The Emergence of New Values in the 1920

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The Emergence of New Values in the 1920 s

The Emergence of New Values in the 1920 s

Women • Women began to demonstrate new independence & assertiveness • Women began to

Women • Women began to demonstrate new independence & assertiveness • Women began to drink & smoke in public • Began reading Sigmund Freud • Adopted the look of the “flapper” – Short dresses – Short hair & lots of makeup

Tin Pan Alley • 1910 - NYC emerged as capital of popular music publishing

Tin Pan Alley • 1910 - NYC emerged as capital of popular music publishing • Tin Pan Alley: (section of NYC) where song-writing & and musical ideas mixed together • Blues, jazz, & ragtime melded together

Tin Pan Alley • Vaudeville – most popular form of stage entertainment – Showed

Tin Pan Alley • Vaudeville – most popular form of stage entertainment – Showed need for sheet music & Tin Pan Alley publishing houses supplied them

Youth & the Lost Generation • New group of writers, the Lost Generation, rejected

Youth & the Lost Generation • New group of writers, the Lost Generation, rejected desire for material wealth • Sinclair Lewis: wrote Main Street and Babbitt, which ridiculed hypocrisy of American life – 1 st American author to be awarded Nobel Prize in Literature • Ernest Hemingway: wrote A Farewell to Arms about WWI • F. Scott Fitzgerald: wrote The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby about the 20 s

The Great Migration • 2 decades from 1910 to 1930 witnessed the Great Migration:

The Great Migration • 2 decades from 1910 to 1930 witnessed the Great Migration: 2 million African-Americans moving out of the South to the North • In search of jobs to escape sharecropping & racism

The Great Migration • Still faced racism, housing shortages, and crime • But, found

The Great Migration • Still faced racism, housing shortages, and crime • But, found organizations such as National Urban League and the NAACP to help them • Largest African-American city: Harlem – In Upper Manhattan of NYC – Roughly 200, 000 African. Americans lived there in 20 s

Harlem Renaissance • 1920 s referred to as Jazz Age • General awakening of

Harlem Renaissance • 1920 s referred to as Jazz Age • General awakening of African-American culture has become known as the Harlem Renaissance

Harlem Renaissance • Included visual art, dance, & music • They shared an unprecedented

Harlem Renaissance • Included visual art, dance, & music • They shared an unprecedented level of optimism & pride

Harlem Renaissance • Poets & writers expressed pride in their heritage – Zora Neale

Harlem Renaissance • Poets & writers expressed pride in their heritage – Zora Neale Hurston • One of the 1 st successful female African-American authors • Published her greatest novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God – Countee Cullen • won more literary prizes than any other African-American during the 20 s – Langston Hughes • One of America’s best poets • Expressed the determination to overcome racial prejudice – Alain Locke • Influential writer during Harlem Renaissance

Harlem Renaissance • Marcus Garvey: – highly controversial political activist, known for fancy uniforms.

Harlem Renaissance • Marcus Garvey: – highly controversial political activist, known for fancy uniforms. Emphasized racial pride. – formed Universal Negro Improvement Association – Goal was the total liberation of African people around the world – Organized the “Back-to-Africa” movement, where African-Americans would return to Africa (especially Liberia)

Popular New Heroes • Charles Lindbergh – 1 st person to fly across Atlantic

Popular New Heroes • Charles Lindbergh – 1 st person to fly across Atlantic Ocean in 1927 – Single engine plane, The Spirit of St. Louis; landed 33 hours after takeoff