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1920/30's Jazz Influence

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Jazz influence on the 1920/30’s

The Jazz Age was a cultural tectonic shift that took place in America during the 1920’s, or "the Roaring Twenties”, from which both jazz music and dance emerged. This movement was coupled with both the equally phenomenal introduction of mainstream radio and the conclusion of World War I. Although the era ended as the Great Depression victimised America in the 1930's, jazz has lived on in American pop culture.
The birth of jazz music is often credited to African Americans, though it didn’t take long to expanded to America's white middle class. Jazz, therefore, was characterised by a meshing of African American traditions and ideals with white middle class societies. Big cities like New York and Chicago were …show more content…

This view of women was widely accepted before World War I, but was rejected by most women in the 1920s, which was partly due to the success of the eighteenth and nineteenth constitutional amendments. Women rebelled against their traditional roles as daughters and mothers. Women wanted to be seen as individuals outside of their familial roles. Jazz provided an outlet for rebellion in several ways. The dance halls, jazz clubs, and speakeasies were places where women could escape from the traditional roles that were demanded of them by a rigid society. Here, women were allowed greater freedom in their language, clothing, and behaviour. Like the Freudian psychology that was rampant in the 1920s, jazz also encouraged "infantile" behaviour; Flappers who frequented these establishment were often referred to as "Jazz Babies." Jazz encouraged primitive and sexual behaviour through the uninhibited and improvisational feel of the music. Jazz music was rejected by the older generation, and therefore, jazz music and jazz dancing were ideal ways for young women (and even men) to rebel against the society of their parents and

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