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The 1920’s: The setting of F.Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby

The 1920’s: The setting of F.Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby. The 1920’s The 1920’s, also known as the Roaring Twenties (for its economic boom), was the post-war era. With the ending of the war, the time had come for people to let go of their repressed ways and begin living again.

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The 1920’s: The setting of F.Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby

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  1. The 1920’s:The setting of F.Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby

  2. The 1920’s • The 1920’s, also known as the Roaring Twenties (for its economic boom), was the post-war era. • With the ending of the war, the time had come for people to let go of their repressed ways and begin living again. • It was a time of great social change and everything was changing: Pleasure dominated and people prospered. • It was a time of excess; alcohol, social activity, frivolous sex, and jazz music were in abundance. • The following pages will give you a glimpse into the lifestyle of the 1920’s.

  3. Excess Alcohol • Alcohol was in abundance, but this was a rather ironic situation. Between 1920-1933 the United States Government implemented Prohibition. • Prohibition meant that it was illegal to manufacture, sell or consume alcohol. • Prohibition was based on religious beliefs: the association of alcohol with sin. • An ultra-religious congressman from Minnesota, Andrew J. Volstead, was rigorously behind the 18th Amendment and on January 29, 1920 Prohibition became the law of the land.

  4. Volstead’s intent was to rid the land of drunkenness. • What he created was a 13-year span where alcohol consumption increased each year and was never to return to the lows it had been prior to the 1920’s. • With Prohibition in effect, this obviously raises one question: if alcohol consumption was on the rise, but it wasn’t being manufactured or sold anywhere in the U.S., where was it coming from?

  5. Gangsters and G-Men! • With Prohibition came organized crime. • Saloons went underground and became “speakeasies.” • Speakeasies, unlike saloons welcomed women, and droves of people came. • Gangsters such as Al Capone made their fortunes from organizing the import of alcohol illegally into the U.S. • From liquor sales alone, Capone made 60 million dollars in one year.

  6. Famous Gang Getaways • Since organized crime was rampant in the streets of New York, violence was up. • Gangsters needed a quick escape from their crime scenes and the twenties, with its money and demand, marked the appropriate time to mass produce automobiles. • Still considered luxury items, automobiles were the symbol of wealth and the “in crowd”. • Automobiles would prove to make a major impact on the way people traveled from then on.

  7. Women’s Fashion in the 1920’s • With the end of the war and the surge in prosperity, fashion was no longer limited to the wealthy. • Major changes were seen in women’s fashions. • A boyish figure and short hair were all the rage.

  8. Men’s Fashion in the 1920’s • Men wore very distinguished suits for business. • An outfit wasn’t fully complete without the right hat! • For a relaxed look, men took on a very preppy attire.

  9. And Don’t Forget Wedding Attire!

  10. Sports in the 1920’s • With the surge in social activity came an interest in sports and sports activities…

  11. And an intense love for baseball • Babe Ruth became everyone’s favorite player.

  12. And An Intense Sadness Associated With It • The Black Sox scandal rocked the nation, when several White Sox players were banned from playing baseball for throwing the World Series. • Pressured into the scandal by other players, Shoeless Joe Jackson was never allowed to play baseball again.

  13. Silent Movies • Besides sports, entertainment in the 1920’s included silent films. • Famous stars of the silent screen included funny man Charlie Chaplin, Heart throb Rudolph Valentino, and beauty icon Greta Garbo…

  14. Introduced to the United States in 1922, the Chinese game of mahjongg took hold of Americans within a year with millions of enthusiastic followers. Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entreprenuers quickly jumped on the bandwagon. Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game o   Mahjongg Rules! • Introduced to the U.S. in 1922, the Chinese game of Mahjongg became wildly popular with millions of Americans. • Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entrepreneurs quickly jumped on the bandwagon. • Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game of the 1920’s.

  15. Introduced to the United States in 1922, the Chinese game of mahjongg took hold of Americans within a year with millions of enthusiastic followers. Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entreprenuers quickly jumped on the bandwagon. Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game o   The “It” Girl • The 1920’s was a very sexual era as well. • Silent screen actress Clara Bow defined what it was to be a liberated woman in the 1920’s. • The flapper icon of the 1920’s, she was to become the inspiration for the cartoon Betty Boop in the 1930’s.

  16. Introduced to the United States in 1922, the Chinese game of mahjongg took hold of Americans within a year with millions of enthusiastic followers. Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entreprenuers quickly jumped on the bandwagon. Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game o   Flappers • The term is always associated with the 1920’s so it should be explained: • According to F.Scott Fitzgerald, “Clara Bow is the quintessence of what the term 'flapper' signifies” • A flapper was a young woman who was “pretty, impudent, superbly assured, as worldly-wise, briefly-clad and 'hard-burled' as possible.” 1924 1925 1926

  17. Introduced to the United States in 1922, the Chinese game of mahjongg took hold of Americans within a year with millions of enthusiastic followers. Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entreprenuers quickly jumped on the bandwagon. Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game o   The Jazz Age • The term was coined by F.Scott Fitzgerald. • He felt that Jazz music had a profound impact and influence over society in the 1920’s. • Jazz was all the rage and popular hotspots like the famous Cotton Club provided some of the best Jazz entertainment in the 1920’s.

  18. The Harlem Renaissance • Between 1920 and 1930 there was an amazing outpouring of talent among the African-American community. • Literary and musical talent abounded. And famous Jazz musician Loius “Satchmo” Armstrong was making a name for himself.

  19. Introduced to the United States in 1922, the Chinese game of mahjongg took hold of Americans within a year with millions of enthusiastic followers. Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entreprenuers quickly jumped on the bandwagon. Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game o   The Charleston • With Jazz came a new form of dance, the Charleston, and swing dancing was soon to follow!

  20. Introduced to the United States in 1922, the Chinese game of mahjongg took hold of Americans within a year with millions of enthusiastic followers. Women of mahjongg clubs donned silk kimonos to play in proper attire while the game became the staple form of entertainment within fraternity houses and dormitories. By 1923, mahjongg sets were outselling radios, and American entreprenuers quickly jumped on the bandwagon. Chicago meat packers sent bones to China for carving. Sets were sold at prices ranging from a few dollars to $500. American novices paid for rulebooks and Chinese Americans to teach them the ritziest game o   Prosperity • The 1920’s was a very prosperous decade. • It was a time of new money and new-found wealth for many. • There was a distinct difference between new money and old money however. • The wealthy, stemming from old money, had a well-established and respected background. • The “old money” clans often did not mingle with the “new money” clans, who were just beginning to build their fortunes from industry, investing, and other business.

  21. Now On to The Great Gatsby! • The 1920’s in a nutshell: • Money • Fashion • Alcohol • Sex • Jazz • “Living life to the fullest” • As we read TheGreat Gatsby, by F.Scott Fitzgerald, try to keep some of these things in mind. They should help you picture the people and understand the events in the story.

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