CHAPTER 23 The Age of Jazz and Mass Culture 1921 – 1927 “No Congress of the United States, ever assembled, on surveying the state of the Union has met.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Opening The 20 th Century. Germany began attacking U.S. ships and sank the Lusitania, killing American citizens. Which of the following explains why the.
Advertisements

The 1920s: Coping with Change
Power Presentations CHAPTER 25. Image Science and Technology World War I is over, and a new decade has begun. There is peace in the world and prosperity.
Learning Objective: We will learn how the 1920’s represents a clash of values Do Now: What values do you have that clash with your parents or with the.
The 1920s.
The Roaring Twenties!!. The Red Scare With the communist takeover in Russia (the USSR) many Americans became even more fearful of American supporters.
CHAPTER 22 Cultural Conflict, Bubble, and Bust, 1919‒1932
PresentationExpress.
Postwar America The Roaring Twenties What was American life
The Roaring Twenties Isolationist
America in the 1920’s and 1930’s. Women’s Rights 19 th Amendment is passed in August of 1920 – gave women the right to vote Flappers – women who challenged.
1920s A New Era. Politics Through the 1920s, three Republican presidents would control the executive branch Through the 1920s, three Republican presidents.
Objectives Identify the causes and effects of the Eighteenth Amendment. Explain how the Nineteenth Amendment changed the role of women in society. Describe.
An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict Mr. Violanti, Iroquois High School, Spring 2013.
1920s.
BOOM TO BUST ( )  SOCIAL CHANGE  POLITICS  PROSPERITY  CRASH/DEPRESSION  THE NEW DEAL.
Ch. 12: The Roaring Twenties African Americans- moved North for economic reasons and to get away from the racism in the South African Americans- moved.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. 1920s Social Change and Prohibition.
PresentationExpress. Click a subsection to advance to that particular section. Advance through the slide show using your mouse or the space bar. A Booming.
Coping with Change Chapter Readings You must read the entire chapter and prepare for reading check quizes. –Pp –Pp –Pp.
Copyright ©2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter Twenty-Four: The New Era.
U. S. HISTORY. AMERICAN LIFE CHANGES NEW ROLES FOR WOMEN Cultural Changes! New Opportunities: voting, running for office, changes in the workplace New.
What do you know about consumers in the 1920’s? Prosperous Bought stuff on credit Bought stock on margin Thought it would last forever.
CHAPTER 23 The Age of Jazz and Mass Culture, Web.
Unit 4 The 1920’s and The Great Depression
200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300.
Between the Wars The ROARING 20s By 1920, the Great War has officially ended. However, the world has seen more fighting, death, and destruction than.
The Roaring 20’s An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict.
The Tumultuous 1920s.
Chapter 23 The Roaring 20’s. Time of Turmoil Post WWI Treaty of Versailles Congress does not ratify 18 th Amendment, Prohibition, th Amendment,
 With the consumer revolution of the 1920s, American wages grew 30%, but the standard of living remained the same. This provided more disposable income.
Copyright ©2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 12/e Chapter Twenty-Four: “The New Era”
Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY: A SURVEY, 11/e Chapter Twenty-Four: The New Era.
HIST HESEN. “The War to End All Wars”  WWI ends November 11, 1918  Wilson’s Plans for Peace: Fourteen Points League of Nations ○ Irreconcilables.
Return to Normalcy Postwar U.S. “Great Russian Civil War” ( ) “Great Russian Civil War” ( ) The Bolsheviks / Communism The.
1920’s – Boom The Roaring Twenties. Roaring Twenties I. _________________ Society A. Role of _____________ 1. challenged “old” ways a. ______________________.
Chapter 21 The Roaring 20’s. EQ What made the 1920’s so “roaring?”
Postwar Economics and Politics The Jazz Age & Pop Culture The Harlem Renaissance.
Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
Match the term with the description ___1) Lynching ___2) Russia ___3) Red Scare ___4) Sacco and Vanzetti ___5) Ku Klux Klan ___6) Warren G. Harding A)
TRANSITION TO MODERN AMERICA Chapter 25. Patterns of Economic Growth Second Industrial Revolution – Electricity replaced steam – Modern assembly introduced.
3 rd Nine Weeks Social Studies Review Chapter 9 and 10.
The Roaring Twenties!. Industrial Thrive After WWI, the US had one of the highest standards of living in the world. This was in part due to the production.
Jeopardy People Immigrants African Americans Business Misc. Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Chapter 21 Prosperity Decade,
The 1920’s – A Decade of Transition, Contradiction and Conflict.
Jeopardy People Immigrants African Americans Business Misc. Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
James L. Roark Michael P. Johnson Patricia Cline Cohen Sarah Stage Susan M. Hartmann CHAPTER 23 From New Era to Great Depression, The American.
Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e Chapter Twenty-two: “The New Era”
A Clash of Values The Roaring 20s.
Review for Test on 1920s.
The Roaring 20s!.
Prohibition and Crime The temperance movement in the U.S. had been around for years, but found a surge during the Progressive Era, when alcohol was.
The Age of Jazz and Mass Culture,
Objectives Identify the causes and effects of the Eighteenth Amendment. Explain how the Nineteenth Amendment changed the role of women in society. Describe.
The Roaring Twenties Economic Reasons Rising stock prices
Write your answers to the questions on a piece of paper
Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation 6/e
1920s Social Change and Prohibition
Chapter 24 APUSH Mrs. Price
of the Roaring Twenties
The 1920s.
An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict
The Roaring Twenties AP US History.
An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict
An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict
The Roaring Twenties AP US History.
Ch. 24 The Roaring Twenties Ch. 25 The Great Depression
The Roaring Twenties Culture, Society, & Economics
America in the Roaring Twenties
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 23 The Age of Jazz and Mass Culture 1921 – 1927 “No Congress of the United States, ever assembled, on surveying the state of the Union has met with a more pleasing prospect than that which appears at the present time.... The great wealth created by our enterprise and industry and saved by our economy has had the widest distribution among our own people and has gone out in a steady stream to serve the charity and the business of the world. The requirements of existence have gone beyond the standard of necessity into the region of luxury.... The country can regard the present with satisfaction and anticipate the future with optimism. President Calvin Coolidge, his last state of the union address in December of 1928

Societies have always been shaped more by the nature of the media by which men communicate than by the content of the communication.” Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore, The Medium Is the Massage, 1967 “Never argue with someone who purchases ink by the barrel.” Mark Twain “Silence is sometimes a disgrace.” Yevgeny Yevtushenko, August 22, 1968

Bibliography Joan Hoff Wilson, American Business and Foreign Policy [1971] and Herbert Hoover: Forgotten Progressive [1975] Robert Lynd and Helen Lynd, Middletown [1929] Roderick Nash, The Nervous Generation: American Thought, 1917 – 1930 [1970] George Mowry (editor), The Twenties: Fords, Flappers & Fanatics [1963] Paula Fass, The Damned and the Beautiful: American Youth in the 1920s [1977] Charles A. Fecher (editor), The Diary of H.L. Mencken [1989] Clinton Rossiter & James Lare, The Essential Lippmann [1982]

Chapter Review Describe in general terms the social attitudes of post-World War I America. [11 points] Name some of the technological developments that shaped society and the economy in the postwar period. Describe the presidential styles and administrations of Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge. Explain the contributions of the artists in music, literature, art, and film who contributed to the cultural explosion of the 1920s. Describe the effect of prohibition on the social and cultural makeup of the United States. Describe the expanding roles of women in the 1920s.

Concepts Roderick Nash, The Nervous Generation: American Thought, 1917 – 1930 Harlem Renaissance, Great Migration Jazz Age: Louis Armstrong League of Women Voters Charles Lindbergh Multinational corporations National Origins Act of 1924 Open shop, closed shop, agency shop, yellow-dog contracts Sacco and Vanzetti Scopes “Monkey” Trial Sheppard-Towner Maternity and Infancy Act Welfare Capitalism Charles Lindbergh to Paris, Babe hits 60 home runs Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, "Dream factory“ Walter Lippmann’s “manufacturing consent” Upton Sinclair, The Jungle [1906] Democrat [Socialist] Candidate for CA Governor in 1934 Henry Ford – symbol of the 1920s

Klanswomen Indiana Klanswomen pose in their regalia in The Klan combined appeals to traditional family and religious values with violent attacks upon these who were not white native-born Protestants. Getty Image Inc./Image Bank

Scopes Trial The packed courtroom for the Scopes Trial in 1925 illustrates the intense interest that Americans have persistently taken in conflicts stemming from differing cultural values and ethical visions. Getty Images Inc.

Scopes Monkey Trial Clarence Darrow stands behind a cluttered table in a crowded courtroom during the trial of John Scopes in Dayton, Tennessee in Library of Congress

Advertising Advertisements for brand- name products, like this 1929 ad for Campbell’s tomato soup, often tried to link simple consumption with larger issues of personal success and achievement. By permission of Campbell Soup Company

Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge Presidential candidate Harding and vice- presidential candidate Coolidge portrayed with American flags in a 1920 campaign poster. Library of Congress

Amos ‘n’ Andy

Ford Model T A Ford automobile assembly line with several unfinished automobile frames. Library of Congress

I. The Aftermath of War As urbanization increases, immigration continues to cause fears Ku Klux Klan targets blacks and new immigrants Blacks become more assertive and militant Marcus Garvey tries to unify blacks Prohibition fails to cure society’s ills but does give rise to gangsters and lawlessness

II. Harding as President Senate ratifies Treaty of Versailles without joining League of Nations Washington Naval Conference shows America’s new status as a world power

III. The New Economy Automobiles, electricity and the radio bring tremendous changes to lives of ordinary Americans Advertising becomes big business as consumerism grows As some members of society prosper, farmers are left behind Harding’s administration soon becomes linked to numerous scandals, and Harding dies unexpectedly Calvin Coolidge becomes president and proves himself better at the job than Harding

Election of 1924 ©2002 Wadsworth Group, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning ™ is a trademark used herein under license.

IV. A Blossoming in Art and Literature Harlem Renaissance brings flowering of black culture to both blacks and whites Jazz becomes an original American art form, and writers develop new American style Other forms of artistic expression change the look of America

V. Fundamentalism and Traditional Values The Klan declines in influence, but the Sacco and Vanzetti case shows discrimination still abundant Religious fundamentalism emerges and contributes to Scopes trial over teaching of evolution Some begin to call for repeal of Prohibition Lives of young people change, as they become more independent and better educated Sports figures become icons, as baseball and boxing grow in popularity “Babe” Ruth helps make baseball America’s national sport

VI. New Roles for Women With right to vote, women get involved in politics and call for an Equal Rights Amendment Younger women enjoy fruits of their elders’ labor, unconcerned about its costs Women continue to enter work force in larger numbers but are welcomed to only a few occupations, and usually only until they marry

VII. Coolidge in the White House Coolidge grows business, cuts taxes, and increases America’s foreign involvement Mexico and Nicaragua cause tensions Americans become involved in international affairs through loans and investments

VIII. 1927: The Year of the Decade Charles Lindbergh makes transatlantic flight from New York to Paris Sports and movies captivate America Sacco and Vanzetti are executed after years of trials Coolidge chooses not to run for re-election