The Jazz Age 1920-1929 Section 1: Boom Times Section 2: Life in the Twenties Section 3: A Creative Era Section 1: Boom Times Prosperity and Productivity GNP = $70 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
Tennessee legislature outlawed Darwinism in public schools
American Civil Liberties Union offered to defend a school teacher, John Scopes, a science teacher
Defense attorney, Clarence Darrow
Prosecution witness William Jennings Bryan 3 time democratic presidential hopeful
Trial exposed the deep divide in American society between traditional religious values and new ones based on scientific thought and theory
Darrow attacked the law as impeding free expression
Bryan admitted his belief that bible was literal, forced Bryan to admit inconsistencies in his interpretation of the scriptures
Darrow failed to convince the jury. Snopes was found guilty and fined 100
Showed to some a narrow mindedness in some fundamentalists like Bryan and lowered some Americans views of fundamentalism
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Section 3 The Creative Era
Music
The Emergence of Jazz
Charles Buddy Bolden
Blues mix of slave music and spirituals
Mamie Smith
Gertrude Ma Rainey
Bessie Smith
Louis Armstrong
Jazz Moves North
Chicago and New York
Ferdinand Jelly Roll Morton Chicago formed a band called the Red Hot Peppers, Jelly Roll Blues
Joseph King Oliver, Creole Jazz Band, Louis Armstrong joined his band in 1922, Mabels Dream and Froggie Moore
1924 Louis Armstrong goes solo When the Saint Go Marching In, Savoy Blues, and Hotter than That
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The popularization of jazz
Bix Beiderbecke, cornetist and pianist, put jazz rhythms in his music
George Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue
Igor Stravinsky
Aaron Copeland
Big Band music, dance music
Harlems Cotton Club
Duke Ellington
Ethel Waters
Cab Calloway
Many clubs were white only with black entertainers, even when the clubs were in black neighborhoods
Langston Hughes Why should I want to be white? I am a negro and beautiful
Josephine Baker and others traveled and spread jazz to other places, such as Paris which had its own Jazz Age
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The Harlem Renaissance
Theater
Paul Robeson, Emperor Jones
Son of a former slave
Graduate from Rutgers and Columbia Law
Singer Ol Man River, from Showboat
First African American actor to play a leading role opposite a white actress
Rose McClendon, Deep River
In Abrahams Bosom
Porgy, she appeared in the first production
Literature
Nella Larsen, Quicksand (1928)
Claude McKay, Home to Harlem
James Weldon Johnson, educator, lawyer, diplomat to Venezuela and Nicaragua, office of the NAACP
Poetry Lift Evry Voice and Sing became a song
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Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man (1912)
The Book of American Negro Poetry
Executive secretary of NAACP, raised money to support African American artists and art programs in Harlem
The Lost Generation
Scorned middle-class consumerism and superficiality of post war years
lost generation was coined by Gertrude Stein in reference to Ernest Hemingway and others
Stories of disillusionment
Ernest Hemingway
A Farewell to Arms devastation of war
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby emptiness of the pursuit of social status and money
Married Zelda Sayre, her mental illness and his alcoholism cut short their glamorous lifestyle when his creativity dried up due to the pressures
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Criticizing the middle class
Sinclair Lewis
Main Street (1920) satire of close-mindedness of a typical small Midwestern town
Babbitt (1922), story of middle aged realtor and city booster who hates his life but is too cowardly to change
H.I. Mencken, wrote in The American Mercury, he promoted writers who satirized middle America or booboisie, made fun of Republican politicians, Fundamentalist Christians, rural southerners, people who lived in small towns, and others
The Visual Arts
Painting and Photography
Georgia OKeefe NY factories and tenements
Alfred Stieglitz photos of people, airplanes, skyscrapers, crowded city streets
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Murals
Mexican influence
Jose Clemente Orozco
Diego Rivera
Detroit Institute of Art
Wife, Frida Kahlo
Rockefeller Center mural was destroyed by the sponsors because it featured Lenin
David Alfaro Siqueiros
Architecture
Louis Sullivan
Frank Lloyd Wright
Empire State Building (1250 feet) in 1931 tallest building in the world until 1954.