Title: The Twenties
1The Twenties
- I. A New Economic Era
- II. Cultural Change
- III. Culture Wars
- IV. The Economy Collapses
2Return to Laissez Faire
--Tax cuts --Limitations on Federal Trade
Commission --Court rulings against labor
--aid to farmers vetoed
Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge
3A Booming Economy
- GNP rises from 149 to 229 billion (5.5 average
per year) - Mass production and the assembly line
- Radios, appliances, entertainment
- Advertising budgets double
- (G.E. from 2 to 12 million)
4The Role of Advertising
5The Key Industry Automobiles
--number of cars from 8 to 27 million -- impact
on oil, steel, rubber, new industries
The Model T
6The Extent of Auto Manufacturing
7A Booming Economy But Not for All
- Farmers share of national income 15 in 1920 to
9 in 1929 - 71 of people have incomes below 2,500 (minimum
for decent standard of living) - 42 earn less than 1,500
8A Booming Economy But Not for All
--machines substitute for workers --union
membership declines from 5 to 3 million --welfare
capitalism and yellow dog contracts --consumer
credit/installment buying
9II. Cultural Change
- Personal gratification/self-fulfillment
- Sexual freedom
- The new woman
- Consumption and the pursuit of pleasure
10(No Transcript)
11The New Woman
- Decline of feminism
- Employment grows
- Birth control
Margaret Sanger
12III. Culture Wars
- Prohibition
- Immigration Restriction
- Revival of the Ku Klux Klan
- The Scopes trial
- The Election of 1928
13Clashing Values
- Work versus consumption
- Character versus personality
- Substance versus image
- Scarcity versus abundance
- Religion versus science
- Local culture versus mass culture
14The Debate over Prohibition Revives
- Widespread flaunting of the law alcohol
consumption 70 of pre-World War I level by 1929 - Speakeasies--symbol of urban depravity
prohibition supporterssymbol of moralistic
meddlers - Organized crime controls liquor trade
15Restricting Immigration The National Origins
Act of 1924 (Johnson-Reid)
--limit on numbers 161,000/year (1/5 of
immigrants in pre-World War I years) --quotas
based on 1890 census --all Asians excluded --no
restrictions on immigrants North and South America
16Revival of the Ku Klux Klan
--not only anti-black, but anti-Catholic and
anti-Jew
--4 million members --throughout nation, not just
South --Indiana governor, state legislators
Oklahoma legislature
17The Scopes Trial Fundamentalism v. Science and
Religious Modernism
Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan
18Culture Wars and the Election of 1928