3. The collapse of colonialism and the struggle for racial equality (middle to late1900's)

After World War II ended in 1945, colonies of the European powers won independence. Political, economic, and social upheavals occurred as the new developing countries attempted to modernize. The upheavals often led to rapid development, but they also brought about local wars, economic hardship, large numbers of refugees and immigrants, and civil rights movements. Literature, art, and mass culture became increasingly multicultural and global. In the United States, the struggle for racial equality led to the elimination of legal segregation. It also contributed to an ongoing struggle to eliminate prejudice and to gain respect for individual, group, and cultural diversity.

 

Donald G. Marshall is a Professor and the Head of the Department of English at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His top 10 events of the 1900's reflect a general historical approach. Professor Marshall emphasizes the impact of technology on the century and points out one chilling effect : "The fear that humankind's highest scientific achievements will destroy us becomes very real."

1.

The rise and fall of Communism in Russia (1917-1991)

2. The invention of electronic communications media (early to middle 1900's)
3. The collapse of colonialism and the struggle for racial equality (middle to late 1900's)
4.

The development of the automobile and the airplane (early 1900's)

5. The development of the computer (middle to late 1900's)
6. The new physics (throughout the 1900's)
7. The impact of World War II and the Holocaust (middle to late 1900's)
8. The development of biomedical science (mid-1900's)
9. The emergence of "modern" architecture, art, literature, and music (throughout the 1900's)
10. The outbreak of World War I (1914-1918)