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History of Technology 1: The Industrial Revolution 271 Views
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Description:
The Industrial Revolution was a monster. Seriously, we hear it's still terrorizing parts of Tokyo.
Transcript
- 00:03
Fueled by coal and steam engines the Industrial Revolution was [Steam train flies by]
- 00:07
our ticket to the modern era, and like kids who hung out too long on a
- 00:12
merry-go-round we're still reeling from its effects. Astronomical population [Kids sat on a merry-go-round]
- 00:16
growth and climate change came along with the new modern comforts and
- 00:20
economic booms of the Industrial Revolution. Proving once again that bad [Aerial footage of skyscrapers]
Full Transcript
- 00:24
things always come along with the good, but we're pretty sure the existence of
- 00:28
black jellybeans already proved that fact right. Anyway the Industrial
- 00:32
Revolution was a monster as revolutions go, basically it changed everything about [Robot stands on planet earth]
- 00:36
well pretty much everything, the economic structure of the world, the nature of
- 00:41
production and labor, gender relations, consumer culture and the fundamental way [Workers in a factory]
- 00:47
that humans use energy, so you know on all little things... For some people it
- 00:52
meant Scrooge McDuck levels of wealth. For others it meant poverty and crushing [Man jumps into pile of gold and treasures]
- 00:57
despair, because sure steam power led to an increase in global wealth but it also
- 01:02
concentrated that wealth in even fewer hands and check this out in the 1700s India [Money being put through a funnel]
- 01:08
produced about 23% of the world wealth by 1900 it produced two percent so what
- 01:16
happened in between there India? No every Indian didn't just decide to
- 01:20
retire and start crocheting ugly socks, though that does down like a pleasant [Woman crocheting]
- 01:25
retirement nope. Britain's industrialized textile mills destroyed India's own
- 01:30
cotton production. For the first time people didn't have to make stuff by hand [Old footage of Indian cotton fields]
- 01:34
Britain's steam-powered factories could pump out machine made products really [Machine running in a factory]
- 01:38
really fast and they were super cheap too so there was no reason to buy
- 01:43
anything else. Well sayonara handmade craftsmanship. Industrial production also [Man handing over money at a till]
- 01:48
required new kinds of work and workers. Paid labor had always been about
- 01:52
product rather than time people would pay a weaver for his finished cloth not
- 01:57
hire him to weave for a few hours unless that was just something they like to [Sewing machinists working]
- 02:01
watch, but that'd be kinda weird... Anyway, but industrial production was
- 02:04
different, it was about churning out the same stuff over and over and over again [Workers on a production line]
- 02:08
anybody could do it. Industrialists just hired a bunch of kids to run the
- 02:12
machines and pay them like two cents an hour, it was a great way to get [Kids working in a factory]
- 02:16
fabulously rich while ensuring that everybody else was just scraping by.
- 02:21
Well work used to be limited by how long people could physically and mentally [Workers in hard hats and jumpsuits have a race]
- 02:24
endure their tasks, but that one's a thing of the past. Steam engines never got tired,
- 02:30
or hungry, or irritated, people became more like cogs in the machine or bricks [Thomas the tank engine looking unhappy]
- 02:35
in the wall, is there a song about that? Something about not needing an education...
- 02:41
That's fine we don't take offense to that or anything not like it's our life's
- 02:45
purpose but you know whatever... [Unhappy kid in a Shmoop shirt]
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