Unit 7 Culture & Society: How Ideas, Art, Reform, and Mass Politics Reshaped 19th-Century Europe

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25 Terms

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Realism

A mid-19th-century movement in art and literature that depicted the world truthfully and concretely, focusing on ordinary people and everyday life without idealization.

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Idealization

Presenting subjects as better, more heroic, or more perfect than they are; realists rejected this to show society plainly.

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Social critique (in realist art)

The implied argument created by showing modern life and its harsh conditions, inviting viewers to judge social systems like class inequality or exploitation.

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Gustave Courbet

French painter strongly associated with Realism; centered ordinary laborers and rural life, challenging elite ideas about “worthy” subjects.

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Charles Dickens

19th-century novelist who portrayed the human costs of industrialization and urban poverty, often used as literary evidence of social problems.

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Gustave Flaubert

Realist novelist (e.g., Madame Bovary) who explored middle-class aspirations and disillusionment as social commentary.

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Henrik Ibsen

Playwright who used domestic settings to expose social pressures and hypocrisy, showing how everyday life could be politically revealing.

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Impressionism

Late-19th-century movement that aimed to capture the fleeting “impression” of a moment, emphasizing light, atmosphere, and perception with visible brushstrokes and bright color.

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Perception (Impressionist goal)

A focus on how the eye experiences a scene in the moment—changing light and movement—rather than sharply outlined, studio-polished objects.

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Claude Monet

Central impressionist painter; the movement’s name is linked to his work Impression, Sunrise.

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Salon (official Salon system)

The traditional, institutionally controlled art exhibition/jury system in France that defined what counted as “good” academic art.

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Salon des Refusés (1863)

Exhibition of works rejected by the official Salon; illustrates impressionists/innovators challenging academic authority and cultural gatekeepers.

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Realism vs. Impressionism (core contrast)

Realism emphasizes social reality and often class critique; Impressionism emphasizes modern perception, light, and immediacy while challenging artistic institutions.

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Social reform (19th-century Europe)

A broad set of organized efforts and state policies responding to industrialization and social disruption, aiming to improve society and/or maintain order.

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Social question

Shorthand for problems created by industrial capitalism (poverty, housing, wages, unemployment, stability) and debates over who should solve them and how.

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Public health reform

Reform focused on sanitation, clean water, waste removal, and urban planning, reflecting the expanding role of modern states and city governments.

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Labor reform

Laws and movements aimed at improving working conditions (hours, safety, child labor limits), showing that industrial capitalism required political management.

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Factory Acts (Britain)

General term for 19th-century British factory-related laws that gradually increased regulation of labor conditions after public pressure.

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Abolition of serfdom (Russia, 1861)

Reform under Alexander II ending legal serfdom; crucial because emancipation did not automatically bring prosperity or political stability.

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Women’s rights activism (19th century)

Campaigns targeting education access, professional opportunities, married women’s legal/property status, and eventually suffrage (uneven and later).

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Informal political influence

Ways excluded groups (especially women) shaped politics without voting—petitions, associations, journalism, boycotts, philanthropy, and reform campaigns.

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State-led reform (conservative strategy)

Top-down reforms used by leaders to reduce support for revolution and manage social tensions, showing reform could serve stability and state power.

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Bismarck’s social insurance (1880s)

German welfare measures (health, accident, old-age protections) promoted to undercut socialist appeal and strengthen loyalty to the nation-state.

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Mass politics

A political system where large numbers of ordinary people engage through voting, parties, unions, rallies, and newspapers, shifting politics toward organized popular competition.

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Political party (mass politics era)

An organization linking voters to lawmakers through membership, dues, candidate selection, newspapers/propaganda, and disciplined voting in legislatures.

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