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The Roaring Life of the 1920’s Chapter 13
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African-American movement NAACP- fights for African-American rights Anti-lynching bills introduced into Congress Marcus Garvey- immigrant from Jamaica; believed that African-Americans should build a separate society. UNIA- Universal Negro Improvement Association Back-to-Africa; help throw off colonial oppressors Designed a uniform for himself as “Provincial President of Africa”
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Changing Ways of Life City life vs. rural life Cities: bustling areas of acceptance and strangers Small-towns: strict values and familiarity Clash on 18 th Amendment (Prohibition)- manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcohol was legally prohibited. Support came from rural South & West Immigrants resented govt. involvement
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Prohibition Speakeasies- hidden saloons & nightclubs Password or card Bootlegger- liquor smugglers Canada, Cuba, West Indies Organized crime grew as a result Chicago & Al Capone $60 million/ year
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End of Prohibition Volstead Act established Prohibition Bureau in Treasury Dept. Under funded: patrolled 18,700 miles of coastline, inland borders, distilleries, highways, truck loads etc. 1,500 poorly paid men& local police Often corrupt and paid off to turn their head Ends in 1933- repealed by 21 st Amendment Mid 20’s only 19% support Prohibition
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Fundamentalism Ideas supported by Protestant religion; Bible is true- science is not. Reject Darwin’s theory of evolution TN passed law -illegal to teach evolution ACLU steps up to defend anyone who does Scopes Trial- John Scopes, Biology teacher is arrested Clarence Darrow defends Scopes against prosecutor William Jennings Bryan Bryan supposed expert on the Bible
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The Twenties Woman The flapper- young woman who embraced new fashion, attitudes and freedom of 20’s
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Double Standard Change in attitudes toward what was acceptable for girls; Drinking, smoking, dancing, casual sex Marriage is 50/50, premarital sex b/c of birth control Not necessarily the majority of young girls Double standard allows for greater sexual freedom for men than women. Must still observe stricter standards
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Work opportunities “Female jobs” for college educated women- teachers, nurses, librarians Clerical, stenographers, clerks, typists Few did men’s jobs; pilots, taxi drivers, oil driller 1930- 10 million in jobs, few are managers; still earn less than men Housework gets easier, birth rate drops, ready-made goods Marriages based on love, partnership
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Education & Pop Culture Education -grew from 1 million to 4 million high school grads between 1914 & 1926 Educational standards higher; new immigrants enrolled (EL) Mass media-newspapers, magazines become widely read Radio- widespread news coverage as it happened Presidential speeches; sporting events
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New Entertainment Leisure- sporting events, flagpole sitting, dance marathons Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey, Helen Wills Charles Lindbergh emerges as a national hero- honest & brave Movies- The Jazz Singer 1 st movie w/sound “talkies” doubles movie attendance Georgia O’Keefe, Gershwin, Sinclair Lewis, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway Encompassing “America” and the time period
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The 1920’s Fitzgeralds Lindbergh O’Keefe Babe Ruth “talkies”
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Harlem Renaissance A movement of art and creativity in the heart of Harlem, NY- biggest black community in the world. Middle-class African-Americans writers celebrate their heritage Claude McKay & Langston Hughes- poets Zora Neale Hurston- woman writer of folklore Jazz starts in New Orleans – blends ragtime and vocal blues Louis Armstrong- trumpet player; “Duke” Ellington- pianist; Bessie Smith- singer
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