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  • Prosperity and the Production of Popular Entertainment
  • Transformation and Backlash
  • A New Generation
  • Republican Ascendancy: Politics in the 1920s
A book cover contains the text “Tales of the Jazz Age: By the Author of The Beautiful and the Damned / F. Scott Fitzgerald.” Two caricatured band members play drums and a trumpet while several caricatured couples dance, smoke, and toast with cocktails.
The illustrations for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tales of the Jazz Age , drawn by John Held, Jr., epitomized the carefree flapper era of the 1920s.

Following the hardships of the immediate postwar era, the United States embarked upon one of the most prosperous decades in history. Mass production, especially of the automobile, increased mobility and fostered new industries. Unemployment plummeted as businesses grew to meet this increased demand. Cities continued to grow and, according to the 1920 census, a majority of the population lived in urban areas of twenty-five hundred or more residents.

Jazz music, movies, speakeasies, and new dances dominated the urban evening scene. Recent immigrants from southern and eastern Europe, many of them Catholic, now participated in the political system. This challenged rural Protestant fundamentalism, even as quota laws sought to limit new immigration patterns. The Ku Klux Klan rose to greater power, as they protested not only the changing role of African Americans but also the growing population of immigrant, Catholic, and Jewish Americans.

This mixture of social, political, economic, and cultural change and conflict gave the decade the nickname the “Roaring Twenties” or the “Jazz Age.” The above illustration ( [link] ), which graced the cover of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tales of the Jazz Age , embodies the popular view of the 1920s as a nonstop party, replete with dancing, music, flappers, and illegal drinking.

Questions & Answers

calculate molarity of NaOH solution when 25.0ml of NaOH titrated with 27.2ml of 0.2m H2SO4
Gasin Reply
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rhoda Reply
the study of the heat energy which is associated with chemical reactions
Kaddija
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Victory
First twenty elements with their valences
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ThankGod Reply
Read Chapter 6, section 5
Dr
Read Chapter 6, section 5
Kareem
Atomic radius is the radius of the atom and is also called the orbital radius
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atomic radius is the distance between the nucleus of an atom and its valence shell
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paulino
Bohr's model of the theory atom
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Dr
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ATOMIC
It has no oxygen then
Goldyei
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Dr
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Source:  OpenStax, U.s. history. OpenStax CNX. Jan 12, 2015 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11740/1.3
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