The way Americans lived their lives was drastically changed between the years of 1920 and 1940. Many different events and advances in technology happened within the country during this time period. Events such as the stock market crash in 1929, the dust bowl of the 1930’s, and, due to an increase in urbanization, the uprising of major cities. Also advances in technology transpired, such as the invention of the radio and Henry Ford’s assembly line. These events and advances are all illustrated in great detail in the novel, Daily Life in the United States, 1920-1940 by David E. Kyvig. His thesis explains that during the two decades, the American life style was changed in such a drastic way that it altered the manner in which the American people lived their everyday lives. Kyvig goes into immense detail about how these two decades changed Americans work and family life, as well as explaining in a great extent how the technological advances impacted the Americans everyday life. All of this is acknowledged and is in place by means to support Kyvigs main thesis.…
Why were writers like H. L. Mencken, Sinclair Lewis, Sherwood Anderson, and others (pp.792–793) so harshly critical of American middle-class and small-town life in their work? Why did such writers strike a popular chord in the 1920s?…
The 1920s was the Golden Age of spending and newfound prosperity. Newfound prosperity was represented by the automobile. Automobiles “in the first decade of the twentieth century, were considered rich men’s playthings. They were handmade and expensive.” (Kunstler 88). Soon, Henry Ford created the Model T, “a very reliable machine that ‘the great multitude’ could afford to buy… and by the summer of 1916… Ford offered the same models for $345 and $360. That year he produced 738,811 cars.” (Kunstler 89). The rise of the automobile changed American life in the 1920s because it created new architecture, altered…
Written in 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald 's, The Great Gatsby ' is often referred to as The Great American Novel ' and as the quintessential work, which captures the mood of the Jazz Age '. In this paper I will examine how class is an articulation of insecurities felt by the American people in the years following the First World War. I will also be writing about the idea of the American dream and corruption of this dream by avarice. The roaring twenties ' is the collective name for these significant years, which would ultimately culminate in The Great Depression (the great depression refers to the collapse of the American economy in 1929. It was an event whose reverberations were felt the world over.) America, which had just returned from the war, was quite shaken up by what it had witnessed on the war front. Therefore on returning home, people gave themselves up to a culture of decadence and revelry to compensate for the hardships undergone. They could well afford to do so. Unlike its allies, America had entered the First World War towards the end and did not suffer much economic loss. Americans had also sold costly war supplies to its allies. The European economy was in shambles and in the wake of the disruption of its industries; America became the leading exporter of goods. The dizzying rise of the stock market, government policies, low taxes, Prohibition and easy credit led to a consumer culture. Public demand increased for things like cars, electrical products, and domestic goods. This lead to the setting up of industries on a massive scale, which in turn created more jobs and opportunities. Clearly the 1920s was a time of unprecedented economic prosperity for the U.S.…
The era of the 1920’s was perceived by many to be “roaring”. Exiting new inventions, entertainment, and social trends dominated the lives of people living in this decade. However, not everything was as glamorous as it seemed at the time, and hindsight has shed much light on the harsh realities of this period. Perhaps the 1920’s were not as “roaring” as people at the time perceived them. Examples of misconceptions in the 1920’s are: that the stock market was “roaring”, that everyone shared in the prosperity, and that society was making leaps forward.…
What do you think of the view that obsession with money and the new consumer culture of the 1920s dominates human thinking and behavior in ‘The Great Gatsby’?…
In conversation, too, Tom trades on his possessions. He converses with Gatsby about his car, and how no one else has ever “turned a garage into stables”. Although here Tom seems perfectly in keeping with the bourgeois modernity and materialistic society of the Roaring Twenties, with an explosion in consumerism fuelled by the development of mass production techniques, I believe he is still representative of more conventional times. The “turning [of] a garage…
“...We have seen the future and the future is ours.” The famous Cesar Chavez said this during his speech to the Mexican-American in 1984. As people who were mistreated and defenseless against the government and the communities they lived in, Mexicans sought to better their situations by uniting and holding strikes and boycotts, conferences, and participating in speeches. Powerless people can change their fate by coming together and involving themselves in the problem or going out to help themselves or a family.…
Scott Fitzgerald outlined the events and lifestyles of the roaring 20s through his writings “The Great Gatsby” and “The Jelly Bean”, readers learn that wealth and class effected all the decisions and events that occurred. Jim and Gatsby, from the two works, had drastically different lives but had a lot in common when it came to people and how their story ended. Both used wealth and status as a way of gauging someone’s worth, both of them saw wealth and property as a way to get the girl and both ended up losing it all together. By using foreshadowing, irony and symbolism, F. Scott Fitzgerald captures the way of life during the 1920’s and the importance of…
The 1920s was a decade of exciting social changes and reflective cultural conflicts. For many Americans, the growth of cities, the rise of a consumer culture, and the so-called “revolution in morals and manners” represented a liberation from the restrictions of the country’s Victorian past. But for others, the United States was changing in undesirable ways. The result was a veiled “cultural civil war,” in which a pluralistic society classed bitterly over such issues as foreign immigration, evolution, the Ku Klux Klan, and race. The decade was both a decade of bitter cultural tensions as well as a period in which many of the features of a modern consumer society took cause.…
Once upon a horrible time, the United States was a segregated country in which blacks were considered some sort of subspecies. Although the civil war addressed segregation it didn’t enforce it. While black and white citizens were becoming a group of equals in the north, the story was much different in the segregated south. Black citizens in the south still faced unequal treatment, wages, and were often persecuted by everyone from store workers to judges. It was time for change and some great people would rise up and unite all citizens to stop the crimes in the south.…
The 1920s was a decade of tremendous tension between forces of tradition and modernity, and with it came a difficult struggle for Americans between modernization and “traditional” values. Women began moving up in the world, bad habits started to form, and a more organized sense of racism was building. Americans started to establish a constant conflict within and between themselves on which metaphoric path they should take.…
Much controversy exists on the question of whether a juvenile criminal should be punished to the same extent as an adult. Those who commit capitol crimes, including adolescents, should be penalized according to the law. Age should not be a factor in the case of serious crimes. Many people claim that the child did not know any better, or that he was brought up with the conception that this behavior is acceptable. Although there is some truth to these allegations, the reality of this social issue is far more complex. Therefore we ask the question, Should childhood offenders of capitols crimes be treated as adults?…
American middle class life was greatly influenced throughout 1870-1917. There were many profound changes, however the American industrialization and urbanization were the most rapid and unquestionably the most important. The industrialist brought forth household names that are still around today such as Swift, Armour, Westinghouse, Pillsbury, Pullman, Rocketfeller, Carnegie, and Duke. Due to the rapid movement of industrialization, so began a movement of urbanization. Between 1860 and 1910, urban population increased sevenfold and by the 1920's more than half of all Americans lived in cities. Along with the cities came more use of electricity, electric lights, telephones, and eventually appliances. Appliances virtually revolutionized the lives of the middle and upper class Americans, as did Henry Ford's mass production of the Model T. Throughout these forty-seven years many middle class Americans were influenced by the ads from companies, for example Sears Roebuck & Company. Not only were there adds for clothing and women's and men's' apparel but for automobiles, phones, and housing. There were many values, hopes, and fears Americans contemplated with as well as the advertising business' trying to lure Americans into purchasing products by listing consequences of using (or not using) their products.…
This self-centered attitude and behavior seemed to fit well with the needs of the American economy at the time. The goal of the many businesses and manufacturing companies was to create a demand for the many products they produced. To accomplish, advertising methods that had been used to promote support for World War I were now used to promote the many new products that emerged. The tactic worked, and it resulted in the “mass consumption that kept the economy going through most of the 1920s” (McElvaine, 1).…