Title: LIFE IN THE TWENTIES
1LIFE IN THE TWENTIES
2FUNDAMENTALISM VS. SCIENCE
- Fundamentalism grew in reaction to new modern
values - Promoted temperance, strict interpretation of
Bible and
3PROHIBITION
- 18th Amendment developed in response to
temperance movt. - Alcoholism declined.
- Alcohol related deaths declined.
- But ended in 1933- repealed with 21st Amendment.
4SPEAKEASIES, BOOTLEGGERS AND ORGANIZED CRIME
- Bootleggers sold alcohol to speakeasies and
individuals, often part of criminal gangs - Criminal gangs branched out to seize control of
- Gambling establishments
- Prostitution
- Protection
5THE NEW WOMEN
- More worked but still faced discrimination
- Marriage increasingly became about love
- Flappers became a symbol of women who rebelled
against convention
6EDUCATION
- Expanded due to immigration, prosperity and need
for educated workers - Increased funding
- Broader focus
7ENTERTAINMENT
- Many Americans had bigger paychecks to pay for
leisure activities. - Decreased work hours meant more free time for
- Sports
- Games and Pastimes
- Vacations
8ERA OF WONDERFUL NONSENSE
9MASS MEDIA
- Improved technology and education, growing
leisure time, and sensational stories helped
create mass national media - Newspapers
- Magazines
- Radio
10Advertising
11RADIO
- 1920- KDKA Pittsburgh starts radio broadcasts.
- 1929- 800 stations are reaching 10 million people
- 1923-1930- 60 of Americans purchase a radio
12MOVIES
- Prior to the 1920, movie theaters (nickelodeons)
attracted working-class and immigrants. - By the 1920s, theaters become move lavish
- Led to growing importance of celebrities
13TALKIES
- Before the 1920s, films were silent
- First talking movie aired in 1927- The Jazz Singer
14FILM SUBJECTS
- Film reflected new ways as well as remaining
traditional norms
15LITERATURE
- 1920s were rich in literature
- Focused on modern issues of the time
16ART
- Movts. included art deco, realism, surrealism,
dadaism, expressionism, and Harlem Renaissance
17Max Webers The Fisherman (1919)
18Georgia OKeeffes Radiator Building- Night (1927)
19Georgia OKeefes Two Calla Lilies on Pink (1928)
20Louis Lozowicks Tanks 1
21Edward Hoppers Chop Suey (1929)
22THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE
- A flowering of black art, music, literature and
intellectualism - Black is beautiful
23WHEN THE NEGRO WAS IN VOGUE
- The 1920s were the years of Manhattans black
Renaissance - White people began to come to Harlem in droves.
For several years they packed the expensive
Cotton Club on Lenox Avenue. But I was never
there because the Cotton Club was a Jim Crow club
for gangsters and monied whitesNor did ordinary
Negroes like the growing influx of whites toward
Harlem after sundown, flooding little cabarets
and bars where formerly only colored people
laughed and sang, and where now the strangers
were given the best ringside tables to sit and
stare at the Negro customers- like amusing
animals in a zoo. - The Negroes said We cant go downtown and sit
and stare in your clubs. You wont even let us in
your clubs. But they didnt say it too loud- for
Negroes are practically never rude to white
people - It was a period when, at almost every Harlem
upper-crust dance party, one would be introduced
to various distinguished white celebrities there
as guests. It was a period when almost any Harlem
Negro of any social importance at all would be
likely to say casuallyAs I said to George-,
referring to George GershwinIt was a period when
Charleston preachers opened up shouting churches
as sideshows for white tourists. It was a period
when at least one charming colored chorus girl,
amber enough to pass for a Latin American, was
living in a penthouse, with all her bills paid by
a gentleman whose name was bankers magic on Wall
Street. It was a period when every season there
was at least one hit play on Broadway acted by a
Negro cast. And when books by Negro authors were
being published with much greater frequency and
much more publicity than ever before or since in
history. It was a period when white writers wrote
about Negroes more successfully (commercially
speaking) than Negroes did about themselves. It
was the period (God helps us!) when Ethel
Barrymore appeared inn blackface in Scarlet
Sister Mary! It was a period when the Negro was
in vogue. - - from Langston Hughes, The Big Sea An
Autobiography (New York Hill Wang, 1940)
24Aaron Douglass Sahdji (1925) and Gods
Tombstones (1926)
25Palmer C. Haydens Bal Jeunesse (1927)
26Archibald Motleys Cocktails (1926)
27THE JAZZ AGE
- Jazz blended ragtime and blues
- Americans buy 100 million phonograph records in
1927 - Many visited jazz nightclubs too
28HARLEM RENAISSANCE WRITERS
29Did You Know?
- The peanut butter and jelly sandwich became
famous in 1922. - The first Miss America contest was held on
September 8, 1921. - Mickey Mouse first debuted in 1928 in Steamboat
Willie - The average salary was 1,324 and a dozen eggs
cost 44, the average house cost 7,809, the
average car cost 265 and a gallon of gas cost
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