Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Social, Economical, And Political Effects Of World War I Essays
Social, Economical, And Political Effects Of World War I Essays     Social, Economical, and Political Effects of World War I        "Everywhere in the world was heard the sound of things   breaking." Advanced European societies could not support long wars or   so many thought prior to World War I. They were right in a way. The   societies could not support a long war unchanged. The First World War   left no aspect of European civilization untouched as pre-war   governments were transformed to fight total war. The war metamorphed   Europe socially, politicaly, economically, and intellectualy.       European countries channeled all of their resources into total   war which resulted in enormous social change. The result of working   together for a common goal seemed to be unifying European societies.   Death knocked down all barriers between people. All belligerents had   enacted some form of a selective service which levelled classes in   many ways. Wartime scarcities made luxury an impossibility and   unfavorable. Reflecting this, clothing became uniform and   utilitarian. Europeans would never again dress in fancy, elaborate   costumes. Uniforms led the way in clothing change. The bright   blue-and-red prewar French infantry uniforms had been changed after   the first few months of the war, since they made whoever wore them   into excellent targets for machine guns. Women's skirts rose above   the ankle permanently and women became more of a part of society  than ever. They undertook a variety of jobs previously held by men.   They were now a part of clerical, secretarial work, and teaching.   They were also more widely employed in industrial jobs. By 1918, 37.6   percent of the work force in the Krupp armaments firm in Germany was  female. In England the proportion of women works rose strikingly in  public transport (for example, from 18,000 to 117,000 bus conductors),  banking (9,500 to 63,700), and commerce (505,000 to 934,000). Many  restrictions on women disappeared during the war. It became   acceptable for young, employed, single middle-class women to have   their own apartments, to go out without chaperones, and to smoke in   public. It was only a matter of time before women received the right   to vote in many belligerent countries. Strong forces were shaping the   power and legal status of labor unions, too. The right of workers to   organize was relatively new, about half a century. Employers fought   to keep union organizers out of their plants and armed force was often   used against striking workers. The universal rallying of workers   towards their flag at the beginning of the war led to wider acceptance   of unions. It was more of a bureaucratic route than a parliamentary   route that integrated organized labor into government, however. A   long war was not possible without complete cooperation of the workers   with respect to putting in longers hours and increasing productivity.    Strike activity had reached its highest levels in history just before   the war. There had been over 1,500 diffent work stoppages in France   and 3,000 in Germany during 1910. More than a million British workers   stopped at one time or another in 1912. In Britain, France, and   Germany, deals were struck between unions and government to eliminate   strikes and less favorable work conditions in exchange for immediate   integration into the government process. This integration was at the   cost of having to act more as managers of labor than as the voice of   the labor. Suddenly, the strikes stopped during the first year of the   war. Soon the enthusiasm died down, though. The revival of strike   activity in 1916 shows that the social peace was already wearing thin.    Work stoppages and the number of people on strike in France   quadrupled in 1916 compared to 1915. In Germany, in May 1916, 50,000   Berlin works held a three-day walkout to protest the arrest of the   pacifist Karl Liebknecht. By the end of the war most had rejected  the government offer of being integrated in the beaurocracy, but not  without playing an important public role and gaining some advantages   such as collective bargaining. The war may have had a leveling effect   in many ways, but it also sharpened some social differences and   conflicts. Soldiers were revolting just like workers:        They [soldiers] were no longer willing to sacrifice their      lives when shirkers at home were earning all the money, tkaing,       the women around in cars, cornering all the best jobs, and       while so many profiteers were waxing rich.    
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