In addition, jazz music and Hollywood movies gained popularity in the 1920s, marking a change in Canadian culture toward American influences. However, not everyone in Canada enjoyed the decade. The 1920s saw a disparity of growth, with certain areas and towns suffering greatly. The Great Depression eventually resulted from a financial crisis that started in the later half of the decade. The prairies were severely damaged by the collapse of the wheat market, which resulted in high unemployment and extreme poverty. Even with the economic boom that occurred earlier in the decade, urban workers still had to deal with unstable jobs and poor working conditions. The 1920s were a time of social inequality. It was also a period of severe sexism and racial discrimination, even though women made major progress during this time, gaining the right to vote and starting to enter the workforce in greater numbers. Native Americans and immigrants, especially those from non-European nations, had to deal with societal prejudice. For example, the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, which represented the anti-immigrant views of the period, effectively stopped Chinese immigration to
In addition, jazz music and Hollywood movies gained popularity in the 1920s, marking a change in Canadian culture toward American influences. However, not everyone in Canada enjoyed the decade. The 1920s saw a disparity of growth, with certain areas and towns suffering greatly. The Great Depression eventually resulted from a financial crisis that started in the later half of the decade. The prairies were severely damaged by the collapse of the wheat market, which resulted in high unemployment and extreme poverty. Even with the economic boom that occurred earlier in the decade, urban workers still had to deal with unstable jobs and poor working conditions. The 1920s were a time of social inequality. It was also a period of severe sexism and racial discrimination, even though women made major progress during this time, gaining the right to vote and starting to enter the workforce in greater numbers. Native Americans and immigrants, especially those from non-European nations, had to deal with societal prejudice. For example, the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, which represented the anti-immigrant views of the period, effectively stopped Chinese immigration to