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Unit III A Modern Nation

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Title: Unit III A Modern Nation


1
Unit III A Modern Nation
  • Chapter 10 Section 3
  • A New Popular Culture is Born

2
A New Popular Culture is Born
  • The Main Idea
  • New technologies helped produce a new mass
    culture in the 1920s.
  • Reading Focus
  • How did mass entertainment change in the 1920s?
  • Who were the cultural heroes of the 1920s?
  • How was the culture of the 1920s reflected in the
    arts and literature of the era?

3
Entertainment The Movies, Radio, and Sports
(0630)
4
Radio Drives Popular Culture
5
Movies
6
Film Star Heroes
  • The great popularity of movies in the 1920s gave
    rise to a new kind of celebritythe movie star.
  • One of the brightest stars of the 1920s was
    Charlie Chaplin, a comedian whose signature
    character was a tramp in a derby hat and ragged
    clothes.
  • Rudolph Valentino, a dashing leading man of
    romantic films, was such a big star that his
    unexpected death in 1926 drew tens of thousands
    of women to the funeral home where his body lay.
  • Clara Bow was a movie star nicknamed the It
    Girl.
  • Mary Pickford was considered Americas
    Sweetheart and was married to Douglas Fairbanks
    Jr., a major star of action films.
  • Their home, called Pickfair, was in Hollywood,
    the center of the motion picture industry.

7
1920s Movies
Janet Gaynor
Fairbanks and Pickford
  • Rudolph Valentino

Buster Keaton- The Great Stone Face
Charlie Chaplin
8
Films really blossomed in the 1920s, expanding
upon the foundations of film from earlier years.
Most US film production at the start of the
decade occurred in or near Hollywood on the West
Coast, although some films were still being made
in New Jersey and in Astoria on Long Island
(Paramount). By the mid-20s, movies were big
business (with a capital investment totaling over
2 billion) with some theatres offering double
features. By the end of the decade, there were 20
Hollywood studios, and the demand for films was
greater than ever. Most people are unaware that
the greatest output of feature films in the US
occurred in the 1920s and 1930s (averaging about
800 film releases in a year) - nowadays, it is
remarkable when production exceeds 500 films in a
year. Throughout most of the decade, silent
films were the predominant product of the film
industry, having evolved from vaudevillian roots.
But the films were becoming bigger, costlier, and
more polished. They were being manufactured,
assembly-line style, in Hollywood's
'entertainment factories,' in which production
was broken down and organized into its various
components (writing, costuming, makeup,
directing, etc.). The major emphasis was on
swashbucklers, historical extravaganzas, and
melodramas, although all kinds of films were
being produced throughout the decade. Films
varied from sexy melodramas and biblical epics by
Cecil B. DeMille, to westerns (such as Cruze's
The Covered Wagon (1923)), horror films,
gangster/crime films, war films, the first
feature documentary (Robert Flaherty's Nanook of
the North (1922)), romances, mysteries, and
comedies (from the silent comic masters Chaplin,
Keaton, and Lloyd).
9
Pilot Heroes of the Twenties
Charles Lindbergh
Amelia Earhart
10
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11
Charles Lindbergh Aviation Pioneer,
International Celebrity, and Hero (0227)
12
Charles Lindbergh
  • Lindbergh Does It! To Paris in 33 1/2 Hours
    Flies 1,000 Miles Through Snow and Sleet
    Cheering French Carry Him Off FieldNew York
    Times, May 21, 1927
  • Lindbergh, Charles Augustus (1902-1974), an
    American aviator, made the first solo nonstop
    flight across the Atlantic Ocean on May 20-21,
    1927. Other pilots had crossed the Atlantic
    before him. But Lindbergh was the first person to
    do it alone nonstop.
  • Lindbergh's feat gained him immediate,
    international fame. The press named him "Lucky
    Lindy" and the "Lone Eagle." Americans and
    Europeans idolized the shy, slim young man and
    showered him with honors.
  • Before Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941,
    Lindbergh campaigned against voluntary American
    involvement in World War II. Many Americans
    criticized him for his noninvolvement beliefs.
    After the war, he avoided publicity until the
    late 1960's, when he spoke out for the
    conservation of natural resources. Lindbergh
    served as an adviser in the aviation industry
    from the days of wood and wire airplanes to
    supersonic jets.

13
Amelia Earhart
14
Amelia Earhart The World's Most Famous Female
Aviator (0249)
15
Sports Heroes
  • Radio helped inflame the public passion for
    sports, and millions of Americans tuned in to
    broadcasts of ballgames and prize fights
    featuring their favorite athletes.

16
1920s Sports
  • Up until 1922, no swimmer, male or female, had
    been able to swim the 100 meters in under a
    minute's time. American Johnny Weissmuller (1904
    - 1984), an exception to the record books, broke
    the record with 58.6 seconds swimming freestyle
    on July 9. This, however, was not Weissmuller's
    only feat. He went on to win three gold medals at
    the 1924 Olympics in Paris, France, and two gold
    medals at the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam. In his
    career, he claimed 52 U.S. titles and 28 world
    distance records. 1st Tarzan in the movies.
  • Gertrude Ederle (1906 - ), who was born on
    October 23, 1906, was a superb swimmer. Not only
    did she win three Olympic medallions and break
    several records, but to top it all off, she went
    on to become the first woman to swim across the
    English Channel. When she swam the 21 miles on
    August 6, 1926, Ederle was only nineteen. Her
    time 14 hours and 31 minutes - good enough to
    beat the previously set men's record.
  • George Herman Ruth (1895 - 1948), often known to
    his fans as Babe Ruth, hit a total of 60 home
    runs in 1927. This record-breaker would remain a
    record itself until 1961, when Roger Eugene Maris
    (1934 - 85) hit 61 home runs. Babe Ruth, who
    earned more than 2 million in his career, was
    known by several other names as well. These
    included the Bambino, the Behemoth of Bust, the
    Blunderbuss, the Colossus of Clout, the Mammoth
    of Maul, the Mauling Mastodon, the Mauling
    Monarch, the Prince of Powders, the Rajah of Rap,
    the Sultan of Swat, and the Wazir of Wham. Among
    all of his other accomplishments, this southpaw
    pitcher was inducted into the Baseball Hall of
    Fame in 1936.

17
1920s Sports
  • Like Babe Ruth is to baseball so is Man O' War is
    to horse racing. The horse they called Big Red
    burst onto the scene as a two year old and would
    win 20 of 21 races. As a three-year-old he did
    not lose when he did race he often gave 30 pounds
    to his rivals. Although he did not win the Triple
    Crown it was only because he did not race in the
    Kentucky Derby.
  • Legendary Notre Dame Football coach Knute Rockne
    in 1924 featured one of the greatest backfields
    in college football history. They were Harry
    Stuhldreher, Jim Crowley, Don Miller and Elmer
    Layden. They got their nickname the four horseman
    by sports writer Grantland Rice who compared them
    to those of biblical fame. " Outlined against a
    blue-gray October sky the four horseman rode
    again
  • Red Grange became a household name when he scored
    5 touchdowns against Michigan. However his
    biggest accomplishment was probably establishing
    the pro game. Up to that point the NFL was in the
    same category as monster truck shows are today.
    Well that changed when Red Grange decided to go
    pro after his final college game. Galloping
    Ghost
  • Jack Dempsey was not just the greatest
    heavyweight of the decade but usually makes
    anyone short list for the best of all-time. He
    was a fierce fighter and usually awarded boxing
    fans with exciting fights. This made him very
    popular figure of the day, along with Babe Ruth
    he was probably the most well known sportsmen of
    his time. He also took par in one of the most
    famous fights in boxing history " The Long Count
    fight in a rematch with Gene Tunney.

Man O War
The four Horsemen
Red Grange
18
1920s Fads
  • His name was Alvin Kelly but he was best known as
    "Shipwreck" Kelly. Employed as a professional
    stuntman in Hollywood, Kelly decided to attempt
    to sit on a flagpole in response to a dare from a
    Hollywood friend. He sat upon the pole for 13
    hours and 13 minutes and began a national
    spectacle.
  • Kelly's stunt occurred in 1924 and within weeks
    hundreds of people were trying to call themselves
    the "King of the Pole." One man sat for 12 days,
    another for 17 and another for 21 days. Public
    fascination was phenomenal as huge crowds would
    gather to watch the participant. With such a
    large audience, the publicity-hungry Kelly
    decided that he must once again be King. In
    Atlantic City, New Jersey, Kelly sat atop a
    flagpole for a record 49 days in front of an
    audience of 20,000 admirers.

19
1920s Fads
  • In the early 1930s, during the height of The
    Depression, young people across America gathered
    to participate in Dance Marathons. These
    endurance contests offered the unemployed hopes
    of temporary fame, small fortune, and the
    opportunity to dance their cares away. Prizes
    ranged anywhere between 1000 to 5000, but many
    contestants participated solely for the promise
    of food and shelter. Serious competitors danced
    for days, even weeks at a time. The record stands
    at 5,148 hours and 28.5 minutes. The contestants
    were usually allowed a mere 15 minutes of rest
    for every hour of dancing. Success came to those
    who had the ability to keep their partner moving
    at all times style was irrelevant.
  • Hot toys included the erector set, tinker toys,
    and lincoln logs. The Ouija Board became popular.
    Sales of this game soared.

20
Babe Ruth - 537 min.
21
Arts of the 1920s
  • The great economic and social changes of the
    1920s offered novelists a rich source of
    materials.
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald helped create the flapper
    image, coined the term the Jazz Age, and
    explored the lives of the wealthy in The Great
    Gatsby and other novels and stories.
  • Sinclair Lewis wrote about the emptiness of
    middle-class life.
  • Edna St. Vincent Millay wrote poems on topics
    ranging from celebrations of youth to leading
    social causes of the day.
  • Willa Cather and Edith Wharton produced notable
    works of literature.
  • Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos were war
    veterans and, as part of the so-called Lost
    Generation, wrote about war experiences.
  • Gertrude Stein invented the term Lost Generation,
    referring to a group of writers who chose to live
    in Europe after World War I.
  • Bruce Bartons novel compared Jesus to a modern
    business executive.
  • George Gershwin was a composer best known for
    Rhapsody in Bluewhich showed the impact of
    jazzas well as popular songs written with his
    brother Ira.

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