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Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties English III Mrs. Cobb

Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

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Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties. English III Mrs. Cobb. I. Politics---World War I. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties English III

Mrs. Cobb

Page 2: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

I. Politics---World War I• A. The Great War (World War I) - 1914-1918

- was called “the war to end all wars” and was considered the most influential force on American Writers of the 20th Century

• The Great War changed America in three ways:

1. New Moral Codes2. Disillusionment toward tradition /

connection to the past deteriorating.3. Loss of innocence

It was a “new war” in the sense that it involved new weapons and technological advances

– Some Americans escaped the disillusionment of the war through entertainment and good times

Page 4: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

III. Cultural & Historical Perspectives

1900

1905

1910

1915

1920

Einstein forms the Theory of Relativity (1905)

Sigmund Freud lectures on psychoanalysis (1909)

The Titanic sinks (1912)

World War I(aka “The Great War”

(1914-1918)

19th AmendmentGrants women the

Right to VOTE(1920)

Professional GamblersRig the World SeriesWhite Sox vs. Reds

(1919)

Page 5: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

1925

Charles Lindbergh 1st trans-Atlantic flight

(1927)

The Jazz Singer, 1st Talking picture (1927)

1930

Flapper Dresses In Style (1925)

Fitzgerald publishes The Great Gatsby

(1925)

Page 6: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

IV. Shifts in Women’s Fashion:Victorian Era

Page 7: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

The Gibson Girl: Women’s Pre-War

Fashion (early 1900’s)

Page 8: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

“Myrtle, I’m sure glad we thought to bring these fashionable canes.

Otherwise I fear we might topple over!”

Page 9: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

To Herself: “Oh dear, I do believe I feel a faint coming on!”

To Her Husband: “Darling, I think you might have laced up this corset a bit too tightly!”

Page 11: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

The Free-spirited Flapper Girl of the 1920’s

Page 12: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

V. Men’s Fashion Shifts:The Fashionable Victorian Gentleman

Page 13: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

The Dapper Man of the 1920’s

Page 14: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

Men’s Fashion Advertisements

Page 15: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

VI. Prohibition• 18th amendment to the U.S.

Constitution (1919), which banned the manufacturing, sale, and transportation of alcohol, but NOT DRINKING IT.

*GOAL: reduce unemployment, domestic violence, & poverty.

Affect on American lifestyle:*Many people began drinking,

regardless of the laws. *Led to the “speakeasy” as a

semi-public drinking place.

Page 16: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

Affects Part II:* Illegal sales of alcohol fueled

organized crime & corruption. – EX: Al Capone, and even

President Harding’s attorney general made thousands of dollars “bootlegging”.

– The amendment was not repealed until 1933 -- as the Great Depression is in full swing.

– ***REMEMBER this while reading The Great Gatsby-- ALL of the alcohol they drink has been illegally purchased.

Page 18: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

VIII. The Dust Bowl*a severe drought in the 1930’s resulted in

huge dust storms, which would damage crops and cover farm lands in dust

*families were forced to leave their farms and find work, packing all of their belongings into vehicles or wagons

*trails of vehicles traveled to California ranches to find work, and people stayed in squatters’ camps along the highways like Route 66

*Author, John Steinbeck, captured the uncertainty and despair of the times

Page 20: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

X. Economics Part II: The Automobile and Assembly Line

• Henry Ford’s development of the automobile meant that people could travel from rural areas to the city

• The development of the assembly line allowed for mass production, or “homogenization” of goods, but also created a mechanical, robotic feeling for the workers, without personalizing the goods

Page 21: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

XI. Theories and Stream of Consciousness

*the unconscious forces that drive human beings

*founder: Sigmund Freud

*Karl Marx: believed that history is a constant struggle between classes

*Albert Einstein: believed that everything is relative, and there are no absolutes

Page 22: Bridging the Gap: Victorian Times to the Roaring Twenties

XII. The Short Story• 1890-1930’s• Readers wanted fast literature,

and the two factors that contributed to the development and popularity of the short story are:

• A) the American temperament (everything in a hurry—no time for novels)

• B) advertising and introduction of magazines, where the short stories were published

• Ex: The Saturday Evening Post