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The 1920s

The 1920s. Intolerance, Prohibition and All that Jazz. 1920-21 Depression Returning labor Deflation High interest rates WWI Fixed Ag. Prices Farmers loans to meet demand Buried in debt. Post-war recession and agricultural problems. Intolerance. Scopes Monkey Trial

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The 1920s

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  1. The 1920s Intolerance, Prohibition and All that Jazz

  2. 1920-21 Depression Returning labor Deflation High interest rates WWI Fixed Ag. Prices Farmers loans to meet demand Buried in debt Post-war recession and agricultural problems

  3. Intolerance Scopes Monkey Trial http://youtu.be/xOgI0b-tEAg http://youtu.be/dNKg54bvObQ

  4. Prohibition and Organized Crime

  5. I, Too, Sing America by Langston Hughes I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother. They send me to eat in the kitchen When company comes, But I laugh, And eat well, And grow strong. Tomorrow, I’ll be at the table When company comes. Nobody’ll dare Say to me, “Eat in the kitchen,” Then. Besides, They’ll see how beautiful I am And be ashamed– I, too, am America. King Oliver http://youtu.be/Nklm3JoAh3o Jazz Age and Youth Rebellion Read this excerpt from “Flapper Jane” written by Bruce Biven, published in New Republic, Sept 9, 1925. ” Jane is, for one thing, a very pretty girl. Beauty is the fashion in 1925. She is frankly, heavily made up, not to imitate nature, but for an altogether artificial effect–pallor mortis [white as death], poisonously scarlet lips, richly ringed eyes. Jane isn’t wearing much, this summer. If you’d like to know exactly, it is: one dress, one step-in [underwear], two stockings, two shoes. Her dress is cut low where it might be high, and vice versa. The skirt comes just an inch below her knees, overlapping by a faint fraction her rolled and twisted stockings. The idea is that when she walks in a bit of a breeze, you shall now and then observe the knee. Jane’s haircut is also abbreviated [short]. She wears of course the very newest thing in bobs, even closer than last year’s shingle. It leaves her just about no hair at all in the back, and 20 percent more than that in the front. The corset is as dead as the dodo’s grandfather.”

  6. Teapot Dome Scandal Albert B. Fall, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Loans from Doheny and Sinclair Rights to drill in Wyoming and California Coolidge Prosperity Status Quo "After all, the chief business of the American people is business." Harding & Coolidge

  7. Boom and Bust in the Market • http://media.nclive.org/play_video.php?vid=451 • Between the Wars, Episode 4 • 2:00-5:00, 7:00, 11:00-13:52, 16:45-19:07

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