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The Roaring Twenties

The Roaring Twenties. AP English Language and Composition 2010: Ms. Hearn. The Roaring 20s.

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The Roaring Twenties

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  1. The Roaring Twenties AP English Language and Composition 2010: Ms. Hearn

  2. The Roaring 20s • Characterized by the United States’ overall success in World War I, the survival of the worldwide influenza epidemic of 1918, and an apparently strong economy led to a period of strong optimism and a new fun-seeking attitude.

  3. The Jazz Age • Popularity of the new Jazz music of New Orleans and Chicago • More relaxed moral code and a general feeling of optimism created the ambience of a never ending social party.

  4. The Age of Intolerance • The losses- both financial and human- associated with World War I left the United States unwilling to entangle itself again into affairs of foreign nations. • The U.S. refusal to join the League of Nations was evidence of this new isolationist policy. Immigration rules and quotas were tightened. • Concerted effort to pursue and unmask spies, usually Communist or “Reds.” • The “us and them” mentality resulted in the revitalizing of such supremacist organizations as the KKK.

  5. The Age of Wonderful Nonsense • Age of flappers, bathtub gin, flappers, prosperity, moral and sexual revolution. • Tabloids, sensationalism, gossip and celebrities.

  6. Consumerism • Mass-production and chain stores drove down prices and encouraged consumers to spend. • The concept of credit was being used to help more Americans buy durable goods such as cars and stoves. The lenders, of course, charged interest so that the total cost of the item was far more in the end than if it had been purchased by for cash. • Runaway consumer credit was part of the the overload that resulted in the Great Depression of the 1930s. • Americans were also spending more money on entertainment, especially the movies.

  7. Economic Policy • In the 1920s, for the first time in U.S. history, more people were living in cities than on farms. Presidents Warren G. Harding (1921-1923), Calvin Coolidge (1923-1929), and Herbert Hoover (1929-1933) supported big business and passed legislations that benefited large corporations, often at the expense of small business farmers.

  8. Economic Policy (continued) • Harding’s “return to normalcy” after WWI did little to address the social and economic problems facing thousands of Americans. • Harding Administration’s Teapot Dome Scandal illustrated the extent to which greed and the desire to accumulate wealth quickly were governing principals of post-WWI America.

  9. Economic Policy (continued) • Calvin Coolidge especially favored “laissez faire” attitude toward big business, thus allowing for credit and investment abuses that would lead to the 1929 crash.

  10. Prohibition and Organized Crime • The 18th Amendment prohibited the manufacture, sale and transportation of “intoxicating liquors.” Enforced on January 16, 1920. • Alcoholic drinks were available at “speakeasies” and other underground drinking establishments. • Large amounts of alcohol were smuggled from Canada • Home brewing of beer and wine was popular • Whiskey available by prescription (over a million gallons per year of whiskey were prescribed and consumed.

  11. Prohibition (continued) • The discrepancy between law and actual practice contributed to the widespread disdain for authority that had accompanied the return of World War I servicemen. • Presented an enormous opportunity for organized crime to take over the importation, manufacture, and distribution of alcoholic beverages. Al Capone built his criminal empire largely on profits from trafficking in illegal alcohol.

  12. The New Woman • 19th Amendment, ratified in 1920, granted women the right to vote and changed the nature of politics and society. • Women who held factory jobs during the war had no intention of returning home. Women everywhere were challenging the traditional notions of femininity.

  13. Themes in The Great Gatsby • The Decline of the American Dream- highly symbolic discourse on the 1920s, a period of great prosperity and material excess. At one point, the American Dream was about discovery, individualism, and the pursuit of happiness; however, this was corrupted by easy money and an overall relaxing of social values. • The Stratification of the Social Classes: Fitzgerald makes comparisons between “old money, new money, and no money.” Each of these has a specific place in society. The motif of geography is used here to help develop this theme as each location represents a particular class of people. • The Hollowness of the Upper Class: Newly rich and old aristocracy. They are both spiritually and emotionally hollow. Newly rich are portrayed as being loud, rowdy, and lacking social graces. Old money have social graces, elegance and taste; however, they lack heart and are inconsiderate.

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