America in the 1920s Essay

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    time throughout his novel, The Great Gatsby, but despite this he makes a subtle statement on what the American Dream is in the 1920’s. The American Dream is the idea that if you live in America, and you work hard, you can get rich. Fitzgerald develops a theme around the American Dream through Gatsby, how Gatsby’s story reflects the true meaning of this dream in the 1920’s, and how the novel covers what wealth and dreams have to do with the dream itself. The goal of the American Dream is…

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    During the 1920s, society was drastically changed due to the new ways in how people saw the world after World War I. Many young people traveled to foreign countries to learn new cultures. Before the Great War, set precedents such as Washington’s Farewell address and the Monroe Doctrine suggested America to avoid political connections with the outside world, which influenced people to stay inside American borders. The Great War was one of America’s biggest interactions with foreign countries at…

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    in the world where anyone who worked hard enough could become successful and therefore fulfill the American Dream. However, through The Great Gatsby, author F. Scott Fitzgerald confronts this sanguine mentality. That which defines success in the 1920s, the time during which Fitzgerald’s novel is set, is no longer the “pursuit of happiness” that the Founding Fathers had established in the Declaration of Independence, but instead, the acquisition of a maximized amount of wealth and material…

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    will see a pattern of hate against non-whites such as African Americans and immigrants from other countries along with non-Anglicans such as Jews and Catholics. Each of these groups were all hated because they caused a breach in the goal of getting America to be 100% American. People from the 1800s were not very open to accepting other people’s beliefs. The Ku Klux Klan was a hate group that was filled with terrorists. During the time that the Klan was started, their acts were not known as…

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    Jazz In The 1920s Essay

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    The Roaring 20s definitely roared back in the day. Filled with fun nights and music, the 1920s decade revolutionized jazz. Jazz not only changed the music industry, but also the way the world celebrated life. Jazz started out as a combination of ragtime and blues. People also state that it sounded like a bit of brass band and syncopated music. No one really knows where the word ‘jazz’ originated, but there are many theories. One theory states that jazz’s name stemmed from a musician named Jazbo…

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    The 1920’s was a significant time for women at the time. There are many of different social changes as well as cultural changes that the United States experienced because of this so called “Flapper” movement. A Flapper was a fashionable young woman with the intent on enjoying herself and flouting conventional standards of behavior. Flappers wore their hair short, dared to show their legs, drank, smoked, and cavorted with young men. The book “Flapper” by Joshua Zeitz includes a look at the…

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    The 1920s in America was known as “The Roaring Twenties” due to the seemingly prosperous economy. Employment rates were high and the manufacturing of consumer goods such as cars and electrical appliances rushed out of factories. However underneath the surface, many factors took place that weakened the structure of the economy and led to the New York Stock Exchange crashing on October 29, 1929. This signaled the beginning of The Great Depression; a time period in which a severe economic recession…

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    As America entered its industrial age following the end of the Reconstruction Era, many people from different countries migrated to America for a new life. However, a majority of the immigrants were treated poorly in their workplace and lived in tenements, where the living conditions were extremely poor. Due to this significant wide divergence between the rich and the poor, labor unions in factories and corporations began to form under the principle that the collective labor will impose its…

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    invested in the stock market with all the loans, they did not have enough money to pay back the investors. With the market crashing at a very fast pace the investors could not get their money out before it was all gone. The stock market crash plunged America into the Great Depression, a time of panic and…

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    Imagine leaving your country to start a new life elsewhere. In the 1920’s and the 1930’s many immigrants went to Ellis Island. After they arrived at Ellis Island the immigrants had to pass a medical inspection and a mental inspection. Getting into America was not easy. First, at Ellis Island they would arrive by boat or ship. Wealthy people had nicer places to ride, but the unwealthy immigrants would have to ride in a cramped and small deck that they shared with many others. The well-off…

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