0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views6 pages

9.1 APWH Globalization Intro

The document discusses the ongoing narrative of globalization from 1900 to the present, emphasizing that historical events like the fall of the Soviet Union and decolonization did not mark the end of history. It explores the complexities of globalization, including economic integration, environmental changes, and cultural identities, while highlighting the disparities and challenges faced by different populations. The unit aims to connect past patterns to present realities, encouraging a deeper understanding of how globalization shapes our world today.

Uploaded by

27arajesh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views6 pages

9.1 APWH Globalization Intro

The document discusses the ongoing narrative of globalization from 1900 to the present, emphasizing that historical events like the fall of the Soviet Union and decolonization did not mark the end of history. It explores the complexities of globalization, including economic integration, environmental changes, and cultural identities, while highlighting the disparities and challenges faced by different populations. The unit aims to connect past patterns to present realities, encouraging a deeper understanding of how globalization shapes our world today.

Uploaded by

27arajesh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Learn more at [Link].

com

Unit 9 Introduction: Globalization,


1900–Present
By Trevor Getz

The fall of the Soviet Union and decolonization did not “end history”. The
interconnected world of today offers many opportunities but also deep
problems for us all. The story continues.
Unit 9 Introduction: Globalization, 1900–Present
Trevor Getz

The end of history?


In December of 1991, when the Soviet Union broke up into fifteen different countries, most of which quickly
embraced some form of a capitalist economic system, the Cold War came to an end. Decolonization didn’t end quite
as neatly, but it probably can be said to have ended somewhere in the 1990s, perhaps in 1997, when the British
handed the colony of Hong Kong back to China. So that’s that, right?

Well, no. If you’ve paid attention to this course, you know that historical narratives hardly ever really end. History
has a legacy. The past continues to affect the present. For example, there are still communist states in the world,
such as Cuba and (in some ways) China. Many people in the world still believe that socialism is a good idea, despite
the Cold War victory of the United States over the Soviet Union. Colonialism has left an even longer legacy. Among
other things, this legacy continues to shape ideas and opinions about whose culture is superior or inferior. In global
economic structures, the ghosts of colonialism have left many former colonies impoverished while the richest
companies in the world are based in former imperialist nations.

They say money is power. Decades after most of the world decolonized, this map shows the gross domestic product (GDP) of countries
(for the year 2020) according to the World Bank. By Our World in Data, CC BY 4.0.

This unit is about globalization. Okay, the whole course is kind of about globalization, but this is where we’ll follow
various types of worldwide connections and networks through time and place, armed with the knowledge and ideas
of the earlier units. Like the Cold War and decolonization, historians argue about the dates of this thing we call
globalization. We don’t argue about when it ended, but rather when it began. Did globalization begin around 1750,
2
Unit 9 Introduction: Globalization, 1900–Present
Trevor Getz

when the ideas that would give birth to the Industrial Revolution and liberal political revolutions crisscrossed the
Atlantic? Or perhaps 1880, when industrial states rushed to build vast global empires? Or did it begin in 1914, with
the first truly global war? Wait a minute—shouldn’t we really go back to 1492 when ship routes connected Afro-
Eurasia and the Americas? Or did it only truly take off after the Second World War with mass media and passenger
air travel? Depending on who you ask, globalization is as old as sailboats or as new as the Internet.

In this unit, while acknowledging that global connections go way back, we focus on globalization as a story
beginning around 1900, and especially in the last half century or so. This era overlaps with the last three units—on
empire, conflict, and the Cold War and decolonization. But it extends forward all the way to the early twenty-first
century—within your own lifetime—as well. We call this era, from about 1945 to the present, an age of intense
globalization. This means that globalization was deeper and wider than ever before. Now we try to understand this
intense degree of globalization not just as one big trend, but also in terms of human experiences around the world.
We interpret evidence to answer some fundamental questions about globalization: How alike, and how different
were people living during this era, and to what degree? And what explains the similarities and differences among
them, among us?

States and networks of exchange in an age of intense globalization


Our study of the era of intense globalization starts with a look at issues familiar to anyone who has studied the
past eight centuries—so lucky you! In this course, it began with our comparison of the structure of states and
communities in different regions of the world beginning in the thirteenth century (Unit 1) and also the connections
and exchange networks that spanned them (Unit 2). We then looked at the interacting empires of Afro-Eurasia
(Unit 3) and the Columbian Exchange that connected this landmass to the Americas (Unit 4). It takes into account
the revolutionary technologies of industrialization that brought our economic systems and communications closer
together in the long nineteenth century (Unit 5), and the vast oceanic empires that created unequal trans-continental
connections in the same period (Unit 6). Globalization made the two great wars of the first half of the twentieth
century into “World Wars” (Unit 7), and also helped spread decolonization in the context of the global struggle that
was the Cold War (Unit 8).

Technology and environment in the age of intense globalization


Over this long story, we have seen how the Industrial Revolution gave us the ability to produce more goods, foods,
and services, and to distribute them faster. As the Industrial Revolution remade our world over the past 250 or so
years, our changing environment has introduced another issue. Industrialization, a booming human population, and
the need to feed our growing population have together caused massive changes to the environment. These changes
include increased pollution, the depletion of natural resources, the extinction of species, and—increasingly—climate
change. We sometimes call this era in which humans have been the biggest influence on the environment, the
Anthropocene. This environmental change has affected some people more than others. The demand for natural
resources has started wars in some regions. Pollution is making people sicker, but again that depends on where
you live. Other people have lost their farms or jobs or homes because of climate change. This is the lesson where
we can finally study how the many changes brought on by globalization are affecting different parts of the world.

Economics in the age of industrialization


In the last fifty years, the trends of industrialization only intensified, increasing global economic integration. The
collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of communism almost everywhere meant the global economy was now
dominated by capitalism. Even the last great communist state, China, became a major player in the global capitalist
system. Almost everyone is now a participant in the global economy. Money, raw materials, and finished products

3
Unit 9 Introduction: Globalization, 1900–Present
Trevor Getz

fly across the world at great speed. But what has this global economy done to each of us? How has it affected
people in different regions? In different kinds of jobs? In one lesson in this unit, we try to provide evidence to
answer these questions, in particular by looking at the most dramatic example: the re-emergence of China as a
global economic superpower.

This is one picture, not two, showing the difference in two bordering neighborhoods in Johannesburg, South Africa. Economic inequality,
both within and between societies, remains a major problem in the world today. © Getty Images.

Rights, culture, and resistance on a global scale


Many political revolutions in this narrative of the last 800 years promised national sovereignty and truly egalitarian
states. In reality, such rights have been extended only to some people. Whether because of race, gender, empire,
or other restrictions, many people have not benefited from these changes. In another part of this unit, we look at
people’s identities and globalized culture. Who do people identify with, and who do they feel they are? For better
or worse, our recent human history has given us the option of feeling like members of a nation. But the twentieth
century also gave us international identities. And we all feel like we belong to smaller communities—whether it’s
our towns, or our families, or something else. How has globalization changed the groups we identify with? How
is that different in different places? How have these experiences driven some people to embrace some parts of
globalization, and to resist others!

4
Unit 9 Introduction: Globalization, 1900–Present
Trevor Getz

Secondary school students raise their phone torches as they sing “Do You Hear the People Sing” from “Les Miserables” while attending a
rally at Edinburgh Place in Hong Kong on August 22, 2019. © Getty Images.

This final unit brings our course up to date, but you’ve probably already guessed that it doesn’t end the narrative. By
now, you should be able to see how the patterns of the past are impacting our own world. Maybe you are interested
in the ways that the regions of the world have been drawn more closely together since 1200. Possibly you are more
compelled by the ongoing results of the Columbian Exchange on different regions of the world. Or maybe you are
interested in the ways in which political rights have expanded in some respect—and narrowed in others—since
the liberal revolutions of the long nineteenth century. You could be more concerned about the ways that our global
economy has grown, but not equally for everyone, since the Industrial Revolution.

In many ways, globalization is only the most recent step in all of these processes. Asking how these trends impact
us today makes the past not just useful, but usable—and a usable past can help you to orient yourself to the present,
and perhaps prepare for the future as the global story continues.

5
Unit 9 Introduction: Globalization, 1900–Present
Trevor Getz

Trevor Getz
Trevor Getz is a professor of African and world history at San Francisco State University. He has been the author or editor of
11 books, including the award-winning graphic history Abina and the Important Men, and has coproduced several prize-winning
documentaries. Trevor is also the author of A Primer for Teaching African History, which explores questions about how we
should teach the history of Africa in high school and university classes.

Image credits
Cover image: World flags flying. © Getty Images.
They say money is power. Decades after most of the world decolonized, this map shows the gross domestic product (GDP)
of countries (for the year 2020) according to the World Bank. By Our World in Data. [Link]
domestic-product
This is one picture, not two, showing the difference in two bordering neighborhoods in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Economic inequality, both within and between societies, remains a major problem in the world today. © Per-Anders
Pettersson/Getty Images.
Secondary school students raise their phone torches as they sing “Do You Hear the People Sing” from “Les Miserables” while
attending a rally at Edinburgh Place in Hong Kong on August 22, 2019. © ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP via Getty Images.

OER Project aims to empower teachers by offering free and fully supported history courses for middle- and high-school students.
Your account is the key to accessing our standards-aligned courses that are designed with built-in supports like leveled readings, audio
recordings of texts, video transcripts, and more. Offerings include a variety of materials, from full-year, standards-based courses to
shorter course extensions, all of which build upon foundational historical thinking skills in preparation for AP, college, and beyond.

To learn more about The OER Project, visit [Link]

You might also like