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The Roaring Life of the 1920s

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1 The Roaring Life of the 1920s
Ch.13

2 1. Prohibition Time period in which the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages was illegal 18th Amendment-21st Amendment

3 2. speakeasy Hidden saloon or nightclub that required a password to be admitted

4 3. Bootlegger Alcohol smuggler; seen as heroes

5 4. fundamentalism Protestant Christian movement grounded in a literal, or non symbolic, interpretation of the Bible

6 5. Clarence Darrow Famous trial lawyer hired by the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union) to defend John Scopes

7 6. Scopes Trial Trial of teacher John Scopes over evolution and the role of science and religion in public schools

8 7. flapper An emancipated young woman who embraced new fashions and urban attitudes of the 1920s

9 8. Double standard A set of principles granting greater sexual freedom to men than women Standard of behavior was stricter for women

10 9. Charles Lindbergh Pilot who made the first solo flight across the Atlantic

11 10. George Gershwin Composer who gained fame by merging traditional classical music with American jazz

12 11. Georgia O’Keeffe Artist who painted intensely colored scenes of New York

13 12. Sinclair Lewis Writer who was the first American to win the Nobel Prize in literature Criticized conformity and materialism

14 13. F. Scott Fitzgerald Writer whose books reveled the negative side of 1920s freedom coined the term “Jazz Age”

15 14. Edna St. Vincent Millay Poet who celebrated youth and freedom from traditional constraints

16 15. Ernest Hemingway Author who wrote about the horrors of war

17 16. Zora Neale Hurston One of the pre-eminent writers of twentieth-century African-American literature

18 17. James Weldon Johnson Executive Secretary of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) who fought for legislation to protect the rights of Black Americans

19 18. Marcus Garvey Jamaican immigrant who founded UNIA (Universal Negro Improvement Association) and encouraged blacks to separate themselves from white, move to Africa, and help overthrow the colonial rulers there. He viewed himself as the “Provisional President of Africa”

20 19. Harlem Renaissance A literary and artistic movement celebrating Black culture in America

21 20. Claude McKay Novelist, poet, Jamaican immigrant, who urged his readers to resist prejudice and discrimination

22 21. Langston Hughes Best-known poet of the Harlem Renaissance who focused on the difficult lives of working-class Black Americans

23 22. Paul Robeson Dramatic Actor who rose to fame in London and then New York. He struggled with racism and the treatment he received by being a supporter of communism and the Soviet Union

24 23. Louis Armstrong Famous trumpet-playing Jazz musician

25 24. Duke Ellington Jazz pianist and composer who became one of the most successful musicians of the era

26 25. Bessie Smith Blues singer

27 Changing Ways of Life Section 1

28 Rural and Urban Differences
Urban Scene New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia were the major urban centers of the s Small towns were slow paced and conservative while cities were fast paced and people debated new scientific and social ideas Drinking, gambling, and casual dating Prohibition Eighteenth Amendment (1920) Supported largely by the rural south and west Most immigrant groups considered drinking a part of socializing Underfunding made the law unenforceable

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30 Rural and Urban Differences
Speakeasies Hidden saloons where people had to present a card or know the password to enter Bootleggers People who distilled their own alcohol Organized Crime Sprung up in every major city as a result of prohibition Chicago-Al Capone had an organization that brought in an estimated $60 million a year from

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35 Fundamentalism A Protestant movement grounded in the literal interpretation of the Bible Believed that all knowledge could be found in the Bible and therefore rejected scientific ideas and theories like the theory of evolution

36 The Scopes Trial ACLU publicly stated it would defend any teacher who challenged Tennessee’s law against teaching the theory of evolution John Scopes was arrested for violating the law in 1925 ACLU hired Clarence Darrow to defend Scopes William Jennings Bryan served as special prosecutor Scopes was found guilty and fined $100

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40 The Twenties Woman Section 2

41 Young Women Change the Rules
The Flapper An emancipated young woman who embraced new fashions and urban attitudes Smoking and drinking in public Openly talking about sex Viewed marriage as an equal partnership The flapper was more an image than a widespread reality The Double Standard Women had to adhere to stricter standards of behavior than men

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43 Women Shed Old Roles New Work Opportunities Changing Family
College educated women worked as teachers, nurses, and librarians Clerical work (typists, filing clerk, secretary, etc) Women earned less than men Changing Family Access and acceptability of birth control Mass-produced goods Marriages based increasingly on romantic love Teen rebelliousness

44 Education and Popular Culture
Section 3

45 Shaping Culture School Enrollments Expanding News Coverage Radio
Increased due to economic prosperity and higher educational standards in industry Expanding News Coverage Included news from across the country and around the world Mass circulation newspapers, magazines, and tabloids shaped popular culture Radio News, entertainment, advertisements, live sporting events, and presidential addresses

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48 New Heroes and Old Dreams
Lindbergh’s Flight Won $25,ooo and became a national hero Entertainment and the Arts Silent movies and “talkies” George Gershwin (composer) blended traditional music with jazz Georgia O’Keefe-painter Dance marathons became popular as well as flagpole sitting

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53 New Heroes and Old Dreams
Writers Sinclair Lewis Ridiculed Americans for conformity and materialism F. Scott Fitzgerald Portrayed the negative side of wealth and living as if life had no meaning Edna St. Vincent Millay Wrote poems celebrating new freedoms Ernest Hemingway Criticized the glorification of war

54 The Harlem Renaissance
Section 4

55 Black American Voices in the 1920s
The Move North The Great Migration had caused tensions that culminated in 25 urban race riots in 1919 NAACP Goals Urged protests of racial violence, especially lynching James Johnson helped spear the NAACP campaign for an antilynching law in Congress Secure civil rights

56 Black American Voices in the 1920s
Marcus Garvey and UNIA Jamaican immigrant who called for Black Americans to build a separate society Founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association in 1914 Encouraged his followers to return to Africa

57 Renaissance in New York
Writers Claude McKay- poems about life in black ghettos and experience of being black in a white dominated world Langston Hughes- poems about the lives of the working class Performers Black performers won large followings with all audiences Paul Robeson was a famous dramatic actor whose support of the Soviet Union and Communism led him to leave the country

58 Renaissance in New York
Jazz Louis Armstrong Talented trumpet player Duke Ellington Jazz pianist and composer Bessie Smith Blues singer and highest paid Black artist in the world

59 Ch.13 Review Questions

60 What term did F. Scott Fitzgerald use to describe the 1920s?
Which musician contributed to the spread of Jazz from New Orleans to New York? Which groups of people would not approve of prohibition? Name two reasons why prohibition was difficult to enforce. Where would people go to obtain liquor illegally? Which leader of the NAACP fought for equal rights legislation? John Scopes broke a law that forbade the teaching of what? What did fundamentalists believe? What was the relation between movies and American culture in the 1920s?

61 10. How did the acceptability of debt affect Americans’ lives?
11. What did the flapper represent? 12. Define the Harlem Renaissance. 13. What does the “double standard” refer to? 14. According to fundamentalists (and other prohibitionists) what did alcohol cause? 15. Which of the following increased during the 1920s? A. child labor B. school dropout rate C. the birthrate D. the crime rate 16. Name two ways that mass production of automobiles changed people’s lives.


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