The 1920s was a time in which society changed dramatically. During this rich decade, many exciting social and political changes took form. More citizens started moving to the cities, which was different than the farm life that they have been so accustomed to. Due to the emerging consumer age, many Americans started having extra money for leisure activities, clothes, and products for the home. People also started having extra time and money for activities. The movie theater was a popular social scene to go to. By the end of the decades, Historians estimated that almost three-quarters of the American population visited a movie theater at least once a week (History.com). Women of the 1920’s finally had the right to vote due to the 19th Amendment. …show more content…
The flapper style celebrates their newly found declaration of independence and also challenges old Victorian rules of how women are supposed to dress. Style and fashion have been used throughout history to represent and express certain ideas and beliefs. H.W Wilson discussed in “To (Un)Dress: Clothes, Women, and Feminist Ideology in Modern Art” how women expressed their beliefs and ideas on important topics through style. More specifically, Wilson also mentions how fashion has a sociological meaning behind it regarding gender, sexual orientation, and the social status of women in society. Women in the 1920’s became more comfortable with their sexuality, thus revealing more skin through their short skirts and dresses. They also began using makeup and cutting their hair short. The flappers were claiming a new statement that women are free to explore who they are without being restricted to the things they can wear. Fashion is an art that has been around for centuries. From the early 19th century to now, fashion is constantly changing, along with society. Every one person has a certain style they gravitate towards. The flappers gravitated towards the short dresses, short haircuts, and makeup, to represent a “new women” of their …show more content…
By women beginning to work in the work field, they challenged the old-age ideology that women should be taking care of work inside the home, and not outside. James F. Gubrium researched this idea behind women in the work field in his article called “Urban Ethnography Of The 1920S Working Girl”. This article’s main focus is the booming of society during the time of the 1920s in the United States. The rural areas and the city life blossomed more during this time than ever before. More specifically the article provides information on intellectualization of women in the work force and the advantages offered to them within the work community. Through other empirical studies, research showed how the typical working girl was approached with a multidimensional field of positive opportunity when it came to employment. The article suggests how due to the prosperity of the city and more specifically its city life created new jobs for people, specifically towards women. Through their work, women emphasized the importance of being able to work outside of the home. This new sense of work gave them the confidence that all women have the same set of skills that men
The 1920’s was a great and important decade for the United States. After World War I, the United States went through events and changes that, overall, made the United States a much better place to live. New advances in technology and industry improved American life in more ways than just one. Americans had better wages during this time, more leisure time, and overall, had a better life than ever before. In addition, the 1920’s advocated social and cultural change as well. During this time period, the United States did not return to Normalcy, and instead developed attitudes that changed the life of the people of the United States forever thanks to social changes, cultural changes and changes in technology.
In the years following World War I, the United States was comfortable with returning to its prior state of traditional values. In the government, this was reflected as the 1920 election was won by Republican candidate Harding, who ran with the slogan “A Return to Normalcy.” Americans simply wanted to recuperate after the intense global conflict that had just ended; however, changing and new attitudes were at battle with their desire of normalcy. It was movements like “New Morality” that contested traditional stances of those who sought security in their lives. As a result of the constant battle between old and new values, tensions were mounting between citizens. The Roaring Twenties was a time of innovation in American life; however, tensions surfaced between traditional and new values, shown through court rooms, national politics, grass roots campaigns, and media revolutions, due to a rise in differing theological views, women’s fight for independence, racial conflict, technology, and advertising.
In the time of the 1920s, a group of women decided that they were done being shown around like dolls and given no respect. These women wanted rights and to have independence, and to not constantly have to rely on a man to get the job done. They decided to get and hold onto steady jobs and became single, young, middle class women. These women were called flappers. They were ones who went to jazz clubs, vaudeville shows, and danced the Charleston. You could also find them smoking and drinking just like any other man would. Flappers extinguished any social double standards about women that was out there in that time. The look of that time was one that has stood out in history since it was first worn. Bobbed, shoulder length hair, loads of makeup,
People did not like the flappers dresses. They "emphatically rejected the style beginning in the 1920s because it did not show the curves of the female body." Their dress was a "boxy shape that hung straight from the shoulders and fell in an unbroken line just below the knees." This type of dress "looked best on flat-chested, small-hipped androgyne who has come to typify the freewheeling, emancipated, working 'Mew Woman ' of the world." Women were "no longer constrained by corsets and long skirts, nor by the discomfort and time it took to dress oneself in such styles." Their dresses had a "loose cut and shirt hemline [which] allowed women unprecedented freedom of movement." Their freedom of movement allowed them more room to dance up closely to men and change the thoughts on women. (Makela)
The flapper had an indisputable look. The long locks of Victorian women fell on the floors of beauty parlors as young women cut their hair to shoulder length. Hemlines of dresses rose fiercely to the knee. The cosmetics industry prospered as women used makeup in large numbers. Flappers constrained their chests and wore high heels. Many women celebrated the age of the flapper as a female “declaration of independence”. Experimentation with new looks, jobs, and lifestyles was incomparable with the woman in the Victorian Age. The flappers chose activities to please themselves, not a father or husband. But critics were quick to elucidate the shortcomings of “flapperism.” The political agenda grasped by the previous generation was largely ignored until the feminist revival of the 1960s. Many wondered if flappers were trying to express themselves or act like men. One thing was certain: Despite the political and social gains or losses, the flappers of the 1920s sure managed to have a good time.
After, 19th Amendment was pass, women’s social status are evolved, and then women will definitely desire of authority became the momentum of evolution of flapper. Last, is the year it shows up,1920s American golden age. During that period of time, the United States already made a huge amount of money from world war one, by selling goods to those European countries in wartime, and the goods were made by women workers. So, after woman’s economic power independent occur new things started to happen. Moreover, the creative style bought by flapper had a reform on woman’s social appearance and became the highest fashion during 1920s. By making changes for the long and fully covered up dress from the 1910s to a new style. During the 1920s, woman’s clothing is much shorter than it was, and had more skin exposing. And there was a typical reform bought by flapper stood as a symbol of being member of the flapper, that is a short haircut. This hair style can be represented as showing themselves as a new woman that was no longer following the old style and this new style is been focus by the media as a new
Women in the Jazz Age saw this as a chance to change women as a whole. “Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening” (Brown 255). Fashion was changing rapidly during this time for women. The hairstyle of the 1920s was the short bobbed haircut; even some of the older generation women began to cut their hair short after some time. The hemlines of women’s dresses and skirts were getting shorter and shorter, up to the knees. It was shocking to the older generation of women of how much leg was now being exposed. Long, multiple strands of pearls and beaded necklaces were the style of jewelry to be worn. In this age, fashion was changing more than ever. Women now had a chance to express themselves with fashion.
The flapper fashion was borrowed by many of the women who lived in the 1920's. But as it is with every fashion craze, there are many different examples. The pictures that follow show some of the other clothing items that were characteristic of the 1920's.
Coming into the 1920’s the American people went through the first world war which resulted in many economic, social, and political implications for the United States. Economically the U.S’s industry was greatly expanded due to the need for wartime goods, Socially women are gaining greater freedoms culminating in suffrage for women. This is due to their increased role in American society during wartime where they were relied upon more heavily. Politically the populace was hesitant to become embroiled in another European conflict causing America to take an increasingly isolationist stance. America had also faced a period of sustained economic growth that will continue into the late 1920s ending with the market crash.
After World War One, the United States went through a decade full of industrial, economical, and social growth. This decade is known as the Roaring 20s. The 1920s was a time of important historical events and technological advancement. The development of consumer goods, such as fridges, typewriters, radios, and cars, created jobs and helped the American economy grow. However, not everyone was able to enjoy the advancement that the boom had assured. Although there were many wealthy people, there were still many people who could not afford to live luxurious lives. Many immigrants were not welcome into to United Stats. Prejudice and racism were spread throughout the country. In spite of the prosperity of the 1920s, the
Paid work for women moved from principally customary female-situated employments to all the more non-conventional and already male-arranged vocations. Ladies ' support in the workforce prompted them to start careers in the field dominated by male in the 20th century. Career yearnings were affected by elements, such as sexual orientation, financial status, race, occupation and instruction level, and parental desires. This paper exhibits how women developed, changed and the challenges they faced in the 20th century in America in the workforce and the advancement of ladies ' careers, improvement and profession goals during the 20th century in United States. Also, gender issues affecting women will be discussed in details during this period and how women played their role in fighting for their rights.
Sauro, Clare. "Flappers." Encyclopedia of Clothing and Fashion. Ed. Valerie Steele. Vol. 2. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2005. 88-89. World History in Context. Web. 16 Nov.
The 1920s was a huge time period for the United States. Modern technology such as automobiles, radios, and advertisement had taken America by storm. Rural areas were on the decline. American cities had attracted not only rural and urban citizens, but also people from all over the world. In America during the 1920s, citizens struggled with accepting other races and ethnicities into their widely populated country.
The 1920s is notorious for being a good time, with its reputation of being full of fun parties and extravagant living. Those wealthy enough were able to enjoy that along with all the other changes in American culture. In the 1920s the use of installment buying, credit, and stock market investments became a typical part of life. Technology that improved home life, like vacuums and radio, were desired, and these shifts in culture added to the stigma that good times would continue forever. The American people were not aware that common habits in the 1920s would lead to the Great Depression in the 1930s, during which unemployment reached over 25%, the economy struggled, and the fun times ended. The Great Depression was caused by experts that encouraged
The 1920’s fashion was a period of liberation, change, and even more importantly a movement towards the modern era. Fashion in the 1920’s varied throughout the decade but one could see the noticeable change from the previous fashion statements and eras. At the start of the decade, women began emancipating themselves from the constricting fashions by wearing more comfortable apparel. As women gained more rights and World War I forced them to become more independent, flappers came to be, mass-produced garments became available, and artistic movements increased in popularity, one can see how the fashions from the roaring twenties characterized the time and redefined womanhood. (1920s clothing 1)