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The roaring twenties had social change life that is very difficult to live in.
jazz music
In the 'Roaring Twenties' many American lives were changed, particularly those of women. This period also became known as the 'Jazz Age'. People started going to the cinema, and going out to night clubs. People also started dancing the Charleston and other 'exotic' dances. The lives of women were those that changed the most. One crucial factor was, when in 1919 women won the right to vote. During the war period, the women took on the jobs that the men at war had previously done. Then when the war was over, and the men returned, many women still wanted to keep their job. Another aspect that changed was women's fashion. They started to wear short skirts, and they wore their hair 'up'. Because the women no longer wore corsets, they could become more involved in sports such as tennis.
: Traveling became a lot more prevalent in the 1920's with the growth of the automobile. This lead to gas stations and hotels popping up everywhere to fit the needs of travelers.: Also, new road rules had to be created along with redesigned roads and methods of controlling traffic(i.e. stoplights)American Society changed during the "Roaring Twenties" because of business booms, growing industries, changes in young generation ways of living, fear and violence, restricting Immigration, prohibition, popular music, the Harlem renaissance, and Arts. In the 1920s economic growth grew rapidly. During 1921 - 1929, US manufacturing nearly doubled, which meant more jobs and higher wages. Early 1900s, cars were seen as luxuries only for the wealthy. Henry Ford, invertor and business leader from Detroit, MI made the Model T to change many Americans lives. He created moving assembly line to make his cars, a much easier and faster way of making things. Women before the 1920s were to stay at home and do home chores or taking care of children. By end of 1920s fewer than 5% of US doctors, lawyers and architects were women, percentage is small but slowly raising. Some women were flappers, women who cut short hair, wore makeup & short dresses AKA "unladylike". After 1917 Communist takeover Russia, many Americans worried about communist ideas. April 1919, start of Red Scare, a time of fear of communists (Reds). US postal workers found bombs hidden in several packages addressed to famous Americans. In 1921-1924 the Emergency Quota Act limited total number of immigrants allowed into US and the National Origins Act which banned immigrants from East Asia entirely reduced the number of immigrants dramatically. In 1920 the 18thAmendment, law outlawed manufacturing of Alcoholic Beverages. But this lead to many smuggling such as the Moonshine. On 1933 the 21st Amendment, the US constitutional amendment that ended prohibition. Jazz music became popular and these years were known as the "Jazz age". The first talkie, motion picture with sound, was called The Jazz Singerin 1927. The Harlem Renaissance was period of African American artistic accomplishment during the 1920s such as Langston Hughes, a note writer. Painter changed their style by painting modern urban life style (skyscrapers).
The 1920s was an era of much positive social change (women getting the vote; more middle class young people attending college; black artists, poets, and playwrights leading the "Harlem Renaissance"; new technologies like radio bringing news, education, and entertainment to millions, etc). But it was also an era when the Ku Klux Klan experienced a dramatic increase in influence, and there was also an increase in prejudice directed at Jews, blacks, and immigrants. There was no one person leading the charge: a number of anti-immigrant groups surfaced, of which the KKK was the best known and best organized (they even had their own radio station to spread their message of hate for those who were not white and Christian).But sad to say, anti-Jewish or anti-black bigotry was embedded in the popular culture. America was still segregated, and despite the advances many blacks experienced up North or the praise the members of the artistic community received during the Harlem Renaissance, minority rights were very much restricted throughout the country, and the Ku Klux Klan was able to capitalize on fear of upwardly mobile Negroes (as they were then called) gaining more power in society. The same was true about Jews-- many colleges, including Harvard and Dartmouth, put in quotas so that their schools would not have "too many Jews." While many Jews succeeded in certain professions like entertainment or science, they were still barred from numerous other occupations. And fear of "too many immigrants" led to restrictive policies and quotas on who could come to America. Nativism, the belief that only the "native born" should be allowed to live in the USA, or that only native born (white Protestant) Americans should hold power, was alive and well, one very negative aspect of an otherwise positive decade.
F. Scott Fitzgerald was a prominent figure of the Jazz Age in literature, known for his novel "The Great Gatsby." Although he was not directly associated with the Harlem Renaissance, his writings captured the spirit of the Roaring Twenties, a time of social and cultural change that overlapped with the Harlem Renaissance.
The roaring twenties had social change life that is very difficult to live in.
jazz music
There is much speculation around why the 20's were called the roaring twenties. It mainly had something to do with post-war prosperity, society was considered to be roaring with success and change at that particular time.
You may be referring to the "Harlem Renaissance," or you may also be referring to the "Roaring Twenties," a decade when there was much social change, including more opportunity up north for black novelists, playwrights, artists, poets, and sculptors.
just becasue
Flapper girls of the "Roaring Twenties" were women rebelling against the 'natural' form of being a woman. The twenties was a time of social and economic change, and women took a first step by standing out in society.
The Harlem Renaissance.
The Roaring 20's changed America for the better. It opened up a bunch of industrial and economical avenues that helped shape what is the US today.
social change Consider broadcast radio.
"Glory" by Common and John Legend can be seen as a modern-day song that relates to the themes of empowerment, resilience, and social change prevalent in the Harlem Renaissance. The song reflects on the Civil Rights Movement and the fight for equality, echoing the spirit of resistance and hope seen in the works of Harlem Renaissance artists.
to change from a safety flame to a roaring flame you would fully open the air hole.