Black flappers in the 1920s
[DOCX File]The "Younger Generation" - Mrs. McCarville
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Flappers in the Roaring Twenties. By Jennifer Rosenberg. In the 1920s, a new woman was born. She smoked, drank, danced, and voted. She cut her hair, wore make-up, and went to petting parties. She was giddy and took risks. She was a flapper. The "Younger Generation" Before the start of World War I, the Gibson Girl was the rage.
[DOC File]La Quinta High School
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Mar 19, 2009 · For the time being, the bob and the entire Flapper wardrobe, united blacks and whites under a common hip-culture. Although, the majority of 1920s American women were not Flappers, the symbolic attire was able to spread to those who desired it, making it a defining feature of 1920s collegiate culture for both black and white adolescents 13.
[DOCX File]Flappers, ushistory.org - Mr. Sammons' U.S History Fish Bowl
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FLAPPERS were northern, urban, single, young, middle-class women. Many held steady jobs in the changing American economy. The clerking jobs that blossomed in the Gilded Age were more numerous than ever. Increasing phone usage required more and more operators. The consumer-oriented economy of the 1920s saw a burgeoning number of department stores.
[DOCX File]American History II with Ms. Byrne - Home
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Flappers had a scandalous image as the “giddy flapper, rouged and clipped, careening in a drunken stupor to the lewd strains of a jazz quartet.” The 1920s was the Jazz Age and one of the most popular past-times for flappers was dancing. Dances such as the Charleston, Black Bottom, and the Shimmy were considered “wild” by older generations.
[DOCX File]Mr. Siebenthal’s Homepage - Accelerating learning for ...
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In reality, most young women in the 1920s did none of these things (though many did adopt a fashionable flapper wardrobe), but even those women who were not flappers gained some unprecedented freedoms. They could vote at last: The 19th Amendment to the Constitution had guaranteed that right in 1920.
[DOC File]Chapter 20; The 1920’s
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Technological Advances of 1920s – Stock Market – Flappers – Fundamentalism – Scopes Trial /Monkey Trial – Al Capone – 1920s Advertising – National Culture – Heroes of the 1920s – Overspeculation of Stock Market - Black Tuesday – Radio – Immigration Quota Act of 1924 – How did that Act later hurt European Jewish people ...
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