Name: ______Date: ______

AP US II

1920s: The “Bright” and “Dark” Decade (35 pts)

In lieu of our traditional DQ assignments, we still study the era of 1920s by examining several aspects of this transformative decade. America was, indeed, entering the “Modern Era”, but at what cost? Your group will examine BOTH the “Bright” and “Dark” aspects of one of the topics below.

Topics:

  1. The “New” Negro
  2. The “New” Woman
  3. Prohibition – the Urban Culture
  4. Advancements in Science and Education
  5. Consumerism - in the American home and garage (Model T)

Directions:

1) Please read and annotate the 1920s overview found on the back of this worksheet

2) Continue your research on your assigned topic by using Ch 24 Brinkley, your review book, and other credible internet sources (.edu, .org, etc.) – a Works Cited Sheet must be attached to the copy of the powerpoint you hand in the day you present to class.

3) With your group, develop a powerpoint of images reflective of BOTH the “bright” and “dark” aspects of your assigned topic(s). Please include 10-15 images (20 pts).

4) Your last slide should be a 2-column summary (list) of the “bright” and “dark” aspects of your topic(s).

5) Please post your PP on the GOOGLE DRIVE ACCOUNT for your class

EX: The “Bright” and “Dark” of the 1920s – Block 1A

These powerpoints will serve as study guides for the classes – post the day you present

Presentation:

HAND IN THE DAY YOU PRESENT:

1. One copy of your powerpoint (printed out in “Handouts” format – 3 slides/page)

-Make sure all group members’ names and the topics are the first frame of the PP

2. Works Cited Page (MLA format) stapled to the back. (5 pts)

3. Group Presentation: all members are expected to contribute (10 pts)

Turn over………..

/ The Jazz Age: The American 1920s
The 1920s - An Overview
Period: 1920s
In 1931, a journalist named Frederick Lewis Allen published a volume of informal history that did more to shape the popular image of the 1920s than any book ever written by a professional historian. The book, Only Yesterday, depicted the 1920s as a cynical, hedonistic interlude between the Great War and the Great Depression--a decade of dissipation, jazz bands, raccoon coats, and bathtub gin. Allen argued that World War I shattered Americans' faith in reform and moral crusades, leading the younger generation to rebel against traditional taboos while their elders engaged in an orgy of consumption and speculation.
The popular image of the 1920s, as a decade of prosperity and riotous living and of bootleggers and gangsters, flappers and hot jazz, flagpole sitters, and marathon dancers, is indelibly etched in the American psyche. But this image is also profoundly misleading. The 1920s was a decade of deep cultural conflict. The pre-Civil War decades had fundamental conflicts in American society that involved geographic regions. During the Gilded Age, conflicts centered on ethnicity and social class. Conversely, the conflicts of the 1920s were primarily cultural, pitting a more cosmopolitan, modernist, urban culture against a more provincial, traditionalist, rural culture.
The decade witnessed a titanic struggle between an old and a new America. Immigration, race, alcohol, evolution, gender politics, and sexual morality--all became major cultural battlefields during the 1920s. Wets battled drys, religious modernists battled religious fundamentalists, and urban ethnics battled the Ku Klux Klan.
The 1920s was a decade of profound social changes. The most obvious signs of change were the rise of a consumer-oriented economy and of mass entertainment, which helped to bring about a "revolution in morals and manners." Sexual mores, gender roles, hair styles, and dress all changed profoundly during the 1920s. Many Americans regarded these changes as liberation from the country's Victorian past. But for others, morals seemed to be decaying, and the United States seemed to be changing in undesirable ways. The result was a thinly veiled "cultural civil war." /