Jake Marion
Mrs. Anna Short
English I Honors
04 May 2018
1920’s Values and Culture “I believe that the influence of women will save the country before every other power” (Jagannathan). This quote is very important to the values and culture of the 1920’s. Women started to gain more rights in the 1920’s and people started to realize just how important women are to everyday life. The world was changing as many new ideas and beliefs existed. The values and culture of the 1920s were influenced by the move to urban lifestyles, the treatment of women, and the treatment of people of color.
The 1920s were an age of dramatic social and political change (“The Roaring Twenties”). The nation’s wealth nearly doubled from the years 1920-1929 (“The Roaring Twenties”). Many people started to transition to new urban lifestyles instead of their old lives of living on a farm. A lot of people were loving this transition and enjoying life better than ever. For most people though, this new way of life brought more conflict than celebration (“The Roaring Twenties”). People started to not enjoy living in big cities and wished they were still on their farm where they had more privacy but they could not go back now. However, a small handful of young people were changing history by the minute in the big
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At the beginning of the 1920’s, most African Americans lived in the Southern states. In hope for a better life, more African Americans moved to the Northern states. The 1920’s was a period of racial hatred (“Blacks Set Out in Search of a Better Life in 1920s American Society”). The United States suffered a series of race riots in a number of cities (“Blacks Set Out in Search of a Better Life in 1920s American Society”). The 1920’s however was only the beginning for African Americans standing up for their
Fredrick Lewis Allen wrote a non-fiction historical account of the roaring twenties entitled Only Yesterday: An Informal History of the 1920s. Allen writes about Woodrow Wilson ending the war, women suffrage, Prohibition, the stock market crash and other events of the decade to answer the question that he inquires on the first page of the prelude “Since 1919 the circumstances of American life have been transformed yes but exactly how?” Consequently, the question served as the basis of Allen’s implied thesis that the Post War decade transformed the morals or mentality of the Americans through the rejection of the ways before the war that led to more rights, such as Women’s Right to vote. Moreover, Allen argues that this transformation of the
Guest Committee The 1920s was a time of change for the United States. It was a time of innovation, economic growth, and social status. With this “new era” springing about change it gave people a chance to reinvent themselves. People were able to get more jobs that had higher wages.
The 1920s was a boom time for the American people. This is a well known fact, but behind this time is the politics that made it all possible. Politics is an important staple of the American lifestyle usually boiling down to either loving or hating it. The 1920s, while not only an extremely socially active period, was also a period of political change and Importance. The 1920s was one of the most politically diverse eras in U.S. history, from Prohibition to the prosperity of the Coolidge era.
African Americans face a struggle with racism which has been present in our country before the Civil War began in 1861. America still faces racism today however, around the 1920’s the daily life of an African American slowly began to improve. Thus, this time period was known by many, as the “Negro Fad” (O’Neill). The quality of life and freedom of African Americans that lived in the United States was constantly evolving and never completely considered ‘equal’. From being enslaved, to fighting for their freedom, African Americans were greatly changing the status quo and beginning to make their mark in the United States.
There is a reason it is called “The Roaring Twenties”, and that reason is the partying. Alcohol was prohibited, but that was not stopping anyone. The way people dressed, danced, and even talked became provocative. Because of credit, Americans had extra money to spend and nothing to spend it on. In October of 1929, America crashed from her highest moments and the Great Depression began.
The Roaring Twenties arose with new trends, new technology, and a new morality. With wars finally and completely over, it was time for Americans to have some fun and let all the tension go. The women were able to free some of their restrictions with the ability to drink, vote, and have their own reputation. Also, Americans released the stress through using new technology, such as cars, airplanes, and radios. The Twenties finished with a screeching halt as the growth in the economy collapsed and the Great Depression into the next decade.
The 1920s was a time of severe social and political change. For the first time, less people lived on farms than in cities. Within the decade that nation’s total wealth more than doubled and life was going great. Everyone bought the same goods, did the same dance, and listened to the same music. Because of this historian referred to the twenties as “The Roaring Twenties”.
The 1920s was a very important decade for American history. Many new businesses and new ideas were being produced and becoming popular during this time. There was a copious amount of new inventions that were mass produced due to the advancement in technology and in factory work. A change in the ways people purchased items also played a huge role in the improvement and downfall of the economy in the 1920s. With each new invention and idea that was brought to life was another step into the future of modern America.
The roaring 1920's was a time when most Americans were living a prosperous life filled with wealth and achieving the “American Dream”. Many people called it the “Prosperity Decade” because it was the first time in American history that people were overwhelmed with wealth and could afford to purchase anything they pleased. The change of America's economy from a wartime economy back to a normal economy had the manufacturing industry in overdrive. So many American luxuries were developed, like the invention of the first automobile, the Ford Model T, and many sports became very popular. The Prohibition also affected the 1920's, this brought about higher crime rates, and the emergence of organized crime.
Jim Crow laws were still prevalent and continued to restrict their freedom (Doc D). During the 1920s, the American economy took a giant step forward. Economic prosperity put the “roar” into the twenties. A new
The 1920’s was an interesting time in American history. This era was also known as the roaring twenties. Although it is remembered as a fond time before the Great Depression there was also a lot of conflicts arising, Cultural conflicts in particular were at the center. Prohibition and Immigration were two of the main cultural conflicts during this time period.
The era of the 1920s in America is debated over and talked about by many people throughout the world, and for many decades. Barry Hankins in his book Jesus and Gin describes this era as a period of “culture war” in America. “The 1920s saw a culture war between those who believed that community values preceded individual rights and those who believed that individuals had rights that the community could not violate.” These culture wars consisted of political scandal, prohibition, and religious controversies, including norms on what to teach children in schools. “Scandal was part of what made the 1920s roar…” This quote is certainly true for that era, especially with president Warren Harding.
How did the life and spirit of the average American change from the 1920s to the 1930s? The life and spirit of the average American changed dramatically from the 1920s to the 1930s. In the 1920s it was very upbeat. Americans were living their life, mainly the women though. They went to bars and there they drank, smoked, and danced.
The 1920s carried much change in society. Some of these changes were more rights for women, jazz music, and prohibition. The people of the 1920s were disillusioned by society lacking in idealism and vision, sense of personal alienation, and Americans were obsessed with materialism and outmoded moral values (The Roaring Twenties).Cultural changes were strongly influenced by the destruction of World War I ending 1918. America needed to recover and with it youth rebelled against the norms of the older generations.
The 1920s in America, also known as the Roaring Twenties, was a time of political, social, economic, technological, and cultural developments. These developments created new changes and helped shape the ways of life of the American people. Women played a significant example in social changes. From improvements in the education system, to minor developments such as the changes in attire. Another major development was economic production.