Richard Evans The Pursuit Of Power

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In The Pursuit of Power, Richard J. Evans immediately tells us about the “terrible sufferings” of hunting and scrapping for food and warmth, and struggling to survive in the “Aftermath of War” created by Napoleon Bonaparte. Though it also showed European nations that human determination can cause various potent effects, the French Revolution involved an unforgettable massacre that effected Europe for decades. During the nineteenth century, nations seem to have been remarkably callous toward the suffering of their poor. Evans gives various historical evidences to support this idea but seems to avoid a strong single-thesis. The revolutions created by European nations in the quest of power caused a devastating impact to the middle-class, lower-class, and poor areas of their societies.
After the French Revolution, there were great disturbances in Europe’s population due to deaths, crime, migration, famine or illnesses. While the nations were left to rebuild their cities, their people had lost their homes, jobs, and relief was needed by nations that could give to the more deprived. Evans tells us that …show more content…

As technology had helped Europeans control the outbreaks of nature, from then on they were able to put an end to epidemics like diseases and famines. However, the upgrade of science and industry had flaws as some nations still saw mass economic hardships and deaths due to starvation, like the “major famine in Russia” and “the potato famine” in Ireland, and disease devastated that despaired urban poor. These problems impacted children, men, and women, and effected the population and economy of their nation. Still, in the twentieth century Europeans had a longer life span, and lived healthier and more comfortable lives due to the inventions of antiseptics, antibiotics, vaccines, surgical procedures, and

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