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U.S. History 1 Roaring Twenties Part 2: Changing Society
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Changing Society Flappers = modern women of the 1920s who shattered accepted social beliefs by smoking, drinking alcohol, cutting hair short, and wearing makeup and tight-fitting clothes. Women adopted new lifestyles and roles in society (moved into professional jobs, voted, ran for office)
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Heroes in a Rapidly Changing Society In the midst of a changing society, many people turned to heroes who seemed to have values of an earlier, simpler time Babe Ruth – baseball Charles Lindbergh – first to fly nonstop from NY to Paris
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Amelia Earhart, Jack Dempsey, Four Horsemen, Gertrude Erderle
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Mass Media Mass Media = the use of print and broadcast methods to communicate information to large numbers of people The rise of radio, movies, newspapers produced a truly “national culture”
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Mass Media in the 1920s Radio By 1930, nearly 14 million American households own radios Radio networks such as NBC reach nationwide audiences People around the country hear the same music, news programs, and commercials Movies Hollywood, suburb of L.A., becomes the center of American film industry Theaters sell 100 million tickets a week at a time when the U.S. population is less than 125 million Film making becomes the 4 th largest business in the U.S.
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Mass Media: Newspapers Newspaper chains “chains” buy up smaller newspapers around the country Number of newspapers sold each day increases by 141% People share the same information and are influenced by the same ideas and fashions
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Harlem Renaissance Harlem Renaissance was a literary movement begun by African American musicians, artists, and writers in the African American section of New York City Writers such as Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes created powerful novels and poems about the African American experience
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Jazz Age Jazz = grew out of African American music of the South, especially ragtime and blues. Fast, upbeat music people could dance to Musicians played a free form using improvisation
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Other Jazz Artists of the 1920s
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