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Published byProsper Briggs Modified over 8 years ago
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No longer working from dusk-dawn like on farms 45 hour workweek in cities by 1930! w/ salaries rising, this left a lot of opportunity to go out and enjoy themselves!
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Hollywood, CA emerged as the epicenter for movie production Had control over the industry 60-100 million Americans attended movies each week Mostly silent films helpful w/large immigrant population Cheap to attend
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Charlie Chaplin: most famous silent movie star b/c of his dynamic character 1927: The Jazz Singer released First ever movie w/ sound synchronized to the action http://www.tcm.com/mediaroom/video/299765/ Jazz-Singer-The-Movie-Clip-You-Ain-t-Heard- Nothin-Yet-.html http://www.tcm.com/mediaroom/video/299765/ Jazz-Singer-The-Movie-Clip-You-Ain-t-Heard- Nothin-Yet-.html The first of the “talkies”
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Radios + phonographs created a mass culture Standardized across the country Radio invented by Guglielmo Marconi (1890) KDKA – first radio station for public use out of Pittsburg, PA in 1920 Music, religious sermons, lectures, advertising
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1927 – Boxing match b/w Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney Broadcasted over the radio! Entire nation listened in https://www.youtube.c om/watch?v=- OeeCfbahwQ https://www.youtube.c om/watch?v=- OeeCfbahwQ Phonographs allowed ppl to listen to music from the radio whenever!
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Hollywood stars competed for popularity with sports heroes!
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Major sports games were covered by newspaper and radios Babe Ruth – Yankees homerun slugger! The Great Bambino! Journalists captured the “Golden Age of Sports!” Turned athletes into gods Looking for lofty dreams + feats after WWI gave Americans hope!
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Charles Lindbergh: first solo, non-stop flight across the Atlantic Flew on the Spirit of St. Louis from Long Island, NY to Paris, France Instantly a hero as French radio broadcasted world wide!
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Why did the change occur? Pull of cities = leaving home Right to vote Jobs during the war
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Women https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFRG_B--1v8 1920’s Flapper https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzPGzGUN Zbs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzPGzGUN Zbs Clara Bow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgBHsT1z0R I https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgBHsT1z0R I
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Flapper = rebellious youth not widespread reality, many youth did not agree with the idea People scorned the young women for their rebelliousness + loose morals Double standard because men had always acted this way and it was accepted
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Despite giving up jobs to men after the war, some women took on new roles Teachers Nurses Librarians Clerks Secretaries By 1930 10 million women were earning wages (few in high positions though) Experienced discrimination in the workplace Equal Rights Amendment - NWP
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Decline in amount of children:
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Social and technological innovations made household tasks simpler: Ready-made clothes at stores Sliced bread + canned foods Public agencies supported elderly, sick and unemployed who could no longer work Freed up homemakers (most often mothers) Time for book clubs and shopping > housework
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∴ women experienced greater equality in marriage The number of divorces doubled Children spent days at school and in organized activities Technology in urban homes Working-class + college educated women experienced the difficulty of working and raising a family Rebellious teens made this harder
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The Arts Reflect a Mood of Uncertainty Greatly influenced by the war Before the war belief in progress, after the war this was much less certain Pessimism about the course of civilization known in the arts as modernism Sigmund Freud – contributed to modernism in art and literature Human behavior not driven by rational thought, but by unconscious desires
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Modernist art experimented with more abstract styles Georgia O’Keefe:
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1920s writers: “Lost Generation” b/c they no longer believed in Victorian ideals Of hope, faith in human progress, Search for new truths and the emergence of some of the greatest writers in history!
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Themes: American Dream WWI Wealth Focus on the subconscious Success and failure Writers: Ernest Hemmingway – Farewell to Arms Edith Wharton – first woman to receive Pulitzer Prize Sinclair Lewis, T.S. Elliot, F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby and coined the term “Jazz Age.” AND MORE!
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