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Booze, Bullets, and Babes

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Title: Booze, Bullets, and Babes


1
Booze, Bullets, and Babes
Chp 20 and 21
White Sheets, Red Scares, Black Monday and all
those Blues
Yeah, well he aint got nothing on the original!
This is Leon James 1920s
2
The Roaring Twenties
3
Changing Ways of Life
Chp 21 1
4
The Prohibition Experiment
  • 18th Amendment
  • sin or savior?
  • Volstead Act

didnt we just have a war man? Immigrants dont
see this as a sin.
5
The Prohibition Experiment
  • Speakeasiesillegal bars or night clubs that
    served alcohol
  • Bootleggerspeople that smuggled alcohol

6
The Prohibition Experiment
  • Causes

Effects
  • Religious groups believe alcohol is sinful
  • reformers believe govt should protect peoples
    health
  • reformers believe alcohol leads to crime, abuse
  • Immigrant groups brew beer and alcohol (carry
    over from WWI
  • Consumption declines
  • Disrespect of the law
  • Increase in lawlessness (bootlegging, smuggling)
  • Organized crime

326
7
Science and Religion Clash
8
Science and Religion Clash
Billy Sunday
  • Fundamentalist (literal interpretation of the
    Bible) vs. Scientific Discoveries
  • Reject Charles Darwins Evolution Theory

He predicted that with the prohibition of
alcohol, the slums would cease to exist, prisons
and jails would become nothing more than a
memory
9
Scopes Monkey Trail
  • March 1925, TN passed law to prevent teaching
    of evolution
  • ACLU promised to defend any teacher challenging
    the law
  • John T. Scopes bio teacher from Dayton, TN took
    challenge

10
Scopes Monkey Trail
  • We have now learned that animal forms may be
    arranged so as to begin w/the simple one-celled
    forms and culminate w/a group which includes man
    himself
  • Scopes was arrested

11
Scopes Monkey Trail
  • CLARENCE DARROW most famous trial lawyer of his
    day
  • Hired to defend Scopes
  • Wm Jennings Bryan (3x pres cand) was prosecutor

12
Scopes Monkey Trail
13
Scopes Monkey Trail
Darrow questioned Bryan as an expert on the
Bible, and finally questioned him about the
creation in 6 days Bryan admitted it was not
likely 6-24 hour days- so Bible might be open to
interpretation
14
1. Explain how urbanization created a new way of
life that often clashed with the values of
traditional urban society. 2. Describe the
controversy over the role of science and religion
in American education and society in the 1920s
15
The Twenties Woman
Chp 21 2
16
Society Just Aint Like It Used To Be!
  • Birthrate dropped at faster rate in 20s
  • MARGARET SANGER 1916, 1st birth control clinic
    in US
  • Lots of new technology to make work at home
    easier - sliced bread!
  • Public assistance for elderly, public health
    clinics for ill

17
Education andPopular Culture
Chp 21 3
18
Society Just Aint Like It Used To Be!
The mass media, movies, spectator sports played
important roles in creating the popular culture
of the 1920s a culture that many artists and
writers criticized.
Sinclair Lewis- Babbit main character ridicules
American conformity and materialism (Nobel Prize
winner) F Scott Fitzgerald- The Great Gatsby
showed negative side of 20s gaiety even wealthy
had hollow lives Edna St Vincent Millay- poems
celebrate youth Ernest Hemingway- Sun Also Rises
criticized glorification of war.
  • Widespread education meant literate citizens but
    it took mass media to shape a mass culture.
  • Newspapers and magazines increased dramatically

19
  • All about fads
  • King Tut
  • Charles Lindbergh and the Spirit of St. Louis
  • Movies
  • Jazz
  • Steamboat Willie
  • Art Edward Hopper

20
Society Just Aint Like It Used To Be!
  • Huge influence on American Culture
  • Everyone in the US could experience the same
    news, sports, and advertisements at the same
    time. A shared national experience
  • Privately owned unlike Europe with govt owned
    radio systems

RADIO!
21
Harlem Renaissance
22
Harlem Renaissance
  • Harlem Renaissance - flourishing of African
    American culture

The ever-so-talented Miss Josephine Baker
23
Harlem Renaissance
  • Langston Hughes- best known poet of Harlem
    Renaissance. Describes difficult lives of AA.
    Some poems set to jazz tempo
  • Claude McKay-writer
  • W.E.B. DuBois, James Weldon Johnson, Marcus
    Garveypolitical activists
  • Zora Neale Hurston- told of lives of poor
    Southern blacks. Celebrated common persons art
    form - folkways
  • Paul Robeson- son of a slave became major
    dramatic actor (Othello)

24
Harlem Renaissance
  • Cotton Club
  • Louis Armstrong
  • Duke Ellington
  • Cab Calloway
  • Bessie Smith
  • Ella Fitzgerald
  • Josephene Baker

Alexanders Ragtime Band by Louis Armstrong
25
Harlem Renaissance
Considered by many to be the greatest jazz
vocalist of all time, Billie Holiday lived a
tempestuous and difficult life. Her singing
expressed an incredible depth of emotion that
spoke of hard times and injustice as well as
triumph. Though her career was relatively short
and often erratic, she left behind a body of work
as great as any vocalist before or since. Born
in 1915, Billie Holiday spent much of her young
life in Baltimore, Maryland. She was raised
primarily by her mother. Living in extreme
poverty, Holiday dropped out of school in the
fifth grade and found a job running errands in a
brothel. When she was twelve, Holiday moved with
her mother to Harlem, where she was eventually
arrested for prostitution. Desperate for money,
Holiday looked for work as a dancer at a Harlem
speakeasy. When there wasnt an opening for a
dancer, she auditioned as a singer. Long
interested in both jazz and blues, Holiday wowed
the owner. This led to a number of other jobs in
Harlem jazz clubs, and by 1933 she had her first
major breakthrough. Her bluesy vocal style
brought a slow and rough quality to the jazz
standards that were often upbeat and light. This
combination made for poignant and distinctive
renditions of songs that were already standards.
By slowing the tone with emotive vocals that
reset the timing and rhythm, she added a new
dimension to jazz singing.
Billie Holiday
26
Harlem Renaissance
Billie Holiday
It was not, however, until 1939, with her song
"Strange Fruit," that Holiday found her real
audience. A deeply powerful song about lynching,
"Strange Fruit" was a revelation in its
disturbing and emotional condemnation of racism.
Though one of the highest paid performers of the
time, much of her income went to pay for her
serious drug addictions. By the late 1940s,
after the death of her mother, Holidays heroin
addiction became so bad she was repeatedly
arrested eventually checking herself into an
institution in the hopes of breaking her habit.
By 1950, the authorities denied her a license to
perform in establishments selling alcohol. Though
she continued to record and perform afterward,
this marked the major turning point in her
career. For the next seven years, Holiday would
slip deeper into alcoholism and begin to lose
control of her once perfect voice. In 1959, after
the death of her good friend Lester Young and
with almost nothing to her name, Billie Holiday
died at the age of forty-four.
27
Harlem Renaissance
Abel Meeropol
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