U.S. Post W.W. I Return to normalcy (Harding) Economic concerns: –Conversion to peacetime –Returning vets –Inflation –Strikes Red Scare ( Huh? ) Racial.
U.S. Post W.W. I Return to normalcy (Harding) Economic concerns: –Conversion to peacetime –Returning vets –Inflation –Strikes Red Scare Racial tension(
1920s: Themes, Advertising and Attitudes towards Consumerism/Ma ss Media.
Lessons from The Honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey
Marcus Garvey, Langston Hughes, Charles S. Johnson
The Roaring 20’s Modern Society Time of Great Change Return to Conservatism. Simpler past.
Goals: To understand the importance of the Harlem Renaissance to 1920s culture To understand how the Harlem Renaissance established a basis for the Civil.
Chapter 21 A Unique, Prosperous, and Discontented Time 1919-1929 © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Marcus Garvey. Spent early life in Jamaica Began working as a printer’s apprentice at age 14, where he participated in an unsuccessful printer’s strike.
African American Civil Rights Analyze the NAACP, UNIA, ADL, ACLU.
The Great Migration, 1910s to 1930s 2 million African Americans left the U. S. South. Before 1910 80% of African Americans lived in South. After 1930.
Chapter 23 Roaring Twenties. 1920’s Republican Presidents Warren Harding (1920)- “Return to normalcy” - Teapot Dome Scandal Calvin Coolidge (1923)- VP.