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Political Changes In The 1920s

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Politics:

Politically, the 1920s could be described as pro-business and anti-union. These two main principles of our political time period directly contrast that of the error of reforms pre-war America was in. Coming into this decade, the war has come to an end and now the U.S believes it is time for a hedonistic interlude. A time of less reforms and more business. Post-war America is a start of a new chapter for our young country which obviously comes with its own set of problems.
After the war, our former president Woodrow Wilson brings forth the idea of the League of Nations which begins to split the countries population depending on their political views of the super pact. This would set the stage for the 1920s U.S and its endeavor to …show more content…

Popular culture in the 1920s is characterized by innovation in film, visual art and architecture, radio, music, dance, fashion, literature, and intellectual movements. The movie industry skyrocketed in this time, growth of Hollywood and downtown movie theaters. Silent films are replaced by "talkies" in the late '20s. Jazz music and the dance clubs plays a huge part in the 1920’s. Some of the chief literary figures are, Fitzgerald and Hemingway, wrote novels and short stories criticizing materialism and selfish individualism of the age. This era of the Harlem Renaissance, the period of African-American literary and artistic growth. The 1920s is a period of significant change for women. The 19th amendment is passed in 1920, giving women the right to vote, and women began to pursue both family life and careers of their own. One of the most enduring images of the 1920s is that of the flapper, a young woman with short hair, wearing a knee length dress, rolled up stockings, and unbuttoned rain boots that flapped when she walks. Commercial radio began to be a big part in the 1920s when Pittsburgh station KDKA broadcasted the results of the presidential election. As the number of homes with radios rapidly increased from 60,000 to 10 million in 1929, the airwaves flies across Americans and news and entertainment started to be huge in the 1920’s. The business of radio is simple and supports the growing consumer culture. Local radio stations affiliated themselves with national networks, such as NBC and CBS, which provides programming by companies who bought air time for their

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