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Were the 1920s good for minorities? Black Advancements Blacks advance in many areas of society 1920s the expansion of Jazz Music grew out of New Orleans to Chicago, Detroit and New York NY & Harlem

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Were the 1920s good for minorities?

Black Advancements

• Blacks advance in many areas of society

• 1920s the expansion of Jazz

• Music grew out of New Orleans to Chicago, Detroit and New York

NY & Harlem

Harlem Renaissance• Cultural explosion of music, art, literature of black

Americans • Seemingly accepted by many in cities • Art depicted everyday life in Harlem • Black poetry became more mainstream - Langston

Hughes -Read Let America be America Again

Black Artists

Black Art

JAZZ

• Jazz explodes in cities up north – Louis Armstrong – Duke Ellington

• Becomes the dominant form of music that defines the 1920s

The Cotton Club

• Whites only patronage

• Located in Harlem • If you played there

you made it • Defined the period • Read “Pearl of the

Harlem Renaissance”

Duke Ellington at the Cotton Club

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Black Renaissance Jazz and Women

1920s Dress

• Basic style of dress • Shorter hair • Straight waist

Changes in Fashion

• Dresses Shorter • Shorter hair • Rise of the cosmetics industry • Evolution from high waist to straight

waist style dresses • Shift from corset to camisole and

bloomers to replace Victorian era undergarments

Women and the 1920s

Changing Attitudes of Women• Margaret Sanger - Changes in women’s role in marriage

– Marriage for love as opposed to security – Birth Control was more available – Family sizes decreased – Divorce see as acceptable way out of unhappy marriage

• Eleanor Rowland Wembridge - Changes in women’s attitudes toward Victorian restrictions - Kissing and other activities were seen as the norm -

• Changes in attitudes toward sex as not just for procreation

Reality

• Worked in “female” jobs • Business good place to find a husband

and learn endurance, self-effacement and obedience

• Marriage = Loss of Job • Still seen as wife and home maker • Most women were not flappers

Women’s Hopes Dashed

• Suffrage did not mean equality • Not able to serve on juries • Could not sign contracts without

husband’s permission • Held responsible for illegitimate births • Divorce favored men

Changes in Home Life

• Modern conveniences=higher expectations – Cleanliness became important – Housework continued unabated – Mixed messages from life and the media

Were the 1920s good for minorities?