Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

 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.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: " 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."— Presentation transcript:

1

2  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!

3  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

4  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”

5

6  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

7  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!

8  Hollywood stars competed for popularity with sports heroes!

9  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!

10  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!

11  Why did the change occur? Pull of cities = leaving home Right to vote Jobs during the war

12

13  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

14  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

15  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

16  Decline in amount of children:

17  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

18  ∴ 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

19  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

20  Modernist art experimented with more abstract styles  Georgia O’Keefe:

21  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!

22  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!


Download ppt " 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."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google