chapter 15 1920's

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Chapter 15 The 1920’s

• The 1920’s was an era of rapid change and clashing values. Many Americans believed society was losing its traditional values and they took action to preserve these values. Other Americans embraced new values associated with a freer lifestyle and the pursuit of individual goals.

The War’s Impact

• Racial Unrest: As hundreds of thousands of white American soldiers from Europe returned home looking for a job, clashes occurred with the African Americans who had moved north during the war to take those jobs. Frustration and racism combined to produce violence. In the summer of 1919, over 20 race riots broke out across the nation.

Red Summer

• The worst violence occurred in Chicago. On a hot July day, African Americans found themselves at a White only beach.

• http://chicagotonight.wttw.com/2011/10/12/red-summer

The Red Scare

• Americans had become very anti-German as the war progressed, and when the Communists withdrew Russia from the war, they seemed to be helping Germany. American anger at Germany quickly expanded into anger at Communists as well. Americans began to associate communism with being unpatriotic and disloyal.

Nativism Resurges

• The fear and prejudice many felt toward Germans and Communists expanded to include all immigrants. This triggered a general rise in racism and in nativism, the desire to protect the interests of old-stock Americans against those of immigrants.

Why?

• Immigration returns• Economic recession• Racial and cultural tensions• Fear and prejudice toward Germans and

Communists

The Sacco-Vanzetti Case

• Both Italian immigrants (anarchist)• Convicted of murder during a robbery• Evidence was insufficient, found guilty and

executed in 1927

Return of the KKK• At the forefront to restrict immigration, the

new KKK targeted not only African Americans, but also Catholics, Jews and other groups believed to represent “un American” values.

• By 1924 membership in the Klan exploded, reaching nearly 4 million.

Controlling Immigration• After WWI, American immigration policies

changed in response to the postwar recession and nativist pleas to “Keep America American”.

• In 1921, President Harding signed the Emergency Quota Act, which established a temporary quota system.

• Only 3% on the total number of people in any ethnic group already living in the US could be admitted in a single year.

• http://www.usimmigrationsupport.org/immigration-us.html

The New Morality

• Some groups that wanted to restrict immigration also wanted to preserve what they considered to be traditional values. They clashed with a new morality that glorified youth and personal freedom.

• It became a clash of Old ideas vs. New ideas• Old vs. Youth• Country life vs. City life• Old school vs. New school

Women in the 1920’s

• The Flapper—a modern women of the 20’s.• Fashion took on a modern look during the

1920’s

Fashions

Flappers pursued social freedoms by entering the work

force as salesclerks, secretaries and

phone operators as well as making

contributions in science, medicine, law and literature.

Margaret Sanger

• She believed that the standard of living could be improved if families limited the number of children they had and founded the American Birth Control League in 1921—later this organization became Planned Parenthood.

New Dance Moves

• Rebelling against older, more formal dancing styles, the Charleston became all the rave with the younger generation.

• http://youtu.be/yNAOHtmy4j0

Thoroughly Modern Millie

• http://youtu.be/KVNcLUE87HQ

The Youth Culture

• http://local.aaca.org/bntc/slang/slang.htm

Fundamentalist Movement

• Millions of Americans feared that the country was losing its traditional values. Many of these people, especially those in small rural towns, responded by joining a religious movement know as Fundamentalism.

Fundamentalists Beliefs

• Bible was literally true and without error.• They defended the ideas that human beings

derived their moral behavior from God• They rejected Charles Darwin’s theory of

evolution• They believed in creationism-the belief that

God created the world as described in the Bible

The Scopes Trial

• A historic trial that pinned evolutionists and creationists against each other.

• Main Characters:• John T. Scopes—science teacher who taught

evolution• William Jennings Bryan—prosecutor,

represented the creationists• Clarence Darrow—most famous trial lawyer at

the time, defended Scopes

Inherit the Wind

• Film about the Scopes Trial• http://youtu.be/S_DQUAuNUvw• http://youtu.be/A6Gk5H3c5f8• http://youtu.be/l5Kdc0LLSW8

Prohibition

• The 18th Amendment- making the manufacturing, selling and distributing of liquor illegal.

• Enforcing the new law proved to be very difficult. Americans blatantly ignored the law. Speakeasies, bootlegging and hip flasks became part of common speech.

Organized Crime• Organized crime specialized in supplying and

often ran the speakeasies. Crime became big business and some gangsters had enough money to corrupt local politicians. Al Capone became the most notorious gangsters of the era.

Chapter 15 Sec. 2Cultural Innovations

• An era of exciting and innovative cultural trends, the 1920’s witnessed changes in art and literature. This period also saw a dramatic increase in the country’s interest in sports and other forms of popular culture.

Art and Literature

• John Marin

Edward Hopper

Poets and Writers

• Ernest Hemingway “For Whom the Bell Tolls”• “ A Farewell to Arms”• F. Scott Fitzgerald “The Great Gatsby”

Popular Culture• The economic prosperity of the 1920’s provided many

Americans with more leisure time and more spending money, which they devoted to making their lives more enjoyable.

• Baseball and Boxing

Charles Lindbergh

• He flew the first transatlantic flight in his plane called the Spirit of St. Louis and became a national hero

The Harlem Renaissance

• After WWI, black populations swelled in large northern cities—particularly in the New York City neighborhood of Harlem. It was there that African Americans created an environment that stimulated artistic development, racial pride, a sense of community and political organization. The result was a flowering of AA arts that became known as the Harlem Renaissance.

Writers

• One of the most prolific, original, and versatile writers of the Harlem Renaissance was Langston Hughes. He became a leading voice of the African American experience in the US.

The Negro Speaks of RiversI've known rivers:I've known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flowof human blood in human veins.My soul has grown deep like the rivers.I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young.I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep.I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it.I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln wentdown to New Orleans, and I've seen its muddy bosom turnall golden in the sunset.

Jazz, Blues and the Theater

• Jazz-a new style of music influenced by Dixieland music and ragtime, with its ragged rhythms and syncopated melodies.

• http://youtu.be/9idqeiACqn4• http://youtu.be/E2VCwBzGdPM• Duke Ellington• Louis Armstrong

African American Politics

• The racial pride that sparked the artistic achievements of the Harlem Renaissance also fueled the political and economic aspirations of many African Americans.

• A dynamic black leader from Jamaica, of millions of African Marcus Garvey captured the imagination Americas with his call for “Negro Nationalism” which glorified the black culture and traditions of the past.

Marcus Garvey

A Growing Economy in the 1920’s

• The US experienced stunning economic growth during the 1920’s.

• The automobile was just one part of a rising standard of living that Americans experienced in the 1920’s.

• Henry Ford

Henry Ford & The Assembly Line

• The assembly line divided operations into simple tasks that unskilled workers could do and cut unnecessary motion to a minimum.

• He also cut the workweek for his employees from six days to five and increased his workers wages to $5 a day and reduced the work day to an 8 hour day. He made his cars affordable for those who built them.

“Return to Normalcy”

• This was Warren Harding’s campaign slogan.• 2 presidents during the 1920’s: • Warren Harding• Calvin Coolidge

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