was a poem published by Helen Maria Williams in 1801. The Theory of Moral Sentiments was published in 1759 by Adam Smith.

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Question

"It may be answered that one should wish to be both, but, because it is difficult to unite them in one person, it is much safer to be feared than loved, when, of the two, either must be dispensed with."

The above claim is representative of which important Renaissance thinker?

Answer

Niccolo Machiavelli's 1513 treatise The Prince described how a ruler should maintain political power. Prior to Machiavelli, political theory typically described how rulers ought to rule based on specific moral and Christian principles. In The Prince, Machiavelli instead advocates for a more realistic mode of governance not restricted by such lofty concerns.

Quotation adapted from The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli (1513; trans. Mariott 1908)

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Question

The French school of history known as the Annales School focuses on __________.

Answer

The Annales School of historiography developed in the first half of the twentieth century in France and is widely influential to the study of history to this day. It focuses on a long-term and comprehensive analysis of historical trends, particularly social and economic history, with a view to finding simple solutions to historical conundrums.

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Question

Eurocentrism and Orientalism have which of the following in common?

Answer

These two historical theories are each predicated on the West viewing the East through the lenses of racism and supposedly inherent Western superiority. Eurocentric interpretations of history give inordinate focus to European events, traditions, and interpretations of society in a global context, and Orientalist works eroticize the East and portray it as backwards and/or exotic.

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Question

Which of the following individuals is most closely associated with Social Darwinism?

Answer

Social Darwinism was an interpretation of the theory of natural selection that emerged in the second half of the nineteenth century. Social Darwinism essentially maintains that in human populations, just like in animal populations, natural selection is at work and only the fittest, smartest, and strongest will survive. It provided a convenient excuse for the abuses committed during the New Imperialism era, as it allowed European intellectuals to claim "natural superiority" over other races and defend their otherwise morally reprehensible actions. Of course, Social Darwinism was not universally propounded in this time period, but in the years since, it has come to be widely associated with Herbert Spencer. Spencer was one of the most famous philosophers of his time and an ardent believer in the benefits of competition.

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Question

Marxist history is predicated on the belief that __________.

Answer

Marxist history is based on the belief that history is one constant struggle between the economic classes. Marxist history considers factors like nationality, religious affiliation, ethnicity, and so on to be secondary to the competition between the classes, particularly the competition between the producers (the working class), the consumers (the middle class), and the owners (the upper class). It is based on the writings of Karl Marx.

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Question

Mary Wollstonecraft is most well known as one of the founding philosophers of which field of thought?

Answer

Mary Wollstonecraft was a founding voice of Feminism in the late 1700's. Her treatise A Vindication of the Rights of Woman is her most famous work, and is an outline of the idea that women are not inferior to men, and deserve the same rights.

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Question

“It is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong.”

The above quotation can be found in the writings of __________.

Answer

The quotation reflects the central tenet of utilitarianism, the core philosophy of the extremely influential British thinker and social reformer Jeremy Bentham. Bentham’s philosophy holds that society, and by extension government, should work towards providing the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people possible. This is the core component of Bentham’s leading philosophy, utilitarianism. Bentham was considered a radical in his time; he advocated for, among other things, economic liberty, individualism, equal rights for women, the abolition of slavery, decriminalization of homosexuality, animal rights, and extensive social welfare.

Quotation adapted from Fragment on Government by Jeramy Bentham (1776)

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Question

The Chartist movement in nineteenth-century Britain supported all of the following policies EXCEPT __________.

Answer

The Chartist movement gained its name from the People's Charter of 1838, which was a large-scale petition effort that found particular success among the burgeoning working classes of Britain's expanding industrial cities. The Chartists fought for Parliamentary reform, as they believed that the previous century's reforms did not go far enough. The Charter contained six specific points about Parliamentary elections: universal male suffrage, a secret ballot, no property requirements for members of parliament, equal parliamentary constituencies, and annual parliamentary elections.

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Question

Which term describes the set of ideals that, beginning in the Early Modern period, aimed to merge political sovereignty with the person of an autocrat with unlimited power within a political realm?

Answer

Absolutism, as exemplified by rulers such as Louis XIV of France, was a movement toward political centralization in Europe. As trade from overseas imperial holdings and expensive, gunpowder dependent-armies grew in importance, they increasingly transferred an edge to the crown in the old feudal struggles. Absolute rulers curbed the rights and privileges granted to smaller feudal nobles, and as a result contributed to the general breakdown of local variation and the rise of nationalism within Europe.

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Question

The ideology known as Jacobitism was centered on the belief that __________.

Answer

The ideology of Jacobitism was first and foremost centered on returning the male Stuart line to the thrones of England, Scotland, and Ireland. While this touched on issues of religion (all the Stuart pretenders were Catholic and England and Scotland were officially Protestant) and saw its greatest support in Ireland and the Highlands of Scotland, Jacobitism's only real unifying element was loyalty to the Stuart line.

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Question

The idea that in every historical period two competing ideas, the thesis and the antithesis, compete and eventually merge to form a “synthesis” is called _________.

Answer

The Hegelian Dialectic, developed by German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, states that in every historical time period there is a prevailing thesis and an opposing antithesis that compete for control and that eventually merge to form a “synthesis.” According to Hegel, this “synthesis” is then carried forwards as the dominant “thesis” (paradigm) of the next time period, where the process repeats itself. The Hegelian Dialectic has been massively influential in the fields of philosophy and cultural criticism.

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Question

According to the Nihilist school of philosophical thought, the only truth and meaning exists in __________.

Answer

Nihilism is the belief that life is essentially meaningless, particularly that religion, morality, and spirituality are fundamentally meaningless. Nihilists believe that even if meaning were to exist, it would be impossible to communicate this meaning between humans. As a philosophical tradition, Nihilism dates back to the ancient Greeks (most notably Gorgias). Many influential philosophers, if not full Nihilists, were substantially influenced by nihilistic thinking, including Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Sartre, among many others.

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Question

The policy of appeasement is closely associated with which of these British rulers?

Answer

In the years leading up to World War II, the militarization of Germany in conjunction with Hitler’s expansionist and racist rhetoric caused alarm throughout the nations of Europe. On the other hand, most governments were also heavily opposed to preemptively striking against Hitler and wanted to avoid war at all costs. The policy of appeasement conceded that it was better to give in to Hitler’s simpler demands if it preserved Europe's tenuous peace. The hands-off approach of appeasement led to the annexation of the Sudetenland (a German-speaking part of Czechoslovakia). Neville Chamberlain was the British Prime Minister at the time, and who was among the strongest advocates of the policy. Seeing that appeasement had failed as a policy, Chamberlain resigned his office shortly after the beginning of the war.

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Question

Romanticism, as a literary movement, was primarily driven by a(n) __________.

Answer

Romanticism, as an literary movement, emerged in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It was primarily focused on celebrating human emotions and the qualities of human nature. Early Romantic poets, most notably William Wordsworth, also emphasized a return to the common speech of lower-class people, as opposed to higher-flown "poetic" or courtly language. Romanticism sought to take the emphasis away from logic and scientific inquiry, and focus instead on the natural beauty of humanity and the world.

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Question

Pan-Slavism, the belief the Slavic people should have their own nation-state under the protection of the Russian Empire, competed with __________ as the dominant ideology of Slavic people in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Answer

Slavs were one of the dominant ethnic groups in Eastern and Southern Europe and were ruled by the Austro-Hungarian empire throughout much of the nineteenth century. The rising influence of nationalism in this time period led to the Slavic people campaigning for self-government. Ultimately, however, two competing schools of thought emerged: Austro-Slavism, which sought to have the Slavic people protected by the might of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and Pan-Slavism, which sought an independent Slavic state under the protection of the Russian Empire.

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Question

Dialectical materialism is the name given to the attempt by _________ to apply the Hegelian Dialectic to __________.

Answer

The Hegelian Dialectic says that in every time period there is a competing thesis and antithesis, and that these two forces eventually merge to form a “synthesis.” This “synthesis” is then carried forward to the next time period and the process begins again. Karl Marx, in his Communist Manifesto, attempted to apply the Hegelian Dialectic to the struggle between the economic classes in the nineteenth century. For Marx, the competing thesis and antithesis were capitalism and communism.

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Question

The twentieth-century French writer and philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre is most closely associated with which of these movements or ideologies?

Answer

Existentialism arose originally as an offshoot of the philosophical writings of Friedrich Nietzsche. Existentialism holds that the universe as a whole is meaningless, and that the responsibility rests with the individual for giving meaning to his or her life and the world around him or her. Existentialism was advocated for and popularized by figures such as Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, and Albert Camus in the mid-twentieth century. Sartre was among the most notable advocates of existentialism as a movement, in part because his works included both creative treatments of the philosophical tennets of the movement (in novels and plays) and academic explanations of these ideas.

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Question

What was the Enlightenment?

Answer

The Enlightenment was in compliment to the Scientific Revolution. Where the Scientific Revolution catered to the "hard sciences" of math, chemistry, and physics, the Enlightenment brought about a major influx of people to the "soft sciences" of philosophy and social science. The major figures of the Enlightenment focused most of their work around the lives and social constructs of people.

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Question

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Zionists campaigned for __________.

Answer

Zionism first emerged in the late nineteenth century and picked up steam in the first few decades of the twentieth century. Zionists wanted a Jewish homeland, ideally located in Palestine. The Balfour Declaration, signed by the British government in 1917, promised to help provide a Jewish homeland in Palestine. This promise was eventually carried out after World War II, with the creation of Israel in 1948.

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