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Ch 13 Sec2 The 20's Woman . How were women's roles changing?How did the image of the flapper embody the changing values and attitudes of young women in the 1920's?What were the causes and results of the changing roles of women in the 1920's?. Women's Changing Roles. Image of the FlapperRebellio
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1. The Roaring 1920s Society in the 1920s
Changes in Manners
Changes in Morals
Mass Media and the
Jazz Age
The Harlem Renaissance
2. Ch 13 Sec2 The 20s Woman How were womens roles changing?
How did the image of the flapper embody the changing values and attitudes of young women in the 1920s?
What were the causes and results of the changing roles of women in the 1920s?
3. Womens Changing Roles Image of the Flapper
Rebellious, energetic, fun-loving, and bold.
Stylish Urban young women
Impact on fashion and behavior
Short bobbed hair and make-up
Wide-brimmed hats
Close fitting dresses, very short
Drank and Smoked in public
Dancing and language annoyed parents
4. The Double Standard A set of standards granting greater sexual freedom to men than to women
Women were required to observe stricter standards of behavior than men did
Women were pulled back and forth between new standards and the old
5. Images of the Flappers
6. Women Working and Voting 15% of wage earning women became professionals, although businesses remained prejudice towards women.
Only 35% of women voted in 1920.
Progressive women did lobby the Shepard Towner Act which aided women and children. (Infant/Pre-natal care.)
Jeanette Rankin WY, US House of Reps.
7. Ch 13 Sec3 Education and Popular Culture What was popular culture of the 1920s?
How did mass media create a shared culture?
Why did the youth dominated decade come to be called the Roaring twenties?
8. Americans on the Move By 1920, more Americans lived in cities.
High School enrollments and Taxes increased
Rural /Urban split due to changes in education, occupations, and cultural issues.
Over 500,000 African Americans migrated from South to North.
Better jobs, education, yet harsh discrimination. (De Facto Discrimination)
9. Other Migration Mexicans emigrated to the US because of job opportunities.
The US had limited immigration with quotas for European, Japanese and Chinese immigrants.
Los Angeles developed a district barrio or Spanish speaking neighborhood.
Puerto Ricans migrated to NYC
10. Growth of Suburbs Trolleys allowed people to get from their suburban homes to jobs and stores.
By mid 1920s 70,000 buses were operating in the US.
Cars became cheaper and offered greater flexibility in travel.
11. American Heroes Charles Lindbergh 1927 NY to Paris
Amelia Earhart 1932 CA to Hawaii
Jack Dempsey- Heavyweight Champ
Babe Ruth 60 HR in 1927, Yankees
Gertrude Ederle Gold medalist 1924
14. Mass Media MOVIES:
80 million tickets sold a week.
The first talkie The Jazz Singer 1927.
Big Stars: Greta Garbo, Clara Bow, Charlie Chaplin, Lon Chaney, Mary Pickford, Gloria Swanson, and Rudolph Valentino.
17. Newspapers and Magazines Between 1920 and 1929 daily newspaper circulation rose from 28 million to almost 40 million.
By 1929 Americans were buying 200 million copies of magazines.
Saturday Evening Post, Readers Digest, Ladies Home Journal, and Time were popular.
18. Popular Magazines
19. Radio of the 1920s First radio broadcast 1920 Election results by KDKA in Pittsburgh
By 1922, 500 stations were on air
NBC, CBS brought the same jokes, commercials, music, sports, religious services, and news to many Americans.
Between 1922 and 1929 the # of radios rose from 60,000 to 12mil
20. Radio 1920s
21. Art and Literature of the 1920s Famous Artists: Edward Hopper, Rockwell Kent, Georgia OKeeffe.
Famous Authors:
Sinclair Lewis
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Earnest Hemingway
T.S. Elliot
The Lost Generation authors disconnected from their country and its values.
24. The Lost Generation
25. Ch 13 Sec 4 The Harlem Renaissance What were the cause and results of the Great Migration of African Americans to Northern cities in the early 1900s?
What was the prolific African American artistic activity of the Harlem Renaissance?
26. The Harlem Renaissance NYCs Harlem was a cultural center for African Americans.
The Renaissance is known as a cultural and literary awakening as well as a time of acceptance.
Authors:
27. African American Writers Claude McKay: Poet/militant writer urging Af Am to resisit prejudice & discrimination
Langston Hughes: (Best Known) Poet: Difficult everyday lives of working class Af Am
29. African American Writers Zora Nele Hurston Sorrows Kitchen, Poor unschooled Southern Blacks moving to the North
31. The Jazz Age Jazz grew out of African American music of the South like Ragtime and Blues.
Jazz Clubs, Radio Play, and Dances
Cotton Club Harlem NYC
Connies Inn
Saratoga Club
32. Cotton Club
33. Jazz Age Icons Paul Robeson
Louis Armstrong
Duke Ellington
Bessy Smith
34. African American Performers Robeson: major dramatic actor & singer with great stage presence. Played Othello & supported communism
Armstrong: improv jazz trumpet [layer
Ellington: jazz pianist & composer
Smith: Blues singer. Most outstanding female vocalist of her time. Highest paid black artist up to 1927
35. Duke Ellington and George Gershwin
36. WEB Dubois &James Weldon Johnson (NAACP) Belief: peaceful protest against racial violence
Goal: Anti-lynching laws, equal rights
Tactics: court cases
37. African- American Voices The Great Migration saw 500,000 African Americans move North
NAACP -1909 WEB Du Bois
Du Bois wrote The Crisis an NAACP magazine to highlight racial violence and to form a platform in the civil rights fight
1920s Executive Secretary of the NAACP James Weldon Johnson fought for anti-lynching laws
39. Marcus Garvey and the UNIA Marcus Garvey an immigrant from Jamaica believed African Americans should build a separate society.
In 1918 the UNIA was moved to Harlem
It promoted black owned businesses
He founded the Black Star Shipping Line
He inspired Black Pride
Proposed Back to Motherland Africa Movement
42. 1920s Images