Imperialists and Boy Scouts

Watch this lecture to learn how increasing industrialization led to a new type of imperialism in the 19th century and how that imperialism set the stage for the First World War. John Merriman describes the European colonial expansion that contributed to the start of World War I. In particular, he explores three key factors in the "new imperialism": religious proselytizing, profit, and inter-imperial political strategy.

The boom in European colonial expansion in the second half of the nineteenth century, the so-called New Imperialism, can be seen to follow from three principle factors, in ascending order of importance: religious proselytizing, profit, and inter-imperial political strategy. With respect to the latter concern, the conflicts emerging from imperialism set the stage for World War I. Along with its military and industrial consequences, imperialism also entailed a large-scale cultural program dedicated to strengthening support for its objectives among the domestic populations of the imperial powers. The creation of the Boy Scouts is an exemplary form of such a program, founded upon a mythology of the American frontier reformulated to encompass Africa and Asia.


Source: John Merriman, https://oyc.yale.edu/history/hist-202/lecture-15
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Last modified: Friday, June 10, 2022, 4:12 PM