Final Exam Essay Question

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    Final Exam Essay Question #3

    During the 1950s, many Americans became middle class and enjoyed materialistic lives.

    Everyone in the country grew wealthier because of the effect government spending on such

    things as public housing, education, and interstate highways had on the economy. Government

    spending created jobs, in turn, raising consumer demand. The wealth Americans experiencedwas at its highest point during the Korean War, because of the need for military supplies and

    workers to provide the labor needed to generate them. The baby boom also expanded the

    economy by requiring families to buy supplies such as clothes, beds, and food, for their

    newborns. The new emphasis on family also caused more families to move to the suburbs, which

    created more jobs because more houses were built, in turn, requiring the purchase and use of

    many different materials, such as glass, wood, brick, carpet, and everything else required to

    construct a house. Levittown was a great example of suburban expansion; Mr. Levitt created the

    track home style of building houses which allowed houses to be built more quickly than

    previously, accommodating the new growth in families. New jobs and wealth could be made in

    such places as universities, automobile factories, and road construction.

    What Americans wanted most out of life seemed to be to fulfill the American Dream;

    after the war, Americans wanted to make up for all the time, and people, they lost during the war.

    They wanted to enjoy life with their families, similar to how the people of the twenties did.

    Americans didnt know how long peace would last, so often times they spent a lot of money,

    moved to the suburbs, and had a lot of kids.

    Americans expressed their desire to enjoy the peace and live life to the fullest by buying

    goods on credit. They just had to have whatever new innovative device was on the market at the

    time. New technology of the time fascinated Americans and was very useful; hence, they had to

    have the products and enjoy them while they could. Some examples would be the purchases of

    homes, TV sets, vacationing, and travel. Also, because Americans put more emphasis on family,

    many white Americans moved to the suburbs where they could have more privacy and more kids

    than if they lived in the city, illustrating that Americans wanted families and private property.

    The possibility of being able to have whatever was desired by way of credit was

    appealing to many and drove Americans to establish themselves in suburbs where they could

    have bigger houses to fill with more items; hence, the growth of the market and the American

    materialist society. Americans desires to have the newest technology kept the market moving,

    and the baby boomers provided jobs for people, which allowed them to be able to afford moregoods. Mostly men worked in the 50s though. This is because a woman was viewed at the time

    as a homemaker; therefore, women were only found in offices or in other forms of domestic

    service.

    Mainly minorities were left out of the prosperous society of the 50s. Blacks were banned

    from dominantly white suburbs, they along with Mexicans made up about 20% of American

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    society who constantly lived in poverty. Farmers were also often left out because they produced

    a surplus of goods, which brought the prices of their crops down. This caused them to leave rural

    areas and move to suburban ones. Sharecroppers also often lived in poverty because cotton

    picking became industrialized and new synthetic fibers were made that put sharecroppers out of

    work. Racial discrimination against minorities kept them from having the same upward mobility

    as the rest of society; Unable to access adequate housing, education, or jobs, the minorities of the

    50s often made up the poorest of the poor.

    When Black people returned home from fighting WWII, they had been fighting alongside

    whites and were being treated with a great amount of equality compared to when they came

    home. What they faced back home stirred them to change their situation. TheBrown v. Edu.

    case was the first step toward black rights and advancement. After blacks began going to college

    and getting middle class jobs, they were able to advance the civil rights movement even more by

    being educated on the obstacles that faced their race. Furthermore, because urban areas were

    more dominated by blacks than rural, urban blacks were able to associate with one another moreoften and create their own institutions. Educated whites also went to the north to get blacks to

    vote and gain more rights, when they finally did vote, their opinions could not be ignored. The

    racism Americans witnessed during the 50s was also later seen as a disgrace to the ideal the U.S.

    was trying to set during the Cold War.

    As in every era of history, the youths were the ones who rebelled against the societal norms. In

    the 50s, there were poets, artists, and writer who were referred to as beatniks because of their

    desire to differ from the conformity of the era, and because they were tired of the droning of

    politics and popular culture. They usually wore all black too. Teens dressed as gangsters did and

    rebelled against their parents. Teens of the era loved fast cars and sex.

    Elvis Presley is a good example of the way Mainstream culture was reflected in popular culture.

    Elvis dressed similarly to the way teens of the era did. Also, sex had become popular, and

    because sex seemed to be selling Elvis and his pelvis movements did too. Elvis broke tradition

    which gained him the love of many rebellious young people.