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Chapter 13: The Roaring Life of the 1920s

This chapter explores the significant societal changes of the 1920s, including the introduction of Prohibition, the changing roles of women, and the cultural impact of the Harlem Renaissance. It examines the differences between urban and rural lifestyles during this time, as well as the clash between science and religion. Key events such as the Scopes Trial and the passage of the 18th Amendment are discussed.

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Chapter 13: The Roaring Life of the 1920s

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  1. Chapter 13: The Roaring Life of the 1920s

  2. Objectives • To understand such issues as Prohibition, the changing role of women, and the influence of the Harlem Renaissance.

  3. Section 1: Changing Ways of Life

  4. Journal • What differences exist today between urban (city) and rural lifestyles?

  5. Rural and Urban Differences • 1922-1929 – 2 million people left the farm for the city every year • Big cities: New York City (5.6 million), Chicago (3 million), Philadelphia (2 million)

  6. Rural and Urban Differences • Cities • Competition • Change • More reading • Discussions about science and social ideas • Various backgrounds • Drinking, casual dating, gambling • Farms • Slow paced • Live close to family and friends • Strict morals

  7. Prohibition • 18th Amendment – manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcohol is illegal • Rural South and West, Protestants, Women’s Christian Temperance Union • After WWI Americans were tired of making sacrifices • Volstead Act established a Prohibition Bureau to enforce the law -> underfunded -> difficult to monitor all the roads and coastline

  8. Speakeasies Underground/hidden saloons

  9. Bootleggers • People who smuggled alcohol into the U.S.

  10. Organized Crime • Chicago’s Al Capone was in control of 10,000 speakeasies • $60 million a year • 1933 – 21st Amendment repeals Prohibition

  11. Central Question • Why was the 18th Amendment passed?

  12. Discussion • 1. What problems did people see in society at the turn of the century? • 2. Why did they think Prohibition would solve these problems? • 3. What strategies/evidence did temperance advocates use to convince people to support Prohibition?

  13. Video Clips • http://www.history.com/topics/al-capone/videos#st-valentines-day-massacre • The Untouchables

  14. Journal • Should America continue to promote fascination with Capone through museums, memorabilia, and tours of gangland sites?

  15. Rumrunners, Moonshiners, Bootleggers DVD • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4wl9n-Gmsw

  16. Journal • What differences exist between urban (city) and rural (small town) lifestyles in the 1920s?

  17. Science and Religion Clash • Fundamentalist religious groups vs. secular (nonreligious) thinkers • Issue = validity (strength/truth) of certain scientific discoveries

  18. Science and Religion Clash • Waves of people become very religious • Question authority and elite • Passionate speakers feel a direct connection with God • The First Great Awakening (1740s-1750s) • The Second Great Awakening (1820s-1840s)

  19. Science and Religion Clash • Fundamentalism (1920s) • Protestant movement • Belief in literal translation of the Bible – all stories in the Bible are true • Against the sins of modern life • Against Darwin’s theory of evolution • Preachers in the South and West lead religious revivals • Prohibit the teaching of evolution

  20. The Scopes Trial • John T. Scopes – biology teacher from Dayton, Tenn. who challenges the Butler Act • American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) hires Clarence Darrow to defend him • William Jennings Bryan = prosecutor

  21. Science and Religion Clash • Why did people care about the Butler Act? • Textbook – A Civic Biology • Go to the back of the Guiding Questions

  22. http://historicalthinkingmatters.org/scopestrial/

  23. Why did people care about the Butler Act?

  24. Discussion • 1. Who supported the Butler Act? What were their reasons? • 2. Who opposed the Butler Act? What were their reasons? • 3. How did Reverend Straton view the big cities? How did the NY Times view Dayton, Tennessee? Why did those views play a role in the Scopes Trial? • 4. In what ways did the historical context of the 1920s affect the battle over the Butler Act? • 5. How was the Scopes Trial more than just a simple debate between evolution and creationism?

  25. Science and Religion Clash • Fundamentalism – Protestant movement based on a literal interpretation of the Bible • All stories in the Bible are true • Reject theory of evolution = Charles Darwin’s theory that plant and animal species have changed over millions of years • Evolution from apes vs. Bible creationism Wanted laws to prohibit the teaching of evolution

  26. The Scopes Trial • March 1925 Tennessee passes law outlawing the teaching of evolution • American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) defends John T. Scopes, a young biology public school teacher who tells students humans have evolved • Clarence Darrow defends Scopes • William Jennings Bryan prosecutes • Scopes is found guilty and law stays in effect

  27. Now and Then • 1999 – Kansas State School Board votes to eliminate the teaching of evolution • Supreme Court says evolution must only be taught as scientific fact + creationism may not be taught as scientific fact (in public schools)

  28. Assignment • 1. Issue -> Legislation -> Outcome • Issue = prohibition (illegal to sell or manufacture) • Issue = teaching evolution • 2. Explain how urbanization created a new way of life that often clashed with the values of traditional rural society. • 3. Describe the controversy over the role of science and religion in American education and society in the 1920s.

  29. Section 2: The Twenties Woman

  30. Journal • How is the music you listen to different than the music your parents listen to? • Do you think your attitude towards life is different than your parents?

  31. Young Women Change the Rules • A rebellious, pleasure-loving atmosphere of the 1920s • independence • 19th Amendment – women suffrage • Flapper = a free young woman who embraced the new fashions and current urban attitudes • Shorter dresses, smoked cigarettes, talked about sex, danced • Marriage = more of an equal partnership

  32. Dancing • Fox trot, camel walk, tango, Charleston, shimmy, dance marathon • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcemYjTdvZ8

  33. Flappers were like women of today because ______________ and they were unlike women of today because __________________________.

  34. Young Woman Change the Rules • Still influenced by tradition/church • Casual dating becomes more accepted • The Double Standard = a set of principles granting greater sexual freedom to men than to women

  35. Women Shed Old Roles at Home and at Work • How were women freed from some household chores?

  36. Women Shed Old Roles at Home and at Work • Time saving appliances • Business growth leads to jobs for millions of women

  37. Women Shed Old Roles at Home and at Work • Women replaced by men after WWI • “women’s professions” = teachers, nurses, librarians • Big business = typists, filing, assembly line workers • Few become managers • Earn less than men • Men felt women should stay at home (job competition)

  38. The Changing Family

  39. The Changing Family • Margaret Sanger opens birth control clinic (1916) • Women have more time for children and reading • Marriages are based more on romance • Children are in school • More social time, peer pressure, rebellious children

  40. Double standard refers to stricter _________ standards for ____________ than for ___________ in the 1920s. • What is your opinion of the double standard? • Women had new roles in the 1920s such as __________________.

  41. Assignment • 1. How do you think women’s lives changed most dramatically in the 1920s? • Think about families and jobs. • 2. Do you think that some women of this decade made real progress towards equality? • Think about double standard, the flapper’s style and image, changing views of marriage

  42. Section 3: Education and Popular Culture

  43. Schools and the Mass Media Shape Culture • 1914 = 1 million American students in high school -> college-bound • 1926 = 4 million -> college-bound and vocational training • Before WWI – a million immigrants a year come to America

  44. Expanding News Coverage • Literacy increased • Newspapers printed sensational stories

  45. Radio • By 1930 – 40 percent of American households had radios • News and sporting events

  46. America Chases New Heroes • More money + more leisure time = money for entertainment

  47. Sports Heroes

  48. Charles Lindberg • First non-stop solo flight across the Atlantic

  49. Entertainment and the Arts • “Talkies” doubled the movie attendance • The Jazz Singer 1927 • Disney’s Steamboat Willie 1928 • Video clip • Georgia O’Keeffe

  50. Writers of the 1920s • Sinclair Lewis • F. Scott Fitzgerald • The Great Gatsby • “Jazz Age” • Edna St. Vincent Millay • Ernest Hemmingway • The Sun Also Rises • A Farewell to Arms • Many denounced war • Addressed political and social topics • Negative side of the freedom of the 1920s

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