the jazz age

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The Jazz Age Section 9.2

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The Jazz Age. Section 9.2. Today’s Agenda. 9.2 Slide Show Presentations Homework Read 9.3. Define materialistic. Placing high value on the purchasing of material things Characteristics of 1920s. What was the Lost Generation?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Jazz Age

The Jazz Age

Section 9.2

Page 2: The Jazz Age

Today’s Agenda

• 9.2 Slide Show

• Presentations

• Homework– Read 9.3

Page 3: The Jazz Age

Define materialistic.• Placing high value

on the purchasing of material things

• Characteristics of 1920s

Page 4: The Jazz Age

What was the Lost Generation?• Expatriate writers and artists

who left America and criticized its materialism

• Said America was “enemy of the artist, of the man who cannot produce something tangible…”

• Hemmingway– The Sun Also Rises– Novels portray lost innocence

of post war generation

• F. Scot Fitzgerald– The Great Gatsby– Discusses the empty lives of

wealthy Americans

Page 5: The Jazz Age

How did Americans entertain themselves during the 1920s? 1of 2 slides

• Era of the silent movies• Theaters

– opened 1-11 PM everyday– $.10 per seat– Glamorous to lower

classes– Criticized for corrupting

youth

• Cult of Stardom– Read gossip columns

written about stars lives

– Tried to imitated hairstyles, fashion

Clara Bow

Page 6: The Jazz Age

The Silver Screen

Page 7: The Jazz Age

• Spectator Sports– Baseball

• Babe Ruth– Bambino, Sultan of Swat

– Boxing• Jack Dempsey

– “Manassas Mauler”– World Heavyweight

Champion (1919 and 1926)

• Fight with Gene Tunney viewed as battle between Modernists and Traditionalists

How did Americans entertain themselves during the 1920s?

Page 8: The Jazz Age

Sports Heroes

Page 9: The Jazz Age

How did music change during the 1920s?• Blues and jazz • Blues

– Derived from work songs of slaves

• Jazz– Born in New Orleans– No written notes– Louis Armstrong

• The Charleston– Dance with crossing

hands, knocking knees• Radios

– began to become popular

Page 10: The Jazz Age

Jazz

Page 11: The Jazz Age

Radio

Page 12: The Jazz Age

What did people read during the 20s?• High literacy rate• Reader’s Digest, Time

Magazine created• Tabloids

– Published scandals, fads, dance marathons

• Advertisements– Spawned from the

Committee of Public Safety

– Told Americans what they needed, wanted

Page 13: The Jazz Age

Creature Comforts & Consumerism

Page 14: The Jazz Age

Who was Langston Hughes?• Novelist & Poet during of

the Harlem Renaissance– flowering of African

American art, literature, music and culture in Harlem

• Part of the “New Negro” movement– Proud to be black– “black is beautiful”– Urged African Americans

to reach their American Dream

The night is beautiful, So the faces of my people. The stars are beautiful, So the eyes of my people Beautiful, also, is the sun. Beautiful, also, are the souls of my people.

What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore And then run? Does it stink like rotten meat? Or crust and sugar over like a syrupy sweet? Maybe it just sags like a heavy load. Or does it explode?

Page 15: The Jazz Age

Harlem Renaissance

Page 16: The Jazz Age

Conclusion

• The Jazz Age was viewed by traditionalists as an attack on tradition American values