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    Fragile Economy of the 1920s and 30’s Post WWI and the Roaring Twenties Prior to the roaring twenties the global economy was unstable. World War I had created fragile trading bonds between the U.S. and many countries‚ war reparations needed to be paid by the countries that lost the war‚ countries such as Germany and Great Britain were indebted to the United States‚ and‚ as we know well‚ wars cost money. The economy was weakened and the developments made in the 1920s didn’t help to rebuild

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    In the 1890’s a famous psychology experiment was conducted by Ivan Pavlov which demonstrated classical conditioning in dogs. According to The Free Dictionary‚ classical conditioning is‚ “a learning process by which a subject comes to respond in a specific way to a previously neutral stimulus after the subject repeatedly encounters the neutral stimulus together with another stimulus that already elicits the response.” Around the 1920s‚ famous psychologist John B. Watson along with a graduate student

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    There’s a reason they called the 1920s in America the “Roaring 20s.” Not only was there a new feeling of ebullience in pop culture and society‚ but the economy was booming as well. According to Investopedia‚ “Economic growth is an increase in the capacity of an economy to produce goods and services‚ compared from one period of time to another.” There are a variety of ways a country can achieve economic growth: increases in labor force‚ capital‚ natural resources and higher productivity through

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    Troubled twenties Intro Racism occurs all around the world on a daily basis. People are terrorized everyday for being different. As time goes by‚ racism becomes more discreet‚ therefore making the task of calling racism out harder. During the 1920s‚ racism in America escalated uncontrollably. While other groups of people with different beliefs and religions were targeted too‚ mainly black people were terrorized‚ by groups such as the KKK during this period. The Morning Tulsa World Daily The invasion

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    1920's Economic Changes

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    Throughout history‚ economics have changed drastically. The Roaring 20’s and Great Depression defined our country‚ The United States‚ and impacted everyone differently. The Roaring 20’s‚ otherwise known as the Age of Intolerance‚ was an age of social and political change. It was only the beginning of many inventions that sent American into the modern age. America was very prosperous during the 1920s‚ but Europe was still feeling the devastation from World War I and fell into an economic decline

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    The Labor Movement in the 1920s As a correction to the wartime effort‚ inflation and unemployment increased because there was not a need to mass-produce products for war‚ and America had to return to "normalcy". The amount of labor unrest increased during this time period‚ which is very obvious by the increase of labor strikes. There was a strike by the United States Steel Corporation workers in 1919. They were annoyed with their seven 12 hour workdays a week. The leader of the American Federation

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    1920's: Rise Of Feminism

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    1920s Study Guide RISE OF NATIVISM 1. Red Scare ➢ Eugene Debs -Socialist leader -Imprisoned ➢ Palmer Raids -US Attorney General Mitchell Palmer -Hunted down communists‚ socialists‚ and anarchists (People who opposed any form of gov’t) -Many foreigners deported -Trampled civil rights ➢ Mail Bombings -Many bombs were mailed to gov’t and business leaders -Public became fearful of Communism taking over -Led to Palmer Raids ➢ Sacco & Vanzetti -Italian immigrants and anarchists -Arrested

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    The Lost Generation got it’s name from Ernest Hemingway‚ which he wrote in his novel‚ The Sun Also Rises‚ about this particular generation. The Lost Generation happened in the 1920s and they were labeled the lost generation because as described in The Twenties‚ sections 4 Mass Media and the Jazz Age‚ “...greedy‚ materialistic world that lacked moral values.” In The Lost Generation Americans grew unsatisfied with their way of living‚ so people moved to different parts of Europe since it was know

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    of time people worked. Before 1860‚ people didn’t have an abundant amount of free time. This is because in 1860 the normal work week averaged an incredible 66 hours (“39b. Sports and leisure”)! By the 1920s the work week had decreased 26 hours‚ putting the average workweek at 40 hours. In the 1920s Henry Ford‚ in addition to his creation of the assembly line‚ invented the 5 day 40 hour work week ("Ford Factory

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    The entertainment in the 1920s was the birth scream of the modern because of the radio‚ sport icons‚ and writers. In the roaring 20s the radio had open entertainment for americans. An example of this would be that‚ approximately 50 million americans listened to their radios as the boxing match between Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney happen. The radio allowed Americans to listen to entertainment instead of reading about it in magazines or in newspaper. The radio is a birth scream and modern because people

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