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Page 1: Postwar Social Change

9/2008

Page 2: Postwar Social Change

Society in the 1920s

• Men came back from the war disillusioned

• Women gained some independence during the war

–many had entered the workforce

–all were given the right to vote

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• Hemlines rose from 9 inches above the ground to knee-length

• Amount of fabric in dresses changed from 19.5 yards to 7

• Women ‘bobbed’ their hair

Society in the 1920s

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• Women began wearing make-up

• Women began smoking and drinking in public

Society in the 1920s

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• 15% of working women worked in professional careers

• 20% of working women worked

in clerical positions

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• Women were expected to quit when they married or became pregnant

• Women earned less than men in the same positions

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• Women were still closed out of many professional positions

• Example - women doctors were only allowed to treat female patients

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• Women won the right to vote in 1920• Only about 35% of women initially voted• Increased as women became used to the idea

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• Demographics–1920 census showed over 50% of

Americans lived in cities

–Rural farmers faced severe economic problems

–Manufacturing plants increased production and hired employees

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• Demographics

–Attendance in public schools doubled to 4.4 million by 1930

–Americans moved to the suburbs as transportation systems improved

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• African Americans continued to migrate north

• Mexicans and other Latinos also moved to the USA and worked on American farms and factories

Society in the 1920s

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• Lucky Lindy flew across the Atlantic in 1927

• His flight was 33 1/2 hours long

• He inspired a generation of aviators, including Amelia Earhart

Society in the 1920s

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• Professional and amateur sports flourished in the 1920s

• Babe Ruth set home run records of 60 in a single season and 714 in his career

• Jim Thorpe, a Native American, became a professional football player after having his Olympic medals stripped

Society in the 1920s

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• Prior to the 1920s most people had very parochial, or narrow views

• Largely due to the mass media, an American culture emerged

Mass Media & the Jazz Age

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• Cecil B. DeMille rented a barn and began to produce silent movies

• The barn expanded into a huge movie studio

• It was located in a little known suburb of Los Angeles named Hollywood

Mass Media & the Jazz Age

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• Between 1920 - 1930 the number of movie theaters quadrupled to 22,500

• Tickets sales averaged 80 million each week; the countries population was 125 million

• The countries first ‘talkie’ was The Jazz Singer in 1927

Mass Media & the Jazz Age

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• Newspapers and magazines became larger, averaging over 50 pages in some

• Tabloids were popular for entertainment; they concentrated on sports, movies, and scandals

• Many newspapers merged or were bought out by conglomerates

Mass Media & the Jazz Age

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• In 1920 an engineer from Westinghouse began broadcasting recorded music and baseball scores

• The world’s first radio station, KDKA of Pittsburgh, soon followed

• The National Broadcasting System (NBC) formed to link individual stations together

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The Jazz Age

• Jazz music came to symbolize the freedom of the 1920s

• Jazz…….“an expression of the times, of the breathless, energetic, superactive times in which we are living”. (Leonard Stokowski)

• The 1920s came to be called The Jazz Age

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• Jazz began in New Orleans before the turn-of-the-century

• With the radio playing to millions, it would sweep the nation in the 1920s

• Duke Wellington wrote and performed over 1000 original songs

• You are currently listening to Louis Armstrong

The Jazz Age

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Black performers played

jazz

for white

audiences

The Cotton Club of Harlem was the most famous Jazz Club

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The Jazz Age• Paintings by Edward Hopper and

literature by Sinclair Lewis depicted a different view of the 1920s

• Lewis wrote The Babbit in 1922 about conformity in the middle class

• Hopper concentrated on ordinary people

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The Jazz Age• The “lost generation” was a group of

artists and writers that were disillusioned with America

• Disliked conservative politics, prohibition, consumerism, and conformity

• Most of them spent the 1920s in Europe• The Great Gatsby was written about the

self-centered, shallow people in the USA

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The Jazz Age

• In the Harlem Renaissance, people like Langston Hughes wrote about the difficulties of being black, being human, and being an American

• The following poem is entitled Cross, by Langston Hughes

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My old man's a white old man

And my old mother's black.

If ever I cursed my white old man

I take my curses back.

If ever I cursed my black old mother

And wished she were in hell,

I'm sorry for that evil wish

And now I wish her well

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My old man died in a fine big house.

My ma died in a shack.

I wonder were I'm going to die,

Being neither white nor black?

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Cultural Conflicts

• Prohibition

• Religion

• Racial Conflicts

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Prohibition

• The 18th amendment outlawed the sale, use, and manufacture of alcohol

• People used homemade stills and made “bathtub gin”

• Bootlegging, or smuggling alcohol, became very profitable

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• Did not stop people from drinking

• Helped to establish organized crime in the USA

• Was repealed with the 21st amendment in 1933

Prohibition

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Religion• Science and religion were in conflict

• Scientists believed in evolution, or the development of the world over time

• Fundamentalists interpret the bible literally; the bible says that the world was created by God in 6 days

• Clashes between the 2 groups continue to this day

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Scopes Trial• John T. Scopes was arrested for

teaching evolution in the classroom in 1925

• He was found guilty and fined $100

• This ‘trial of the century’ was the 1st to be broadcast on the radio

• This sparked an intensive debate on the roll of religion in public education

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Racial Tensions• Race riots killed hundreds of

people in northern cities

• The KKK, which had died out after Reconstruction, was revived in 1915

• Between 1922-1924 its membership grew to 4 million

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Racial Tension

• NAACP and other groups fought for anti-lynching legislation

• Marcus Garvey called for a separation of the races and urged African-Americans to return to Africa

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Postwar Social Change

In spite of the many societal conflicts, the mood of the country was upbeat and hopeful, giving rise to the nickname

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Music Credits:

• It Don’t Mean a Thing by Duke Ellington and Irving Mills

• Stormy Weather by Billie Holiday

• Mack the Knife by Louis Armstrong

• Dream a Little Dream of Me by Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong

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The End!


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