World War I, and later the Great Depression, challenged societies around the world. Across societies, people searched for a new ways to organize themselves and reach for the promises of modernity. Competing visions of modernity occurred - liberal, authoritarian, and anticolonial. Each envisioned new roles for the state, and new conceptualizations of the nation. The following documents examine the pronouncements of some leaders of these competing visions. As you analyze them, identify which type vision they propose, and evaluate to what extent they challenge the status quo. How did each recast ideas about the national identity?
Featured Documents
- Franklin D. Roosevelt,Second Inaugural Address,Wednesday, January 20, 1937
- Benito Mussolini, The Basic Philosophy of Fascism
- National Morale and World Tranquility
- Mohandas K. Gandhi, Swaraj my ideal, 1920
- On the results of the last 10 years and the prospects for the USSR´s economic construction, Resolution of the USSR Central Executive Committee, October 20, 1927
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