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The Roaring ’20s social changes: literature technology prohibition

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Presentation on theme: "The Roaring ’20s social changes: literature technology prohibition"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Roaring ’20s, F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, and what they mean to YOU!!!

2 The Roaring ’20s social changes: literature technology prohibition
music fashion lifestyles women’s rights

3 Business in the ’20s high employment stable prices
steady business rate stock market yielding high returns

4 Rich and Poor in the ’20s 1922: top 1% of population held 32% of nation’s wealth 1929: top 1% of population held 38% of nation’s wealth “the rich get richer and the poor get … children”

5 Old Money in the ’20s inherited wealth of ESTAB-LISHED upper-class families

6 New Money in the ’20s nouveau riche
acquired wealth within one generation and spent it conspicuously “old money” looked down on “new money”

7 Jazz Age --- the ’20s jazz music jazzy atmosphere
prohibition brought jazz musicians from New Orleans up north jazz became “soundtrack of rebellion”

8 Jazz Age --- the ’20s flappers --- typical young girls bobbed hair
shortened skirts rolled stockings powdered knees danced the nights away doing the Charleston

9 Jazz Age --- the ’20s slang --- gam: a girl’s leg all wet: wrong
bee’s knees: cool person bump off: to murder dumb dora: a stupid girl gam: a girl’s leg flat tire: a dull, boring person hooch: bootleg liquor torpedo: a hired gunman

10 Jazz and Gatsby “yellow cocktail music” --- Gatsby jazz and ragtime
“Rhapsody in Blue” mixed jazz and classical Louis Armstrong, George Gershwin, Duke Ellington

11 Lifestyles in the ’20s no more Victorian values --- now: flappers
independent women gaiety increasing wealth social mobility increased alcohol consumption

12 Women’s Rights in the ’20s
                                         women’s suffrage 19th Amendment (1920) changing attitudes + changing fashions = new woman (Jordan Baker in Gatsby)

13 Prohibition in the ’20s 18th Amendment (1919)
forbade making, selling, importing, or exporting of alcohol bootleggers sold, bought, consumed alcohol GANGSTERS

14 Technology in the ’20s “automobilization” --- cars were available for many for 1st time magazines radios and ads “talkies”

15 Modernism in the ’20s rejection of Romanticism and Victorianism
World War I “The Waste Land” by T.S. Eliot the Valley of Ashes in The Great Gatsby

16 Modernism in the ’20s mechanization and industrialization cars
new fashion mass entertainment development of cinema mass media and ads

17 F. Scott Fitzgerald family was prominent, but not rich
attended Princeton; dropped out fell in love with Zelda Sayre; couldn’t afford to marry her

18 F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote This Side of Paradise to get money to marry Zelda became a huge success wrote “money-making fiction” at $4k a story (equal to $50k today)

19 F. Scott Fitzgerald couple illustrated “the Jazz Age”
had Scotty, a daughter wrote The Great Gatsby in 1925;was poorly received Zelda had affair

20 F. Scott Fitzgerald tried to clean up reputation as a drunk
Zelda became mentally unstable moved to Hollywood as screenwriter

21 F. Scott Fitzgerald died almost forgotten at age 45
Zelda died in 1948 in mental hospital fire became “literary giant” in the ’60s

22 Literature in the ’20s authors wrote about personal lives as “knowable” Gatsby very autobiographical Fitzgerald was very influenced by Modernist theories

23 Modernism / Romanticism
Nick Gatsby

24 The Great Gatsby setting: 1920s, East Egg, West Egg, NYC characters:
Nick Carraway (narrator) Tom and Daisy Buchanan Jordan Baker Jay Gatsby George and Myrtle Wilson

25 1920s and Today

26 1920s and Today

27 1920s and Today

28 1920s and Today

29 1920s and Today

30 1920s and Today

31 1920s and Today

32 1920s and Today

33 1920s and Today

34 1920s and Today

35 1920s and Today

36 1920s and Today

37 1920s and Today

38 1920s and Today

39 Recap: The ’20s prohibition, speakeasies, bootlegging, gangsters
Jazz Age, dancing, flappers, women’s rights

40 THE END!


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