Title: Splash Screen
1Splash Screen
2Contents
Chapter Introduction Section 1 A Clash of
Values Section 2 Cultural Innovations Section
3 African American Culture Chapter Summary
Chapter Assessment
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3Intro 1
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again.
4Intro 2
Chapter Objectives
Section 1 A Clash of Values
- Explain the rise in racism and nativism in the
1920s.
- Describe the clash of values in the 1920s and the
changing status of women.
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5Intro 3
Chapter Objectives
Section 2 Cultural Innovations
- Describe the explosion of art and literature and
the disillusionment of 1920s artists.
- Summarize the effects of sports, movies, radio,
and music on popular culture.
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6Intro 4
Chapter Objectives
Section 3 African American Culture
- Describe the Harlem Renaissance and the
rediscovery of African American cultural roots.
- Explain the increase in African American
political activism.
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7Intro 7
Why It Matters
The 1920s was an era of rapid change and clashing
values. Many Americans believed society was
losing its traditional values, and they took
action to preserve these values. Other Americans
embraced new values associated with a freer
lifestyle and the pursuit of individual goals.
Writers and artists pursued distinctively
American themes, and the Harlem Renaissance gave
African Americans new pride.
8Intro 8
The Impact Today
The 1920s left permanent legacies to American
culture.
- National celebrities in sports and film emerged.
- Jazz music became part of American culture.
- F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway wrote
classics of American literature.
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9Intro 9
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10Intro 10
11End of Intro
12Section 1-1
Guide to Reading
Main Idea
During the 1920s, clashes between traditional and
modern values shook the United States.
Key Terms and Names
- Fundamentalism
- evolution
- creationism
- police powers
- speakeasy
- eugenics
- Ku Klux Klan
- Emergency Quota Act
- flapper
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13Section 1-2
Guide to Reading (cont.)
Reading Strategy
Organizing As you read about Americans
reactions to immigrants in the 1920s, complete a
graphic organizer similar to the one on page 482
of your textbook by filling in the causes and
effects of anti-immigrant prejudices.
Reading Objectives
- Explain the rise in racism and nativism in the
1920s.
- Describe the clash of values in the 1920s and the
changing status of women.
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14Section 1-3
Guide to Reading (cont.)
Section Theme
Continuity and Change The rapid changes of the
early 1900s challenged Americans who wanted to
preserve traditional values.
15Section 1-4
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16Section 1-5
Nativism Resurges
- In the 1920s, racism and nativism increased.
- Immigrants and demobilized military men and women
competed for the same jobs during a time of high
unemployment and an increased cost of living. - Ethnic prejudice was the basis of the Sacco and
Vanzetti case, in which the two immigrant men
were accused of murder and theft.
(pages 482484)
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17Section 1-6
Nativism Resurges (cont.)
- They were thought to be anarchists, or opposed to
all forms of government.
- Sacco and Vanzetti were sentenced to death, and
in 1927 they were executed still proclaiming
their innocence. - Nativists used the idea of eugenics, the false
science of the improvement of hereditary traits,
to give support to their arguments against
immigration.
(pages 482484)
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18Section 1-7
Nativism Resurges (cont.)
- Nativists emphasized that human inequalities were
inherited and said that inferior people should
not be allowed to breed.
- This added to the anti-immigrant feeling of the
time and further promoted the idea of strict
immigrant control. - The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) led the movement to
restrict immigration.
(pages 482484)
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19Section 1-7
Nativism Resurges (cont.)
- This new Klan not only targeted the freed African
Americans but also Catholics, Jews, immigrants,
and other groups believed to have un-American
values.
- Because of a publicity campaign, by 1924 the Ku
Klux Klan had over 4 million members and
stretched beyond the South into Northern cities. - Scandals and poor leadership led to the decline
of the Klan in the late 1920s. - Politicians supported by the Klan were voted out
of office.
(pages 482484)
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20Section 1-8
Nativism Resurges (cont.)
What led to a resurgence of racism and nativism
in the United States after World War I?
During the early 1920s, an economic recession, an
influx of immigrants, and racial and cultural
tensions led to an atmosphere of disillusionment
and intolerance. Many Americans saw immigrants as
a threat to the status quo of traditional
American values. Immigrants and demobilized
military men and women competed for the same jobs
during a time of high unemployment and an
increased cost of living.
(pages 482484)
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display the answer.
21Section 1-9
Controlling Immigration
- In 1921 President Harding signed the Emergency
Quota Act, limiting immigration to 3 percent of
the total number of people in any ethnic group
already living in the United States.
- This discriminated heavily against southern and
eastern Europeans. - The National Origins Act of 1924 made immigrant
restriction a permanent policy.
(page 484)
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22Section 1-10
Controlling Immigration (cont.)
- The act lowered the quotas to 2 percent of each
national group living in the U.S. in 1890.
- This further restricted immigrants from southern
and eastern Europe. - The act exempted immigrants from the Western
Hemisphere from the quotas. - The immigration acts of 1921 and 1924 reduced
the labor pool in the United States.
(page 484)
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23Section 1-11
Controlling Immigration (cont.)
- Employers needed laborers for agriculture,
mining, and railroad work.
- Mexican immigrants began pouring into the United
States between 1914 and the end of the 1920s. - The immigrants fled their country in the
aftermath of the Mexican Revolution of 1910.
(page 484)
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24Section 1-13
Controlling Immigration (cont.)
How did the Newlands Reclamation Act of 1902
help bring Mexican immigrants to the United
States?
This act provided funds for irrigation projects
in the Southwest. This led to a need for large
numbers of agricultural laborers for factory
farms. Since the National Origins Act of 1924
limited immigration from southern and eastern
Europe but not from the Western Hemisphere,
Mexican immigrants looking for jobs and political
freedom poured into the United States.
(page 484)
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25Section 1-14
The New Morality
- A new morality challenged traditional ideas and
glorified youth and personal freedom.
- New ideas about marriage, work, and pleasure
affected the way people lived. - Women broke away from families as they entered
the workforce, earned their own livings, or
attended college. - The automobile gave American youth the
opportunity to pursue interests away from parents.
(pages 484486)
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26Section 1-15
The New Morality (cont.)
- Womens fashion drastically changed in the 1920s.
- The flapper, a young, dramatic, stylish, and
unconventional woman, exemplified the change in
womens behavior. - Professionally, women made advances in the fields
of science, medicine, law, and literature.
(pages 484486)
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27Section 1-17
The New Morality (cont.)
How did the automobile encourage the new
morality?
The automobile led to the independence of many
youths. As a result, many American youths spent
time away from family to socialize with friends.
(pages 484486)
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28Section 1-18
The Fundamentalist Movement
- Some Americans feared the new morality and
worried about Americas social decline.
- Many of these people came from small rural towns
and joined a religious movement called
Fundamentalism. - The Fundamentalists rejected Darwins theory of
evolution, which suggested that humans developed
from lower forms of life over millions of years.
(pages 486487)
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29Section 1-19
The Fundamentalist Movement (cont.)
- Instead, Fundamentalists believed in
creationismthat God created the world as
described in the Bible.
- In 1925 Tennessee passed the Butler Act, which
made it illegal to teach anything that denied
creationism and taught evolution instead.
(pages 486487)
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30Section 1-20
The Fundamentalist Movement (cont.)
- The debate between evolutionists and creationists
came to a head with the Scopes Trial.
- Answering the request of the ACLU, John T.
Scopes, a biology teacher, volunteered to test
the Butler Act by teaching evolution in his
class. - After being arrested and put on trial, Scopes was
found guilty, but the case was later overturned.
- After the trial, many fundamentalists withdrew
from political activism.
(pages 486487)
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31Section 1-21
The Fundamentalist Movement (cont.)
How did the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
cause the clash between the evolutionists and the
creationists?
The ACLU raised money to test the Butler Act, and
it asked for a volunteer who would purposely
teach evolution in the classroom.
(pages 486487)
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32Section 1-22
Prohibition
- Many people felt the passage of the Eighteenth
Amendment, which prohibited alcohol, would reduce
unemployment, domestic violence, and poverty.
- The Volstead Act made the enforcement of
Prohibition the responsibility of the U.S.
Treasury Department. - Until the 1900s, police powersa governments
power to control people and property in the
publics interest, had been the job of the state
governments.
(pages 487488)
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33Section 1-22
Prohibition (cont.)
- Americans ignored the laws of Prohibition.
- They went to secret bars called speakeasies,
where alcohol could be purchased. - Crime became big business, and gangsters
corrupted many local politicians and governments.
(pages 487488)
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34Section 1-22
Prohibition (cont.)
- In 1933 the ratification of the Twenty-first
Amendment ended Prohibition.
- It was a defeat for supporters of traditional
values and those who favored the use of federal
police powers to achieve moral reform.
(pages 487488)
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35Section 1-22
Prohibition (cont.)
How were Prohibition and crime related?
Organized crime ran most of the speakeasies.
Bootleggingthe illegal production and
distribution of alcoholwas common. Gangsters
smuggled alcohol into the United States, and
violence occurred as gangs fought to control the
liquor trade. Some gangsters gained enough money
and power to corrupt local politicians.
(pages 487488)
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36Section 1-23
Checking for Understanding
Define Match the terms on the right with their
definitions on the left.
C
__ 1. the scientific theory that humans and other
forms of life have evolved over time __
2. person who believes that there should be no
government __ 3. the belief that God created the
world and everything in it, usually in the way
described in Genesis __ 4. a place where
alcoholic beverages are sold illegally __ 5. a
young woman of the 1920s who showed freedom from
convention, especially in dress
A. anarchist B. flapper C. evolution D. creationis
m E. speakeasy
A
D
E
B
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37Section 1-24
Checking for Understanding (cont.)
Explain why the Eighteenth Amendment was repealed.
People recognized that Prohibition was not
successful.
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38Section 1-25
Reviewing Themes
Continuity and Change How did the passage of the
Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act change
the federal governments role?
The federal government obtained police powers to
enforce the law.
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39Section 1-26
Critical Thinking
Synthesizing Why were immigrants from Mexico not
included in the quota system set by the
immigration acts?
They provided cheap labor.
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40Section 1-28
Analyzing Visuals
Analyzing Photographs Study the image of the
federal agent destroying barrels of alcohol on
page 488 of your textbook. Why do you think the
barrels were destroyed in public with a crowd
watching?
They were destroyed in public to intimidate
people, hoping to make them fearful and
submissive in the face of federal authority.
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41Section 1-29
Close
Explain the resurgence, impact, and decline of
the Ku Klux Klan.
42End of Section 1
43Section 2-1
Guide to Reading
Main Idea
An era of exciting and innovative cultural
trends, the 1920s witnessed changes in art and
literature. This period also saw a dramatic
increase in the countrys interest in sports and
other forms of popular culture.
Key Terms and Names
- F. Scott Fitzgerald
- mass media
- Carl Sandburg
- Eugene ONeill
- Ernest Hemingway
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44Section 2-2
Guide to Reading (cont.)
Reading Strategy
Organizing As you read about the 1920s, complete
a graphic organizer like the one on page 492 of
your textbook by filling in the main
characteristics of art, literature, and popular
culture that reflect the era.
Reading Objectives
- Describe the explosion of art and literature and
the disillusionment of 1920s artists.
- Summarize the effects of sports, movies, radio,
and music on popular culture.
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45Section 2-3
Guide to Reading (cont.)
Section Theme
Culture and Traditions American culture in the
1920s saw a rise in both the arts and popular
entertainment.
46Section 2-4
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47Section 2-5
Art and Literature
- During the 1920s, American artists, writers, and
intellectuals began challenging traditional ideas
as they searched for meaning in the modern world.
- The artistic and unconventional, or Bohemian,
lifestyle of Manhattans Greenwich Village and
Chicagos South Side attracted artists and
writers.
(pages 492494)
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48Section 2-6
Art and Literature (cont.)
- These areas were considered centers of
creativity, enlightenment, and freedom from
conformity to old ideas.
- The European art movement influenced American
modernist artists. - The range in which the artists chose to express
the modern experience was very diverse.
(pages 492494)
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49Section 2-7
Art and Literature (cont.)
- Writing styles and subject matter varied. Chicago
poet Carl Sandburg used common speech to glorify
the Midwest and the expansive nature of American
life.
- Playwright Eugene ONeills work focused on the
search for meaning in modern society.
(pages 492494)
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50Section 2-9
Art and Literature (cont.)
How did F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby
portray modern society?
The book exposed the emptiness and superficiality
of modern society as the characters spent much of
their lives chasing futile dreams.
(pages 492494)
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51Section 2-10
Popular Culture
- The economic prosperity of the 1920s afforded
many Americans leisure time for enjoying sports,
music, theater, and entertainment.
- Radio, motion pictures, and newspapers gave rise
to a new interest in sports. - Sports figures, such as Babe Ruth and heavyweight
champion Jack Dempsey, were famous for their
sports abilities but became celebrities as well.
(pages 494495)
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52Section 2-11
Popular Culture (cont.)
- Motion pictures became increasingly popular.
- The first talking picture, The Jazz Singer, was
made in 1927. - The golden age of Hollywood began.
- The mass mediaradio, movies, newspapers, and
magazineshelped break down the focus on local
interests. - Mass media helped unify the nation and spread new
ideas and attitudes.
(pages 494495)
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53Section 2-13
Popular Culture (cont.)
How did popular culture in the United States
change during the 1920s?
(pages 494495)
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54Section 2-13
Popular Culture (cont.)
The economic prosperity of the 1920s afforded
many Americans leisure time for enjoying sports,
music, theater, and entertainment. Radio, motion
pictures, and newspapers gave rise to a new
interest in sports. Sports figures became
celebrities. Motion pictures became increasingly
popular. The first talking picture, The Jazz
Singer, was made in 1927. The golden age of
Hollywood began. The mass mediaradio, movies,
newspapers, and magazinesbroke down the focus on
local interests. Mass media helped unify the
nation and spread new ideas and attitudes.
(pages 494495)
55Section 2-19
Checking for Understanding
Define Match the terms on the right with their
definitions on the left.
A
__ 1. a person (as an artist or writer) leading
an unconventional lifestyle __ 2. a medium of
communication (as in television and radio)
intended to reach a wide audience
A. Bohemian B. mass media
B
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56Section 2-20
Checking for Understanding (cont.)
Describe the main themes of artists and writers
during the 1920s.
The main themes of artist and writers during the
1920s were disenchantment, isolation,
disillusionment, and emptiness.
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57Section 2-21
Reviewing Themes
Culture and Traditions How did writers, artists,
and popular culture of the 1920s affect
traditional ideas in the United States?
They broke down patterns of narrow focus on local
interest.
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58Section 2-22
Critical Thinking
Synthesizing How did World War I influence the
literature written during the 1920s?
It led many writers to portray disillusionment
and to reevaluate the myths of American heroes.
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59Section 2-24
Analyzing Visuals
Interpreting Art Study the Edward Hopper
painting, Nighthawks, on page 493 of your
textbook. How do different elements of this piece
work to convey a sense of isolation?
One man eats by himself, there are only three
customers in the diner, there is only one person
working at the diner, and there are not people on
the sidewalk or in the street.
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60Section 2-25
Close
Summarize the effects of sports, movies, radio,
and music on popular culture.
61End of Section 2
62Section 3-1
Guide to Reading
Main Idea
During World War I, the prospect of employment
and greater freedoms spurred the Great
Migration of African Americans from the rural
South to industrial cities in the North.
Key Terms and Names
- jazz
- Cotton Club
- blues
- Marcus Garvey
- Harlem Renaissance
- Claude McKay
- Langston Hughes
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63Section 3-2
Guide to Reading (cont.)
Reading Strategy
Organizing As you read about the African
American experience in the 1920s, complete a
graphic organizer similar to the one on page 498
of your textbook by filling in the causes and
effects of the Harlem Renaissance.
Reading Objectives
- Describe the Harlem Renaissance and the
rediscovery of African American cultural roots.
- Explain the increase in African American
political activism.
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64Section 3-3
Guide to Reading (cont.)
Section Theme
Groups and Institutions African Americans played
stronger political and cultural roles in the
1920s than they had in previous decades.
65Section 3-4
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66Section 3-5
The Harlem Renaissance
- The Great Migration occurred when hundreds of
thousands of African Americans from the rural
South headed to industrial cities in the North
with the hope of a better life.
(pages 498500)
67Section 3-6
The Harlem Renaissance (cont.)
- In large northern cities, particularly New York
Citys neighborhood of Harlem, African Americans
created environments that stimulated artistic
development, racial pride, a sense of community,
and political organization, which led to a
massive creative outpouring of African American
arts.
- This became known as the Harlem Renaissance.
(pages 498500)
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68Section 3-7
The Harlem Renaissance (cont.)
- Writer Claude McKay became the first important
writer of the Harlem Renaissance.
- His work expressed defiance and contempt of
racism, which were very strong writing
characteristics of this time. - Langston Hughes became the leading voice of the
African American experience in the United States.
(pages 498500)
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69Section 3-7
The Harlem Renaissance (cont.)
- Louis Armstrong introduced jazz, a style of music
influenced by Dixieland music and ragtime.
- He became the first great cornet and trumpet
soloist in jazz music. - A famous Harlem nightspot, the Cotton Club, was
where some famous African American musicians,
such as Duke Ellington, got their start.
(pages 498500)
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70Section 3-7
The Harlem Renaissance (cont.)
- Bessie Smith sang about unrequited love, poverty,
and oppression, which were classic themes in
blues style music.
- This soulful style of music evolved from African
American spirituals.
(pages 498500)
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71Section 3-8
The Harlem Renaissance (cont.)
What was the Harlem Renaissance?
In large northern cities, particularly New York
Citys neighborhood of Harlem, African Americans
created environments that stimulated artistic
development, racial pride, a sense of community,
and political organization, which led to a
massive creative outpouring of African American
arts. This became known as the Harlem Renaissance.
(pages 498500)
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72Section 3-9
African American Politics
- After World War I, many African Americans wanted
a new role in life and in politics.
- The Great Migration led to African Americans
becoming powerful voting blocs, which influenced
election outcomes in the North. - Oscar DePriest was elected as the first African
American representative in Congress from a
Northern state after African Americans voted as a
block.
(pages 501502)
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73Section 3-10
African American Politics (cont.)
- The National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) battled against
segregation and discrimination.
- The NAACPs efforts led to the passage of
anti-lynching legislation in the House of
Representatives, but the Senate defeated the bill.
(pages 501502)
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74Section 3-11
African American Politics (cont.)
- Jamaican black leader Marcus Garveys idea of
Negro Nationalism glorified black culture and
traditions.
- He founded the Universal Negro Improvement
Association (UNIA), which promoted black pride
and unity. - Garvey encouraged education as the way for
African Americans to gain economic and political
power but he also voiced the need for separation
and independence from whites.
(pages 501502)
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75Section 3-11
African American Politics (cont.)
- Garveys plan to create a settlement in Liberia
in Africa for African Americans caused middle
class African Americans to distance themselves
from Garvey.
- His ideas, however, led to a sense of pride and
hope in African Americans that resurfaced during
the civil rights movement in the 1960s.
(pages 501502)
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76Section 3-12
African American Politics (cont.)
What was Marcus Garveys Negro Nationalism?
Garveys idea of Negro Nationalism glorified
black culture and traditions. He founded the
Universal Negro Improvement Association, which
promoted black pride and unity. He encouraged
education as the way for African Americans to
gain economic and political power but he also
voiced the need for separation and independence
from whites.
(pages 501502)
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77Section 3-23
Checking for Understanding
Define Match the terms on the right with their
definitions on the left.
B
__ 1. style of music evolving from African
American spirituals and note for its melancholy
sound __ 2. American style of music that
developed from ragtime and blues and which uses
syncopated rhythms and melodies
A. jazz B. blues
A
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78Section 3-24
Checking for Understanding (cont.)
Explain how Bessie Smiths music conveyed
universal themes.
Bessie Smith sang of love, poverty, and
oppression.
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79Section 3-24
Checking for Understanding (cont.)
Explain the importance of the defeat of Judge
John Parkers nomination to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Judge John Parkers defeat showed the political
strength of African Americans.
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80Section 3-24
Checking for Understanding (cont.)
Describe the goals of Marcus Garveys Universal
Negro Improvement Association.
The association emphasized black pride and a
separate African American society.
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81Section 3-25
Reviewing Themes
Groups and Institutions What actions did the
NAACP take to expand political rights for African
Americans?
They lobbied and worked through the courts.
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82Section 3-26
Critical Thinking
Synthesizing How did the Great Migration affect
the political power of African Americans in the
North?
The Great Migration affected the political power
of African Americans in the North by creating a
strong voting bloc.
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83Section 3-27
Critical Thinking (cont.)
Analyzing How did Duke Ellington create a new
musical style that grew out of the ragtime
tradition?
Duke Ellington used distinctive orchestration and
improvisation to create a new musical style.
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84Section 3-28
Analyzing Visuals
Examining Photographs Study the pictures of the
Cotton Club and African Americans posing by their
car on page 500 of your textbook. What are some
elements of these pictures that show African
Americans adopting part of the 1920s social
culture?
The style of clothing they wore indicates they
were adopting part of the 1920s social culture.
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85Section 3-30
Close
Explain the increase in African American
political activism.
86End of Section 3
87Chapter Summary 1
88End of Chapter Summary
89Chapter Assessment 1
Reviewing Key Terms
Define Match the terms on the right with their
definitions on the left.
G
__ 1. a place where alcoholic beverages are sold
illegally __ 2. American style of music that
developed form ragtime and blues and which uses
syncopated rhythms and melodies __ 3. the belief
that God created the world and everything in it,
usually the way described in Genesis __ 4. person
who believes that there should be no government
__ 5. a person (as an artist or writer) leading
an unconventional lifestyle
A. anarchist B. eugenics C. flapper D. evolution E
. creationism F. police powers G. speakeasy H. Boh
emian I. mass media J. jazz
J
E
A
H
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90Chapter Assessment 2
Reviewing Key Terms (cont.)
Define Match the terms on the right with their
definitions on the left.
F
__ 6. a governments power to control people and
property in the interest of public safety,
health, welfare, and morals __ 7. a
pseudo-science that deals with the improvement of
hereditary qualities of a race or breed __ 8. the
scientific theory that humans and other forms of
life have evolved over time
A. anarchist B. eugenics C. flapper D. evolution E
. creationism F. police powers G. speakeasy H. Boh
emian I. mass media J. jazz
B
D
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91Chapter Assessment 2
Reviewing Key Terms (cont.)
Define Match the terms on the right with their
definitions on the left.
I
__ 9. a medium of communication (as in television
and radio) intended to reach a wide audience __
10. a young woman of the 1920s who showed freedom
from convention, especially in dress
A. anarchist B. eugenics C. flapper D. evolution E
. creationism F. police powers G. speakeasy H. Boh
emian I. mass media J. jazz
C
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display the answers.
92Chapter Assessment 3
Reviewing Key Facts
Why was there a rise in racism and nativism in
the 1920s?
There was a rise in racism and nativism because
of an influx of immigrants and a recession.
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display the answer.
93Chapter Assessment 4
Reviewing Key Facts (cont.)
What actions did Congress and the president take
during the first half of the 1920s to restrict
immigration?
They enacted the Emergency Quota Act and the
National Origins Act.
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display the answer.
94Chapter Assessment 5
Reviewing Key Facts (cont.)
What role did the automobile play in changing the
way that young people in the United States lived
and socialized?
The automobile allowed them to escape parents
control.
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display the answer.
95Chapter Assessment 6
Reviewing Key Facts (cont.)
What was the Fundamentalist movement?
It was a religious movement to reassert the
Bibles authority in life.
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96Chapter Assessment 7
Reviewing Key Facts (cont.)
What were two reasons for the rise in African
American political activism?
The Harlem Renaissance and the African American
experience in World War I contributed to the rise
in African American political activism.
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display the answer.
97Chapter Assessment 8
Critical Thinking
Analyzing Themes Groups and Institutions In
what ways did the new morality change American
family life?
The new morality increased youths independence
and allowed women to develop a personal identity
that was demonstrated in work and fashion.
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display the answer.
98Chapter Assessment 9
Critical Thinking (cont.)
Interpreting Why was Charles Lindbergh a symbol
of modern America?
His solo flights restored Americans belief in
the courageous, pioneering individual.
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display the answer.
99Chapter Assessment 10
Geography and History
The circle graphs below show immigration numbers
in the United States in 1921 and 1925. Study the
graphs and answer the questions on the following
slides.
100Chapter Assessment 11
Geography and History (cont.)
Interpreting Graphs What significant changes in
immigration do the circle graphs show?
They show a dramatic increase in the percentage
of immigrants form Latin America and a dramatic
decrease in the percentage of immigrants from
Eastern and Southern Europe.
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display the answer.
101Chapter Assessment 12
Geography and History (cont.)
Applying Geography Skills Why did these changes
in immigration occur between 1921 and 1925?
There were changes in immigration laws.
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display the answer.
102Chapter Assessment 13
Directions Choose the best answer to the
following question.
Which of the following events of the 1920s
contributed to a renewed nativist
movement? A Economic recession B Harlem
Renaissance C Scopes trial D Prohibition
Test-Taking Tip First you must be clear on the
meaning of nativism. Then use the process of
elimination to rule out the answers that do not
seem related to the definition of nativism.
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display the answer.
103Chapter Assessment 14
Billy Sunday and Aimee Semple McPherson are both
regarded as examples of what religious movement
of the 1920s?
They are regarded as examples of Fundamentalism.
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display the answer.
104End of Chapter Assessment
105F/F/F 1-Fact
New Words The youth culture of the twenties
produced a number of new words and phrases that
became a part of their own language. In the
mid-1920s, partygoers urged fellow dancers to
Get hot! Get hot! Young Americans also invented
such terms as beauts, cats pajamas, and cats
whiskers to describe attractive young women. The
terms lounge lizards, jelly beans, and jazzbos
described attractive young men, while the phrase
hard-boiled eggs described tough
guys. Prohibition also expanded American
vocabulary. Bootlegger, speakeasy, and hip flask
became part of common speech. It also gave new
meaning to the words wet and dry.
106FYI Contents 1
Miss America Aimee Semple McPherson Tennessee
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slide.
107FYI 1-1a
The first Miss America was crowned in 1921. It
seems fitting that sixteen-year-old Margaret
Gorman was from the nations capitalWashington,
D.C.
108FYI 1-2b
Charismatic preacher Aimee Semple McPherson
gained added notoriety for a five-week
disappearance she claimed was a kidnapping and
for the many lawsuits filed against her in the
following years, often for libel or slander.
109FYI 1-3c
Tennessees law against teaching evolution
remained on the books until 1967.
110FYI 2
Many of the founders were Deists in religion.
Deists believe in one god. They are inspired by
the design found in the universe. They do not
support the idea of divine revelation, nor do
they have a holy book.
111Moment in History 1
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again.
112You Dont Say 3-1
All That Jazz The origin of the term jazz is one
notable dispute in American English. It may have
come from the word Chaz, the nickname of an early
ragtime drummer named Charles Washington, or from
chasse, a kind of dance step. African and Creole
sources are also possibilities.
113CT Skill Builder 1
Synthesizing Information
The authors of your textbook gathered information
from many sources to present a story of how the
United States came about and how the countrys
people lived. To combine the information into a
logical story, the authors used a process called
synthesis. Being able to synthesize information
can be a useful skill for you as a student when
you need to gather data from several sources for
a report or a presentation.
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again.
114CT Skill Builder 2
Synthesizing Information
Learning the Skill
The skill of synthesizing involves combining and
analyzing information gathered from separate
sources or at different times to make logical
connections. Follow these steps to synthesize
information
- Select important and relevant information.
- Analyze the information and build connections.
- Reinforce or modify the connections as you
acquire new information.
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115CT Skill Builder 3
Synthesizing Information
Learning the Skill (cont.)
Suppose you need to write a research paper on the
status of women in the 1920s. You would need to
synthesize what you learn to inform others. You
could begin by detailing the ideas and
information you already have about the status of
women in the1920s. A graphic organizer such as
the one on page 489 of your textbook could help
categorize the facts.
Then you could select an article about women in
the 1920s, such as the one on the following slide.
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display the information.
116CT Skill Builder 4
Synthesizing Information
Learning the Skill (cont.)
In 1923 the National Womans Party first proposed
an equal rights amendment to the Constitution.
This amendment stated that men and women shall
have equal rights throughout the United States
and every place subject to its jurisdiction. The
National Womans party pointed out that
legislation discriminating against women existed
in every state. . . .
Some progressive women reformers, however,
opposed the goals of the National Womans Party.
These progressives favored protective
legislation, which had brought shorter hours and
better working conditions for many women. The
efforts of the progressives helped defeat the
equal rights amendment.
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display the information.
117CT Skill Builder 5
Synthesizing Information
Practicing the Skill
Use the graphic organizer below and the passage
on the previous slide to answer the following
questions.
118CT Skill Builder 6
Synthesizing Information
Practicing the Skill (cont.)
1. What information is presented in the
table? 2. What is the main idea of the
passage? What information does the passage add to
your knowledge of this topic?
The status of women in the 1920s is presented in
the table.
An amendment dedicated to womens rights was
proposed in 1923, but it was defeated with the
help of women who opposed it.
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display the answers.
119CT Skill Builder 7
Synthesizing Information
Practicing the Skill (cont.)
3. By synthesizing the two sources and using what
you know from reading Section 1 of Chapter 15 in
your textbook, what conclusions can you draw
about the role of women in 1920s society?
Women pursued social freedom, entered the
workforce, and made contributions in medicine,
literature, and science.
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display the answer.
120M/C 1-1
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121Why It Matters Transparency
122Daily Focus Skills Transparency 1
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display the answer.
123Daily Focus Skills Transparency 2
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display the answer.
124Daily Focus Skills Transparency 3
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display the answer.
125GO 1
126GO 2
127GO 3
128HELP
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