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 +[[Image:The-bouba-kiki-effect.png|thumb|right|200px|The [[Bouba/kiki effect]] (1929)]]
 +[[Image:Josephine Baker dancing the Charleston to an Art Deco-styole background.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Josephine Baker]] dancing the [[charleston]] at the [[Folies Bergère]] in Paris for ''[[La Revue nègre]]'' in [[1926]]. Notice the [[art deco]] background. <br>(Photo by Walery)]]
 +[[Image:Inversions.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Inversions]]'', the first French gay journal is published between [[1924]] and [[1926]], it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with "[[Outrage aux bonnes mœurs]]". Its full title was ''Inversions ... in [[art]], [[literature]], [[philosophy]] and [[science]]''. [[Sexual inversion (sexology)|Sexual inversion]] was a term used by [[sexologist]]s in the late [[19th]] and early [[20th century]], to refer to [[homosexuality]].]]
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-In the [[1920s]], [[United States|American]] [[Jazz]] music and motor cars were at the centre of a [[European]] subculture which began to break the rules of social [[etiquette]] and the [[class system]] (See also [[Swing Kids]]). In America, the same ''flaming youth'' subculture was ''"running wild"'' but with the added complication of alcohol [[prohibition]]. [[Canada]] had prohibition in some areas, but for the most part, thirsty Americans coming over the border found an oasis. As a result, [[smuggling]] escalated as crime gangs became organised. In the southern United States, [[Mexico]] and [[Cuba]] were popular with drinkers. Thus, a drinking subculture grew in size and a crime subculture grew along with it. Other [[Psychoactive drug|drugs]] were used as alternatives to alcohol. When prohibition ended, the subculture of drink, drugs and jazz did not disappear, and neither did the gangsters. 
-== Mentioned in ==+{|class="toc hlist" id="toc" summary="Contents" style="margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; text-align:center;"
- * Surrealism+|colspan="3" |
- * Documents (journal)+|-
- * Jean Vigo+! style="text-align:right; width:310px;"|<< [[1910s]]
- * History of subcultures in the 20th century+! style="width:125px;"|
- * Modern architecture+! style="text-align:left; width:310px;"|[[1930s]] >>
- * André Masson+|}
- * Folies Bergère+The '''1920s''' is a [[decade]] that is sometimes referred to as the "[[Jazz Age]]" or the "[[Roaring Twenties]]," usually applied to [[United States|America]]. In [[Europe]] the decade is referred to as the [[Golden Twenties]] in Anglophone countries, [[années Folles|Les Années Folles]] in France, and [[1920s Berlin|Weimar Berlin]] in Germany.
- * Noise music+
- * 1920s Berlin+
- * Harlem Renaissance+
- * German Expressionism+
- * Theatre of the Absurd+
- * European comics+
- * Sexual revolution+
- * Cut-up technique+
- * Silent film+
- * Musidora+
- * André Kertész+
- * Samuel Roth+
- * Lee Miller+
- * Roaring Twenties+
- * Flapper+
- * New Criticism+
- * Ero guro nansensu+
- * Djuna Barnes+
- * Swing music+
- * Cinema pur+
- * Storyville+
- * Kino-Pravda+
- * International style (architecture)+
- * Golden Twenties+
- * Avant-garde film in Europe+
- * Années Folles+
 +Since the closing of the 20th Century, the 1920s has drawn close associations with the [[1950s]] and [[1990s]], especially in the United States. The three decades are regarded as periods of economic prosperity, which lasted throughout almost the entire decade following a tremendous event that occurred in the previous decade ([[World War I]] and [[Spanish flu]] in the [[1910s]], [[World War II]] in the [[1940s]], and the end of the [[Cold War]] in the late 1980s).
 +
 +Despite the comparisons, however, there were a number of differences. Firstly, [[Weimar Republic]] [[Germany]], like many other European countries, had to face a severe economic downturn in the opening years of the decade, because of the enormous debt caused by the war as well as the one-sided [[Treaty of Versailles]]. Such a crisis would culminate with a devaluation of the Mark in 1923, eventually leading to severe economic problems and the rise of the [[Nazis]].
 +
 +Second, the decade was characterized by the rise of radical political movements, especially in regions that were once part of empires. [[Communism]] began attracting large numbers of followers following the success of the [[October Revolution]] and the [[Bolshevik]]s' determination to win the subsequent [[Russian Civil War]]. The Bolsheviks would eventually adopt semi-capitalist policies--[[New Economic Policy]]--from 1921 to 1928.
 +The 1920s also experienced the rise of the [[far-right]] in [[Europe]] and elsewhere, starting with [[Fascism]] in the [[world]] as an antidote to [[Communism]].
 +
 +The Stock Market collapsed during October 1929 (see [[Wall Street Crash of 1929|Black Tuesday]]) and drew a line under the prosperous 1920s.
 +== Culture==
 +* [[Prohibition]] &mdash; legal attempt to end consumption of [[alcoholic beverage|alcohol]] in [[Canada]], the [[United States|USA]], [[Norway]] and [[Finland]]
 +* [[Youth culture]] of '''[[Lost Generation|The Lost Generation]]'''; [[flapper]]s, the [[Charleston (dance)|Charleston]], and bobbed hair
 +* "The [[Jazz Age]]" &mdash; [[jazz]] and jazz-influenced dance music widely popular
 +* [[Women's suffrage]] movement continues to make gains as women obtain full voting rights in [[Denmark]] in 1915, in the [[United States|USA]] in 1920, and in [[England]] in 1928; and women begin to enter the workplace in larger numbers
 +* In the US, [[gangsters]] and the rise of [[organized crime]], often associated with [[bootleg liquor]], in defiance of Prohibition.
 +* First commercial [[radio]] station in the U.S. goes on air in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|Pittsburgh]], in 1920, and radio quickly becomes a popular entertainment medium
 +* First feature-length [[motion picture]] with a [[soundtrack]] (''[[Don Juan]]'') is released in 1926. First part-talkie (''[[The Jazz Singer (1927 film)|The Jazz Singer]]'') released in 1927, first all-talking feature (''[[Lights of New York]]'') released in 1928 and first all-color all-talking feature (''[[On with the Show]]'') released in 1929.
 +* Beginning of [[surrealist]] movement
 +* Beginning of the [[Art Deco]] movement
 +* Fads such as [[marathon dancing]], [[mah-jongg]], [[crossword puzzle]]s and [[pole-sitting]] are popular
 +* The height of the [[clip joint]]
 +* The [[Harlem Renaissance]]
 +* The [[Scopes Trial|Scopes Monkey Trial]] (1925) which declared that John T. Scopes had violated the law by teaching [[evolution]] in schools, creating tension between the competing theories of [[creationism]] and [[evolution]].
 +* [[Bishop James Cannon, Jr.]] becomes a U.S. [[temperance movement]] leader.
 +* The [[Group of Seven (artists)]]
 +* The tomb of [[Tutankhamun]] is discovered intact by [[Howard Carter (archaeologist)|Howard Carter]] (1922). This begins a second revival of [[Egyptomania]].
 +*A string of dance crazes swept the world, including [[jitterbug]] and the [[Charleston (dance)|Charleston]].
 +*''[[The Unknown (1927 film) |The Unknown]]'' by Tod Browning
 +
 +== Subcultures ==
 +
 +In the [[1920s]], [[American Jazz]] music and motor cars were at the centre of a [[European]] subculture which began to break the rules of social [[etiquette]] and the [[class system]] (See also [[Swing Kids]]). In America, the same ''flaming youth'' subculture was ''"running wild"'' but with the added complication of alcohol [[prohibition]]. [[Canada]] had prohibition in some areas, but for the most part, thirsty Americans coming over the border found an oasis. As a result, [[smuggling]] escalated as crime gangs became organised. In the southern United States, [[Mexico]] and [[Cuba]] were popular with drinkers. Thus, a drinking subculture grew in size and a crime subculture grew along with it. Other [[Psychoactive drug|drugs]] were used as alternatives to alcohol. When prohibition ended, the subculture of drink, drugs and jazz did not disappear, and neither did the gangsters.
 +
 +==Artworks==
 +*''[[Mechanischer Kopf]]'' (1920) by Raoul Hausmann
 +
 +==Literature==
 +:''[[interwar literature]], [[jazz age]]''
 +*''[[Flappers and Philosophers]]'' (1920) by F. Scott Fitzgerald
 +*''[[The Hands of Orlac]]'' (1920) by Maurice Renard
 +*''[[We]]'' (1920) by Yevgeny Zamyatin
 +*''[[Scaramouche]]'' (1921) by Sabatini
 +*''[[Cocaina]]'' (1921) by Pitigrilli
 +*''[[Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus]]'' (1921) - Ludwig Wittgenstein
 +*''[[Six Characters in Search of an Author]]'' (1921) - Luigi Pirandello
 +*''[[Surrealist Manifesto]]'' (1924) by André Breton
 +*''[[Corydon (book) |Corydon]]'' (1924) André Gide
 +*''[[The Great Gatsby]]'' (1925) by F. Scott Fitzgerald
 +*''[[Dream Story]]'' (1925/26) - Arthur Schnitzler
 +*''[[Story of the Eye]]'' (1928) - Georges Bataille
 +*''[[Lady Chatterley's Lover]]'' (1928) - D. H. Lawrence
 +*''[[Irene's Cunt]]'' (1928) - Louis Aragon
 +*''[[All Quiet on the Western Front]]'' (1929) by Erich Maria Remarque
 +===The Jazz Age in literature===
 +Perhaps one of the most representative literary works of the Jazz age is [[United States|American]] [[writer]] F. Scott Fitzgerald's ''[[The Great Gatsby]]'' (1925), which highlighted what some describe as the corruption of the post-WW1 age, as well as new attitudes, and the growth of [[individualism]]. Fitzgerald is largely credited with [[neologism|coining the term]], which he used in such books as his [[short story]] collection ''Tales of the Jazz Age''. His second novel, ''[[The Beautiful and Damned]]'' (1922), also deals with the era and its effect on a young married couple. Fitzgerald's last completed novel, ''[[Tender Is the Night]]'' (1934) takes place in the same decade but is set in [[France]] and [[Switzerland]] not New York, and consequently is not widely considered a Jazz Age novel ''per se''.
 +
 +Additional works on the Jazz Age might include [[Thomas Wolfe]]'s and [[Catarina Botto]]'s titanic 1936 book ''[[Of Time and the River]]'' which takes its protagonist from the depths of the Carolinas to [[Harvard University|Harvard]] and [[Antarctica]], and finally to [[New York City]] in the 1920s. Wolfe's ''[[You Can't Go Home Again]]'' is recommended for its party scene on the night of the [[1929]] [[stock market crash]]. [[Edith Wharton]]'s late novel ''[[Twilight Sleep]]'', set in New York and written in 1927, is a great example of social critiques of Jazz Age values and lifestyles. Additionally, ''[[The Rosy Crucifixion]]'' trilogy of [[Henry Miller]] -- ''[[Sexus (The Rosy Crucifixion)|Sexus]]'', ''[[Plexus (The Rosy Crucifixion)|Plexus]]'', and ''[[Nexus (The Rosy Crucifixion)|Nexus]]'' -- is set in New York during this period.
 +
 +== Mentioned in ==
 +*[[Surrealism]]
 +*[[Documents (journal)]]
 +*[[Jean Vigo]]
 +*[[History of subcultures in the 20th century]]
 +*[[Modern architecture]]
 +*[[André Masson]]
 +*[[Folies Bergère]]
 +*[[Noise music]]
 +*[[1920s Berlin]]
 +*[[Harlem Renaissance]]
 +*[[German Expressionism]]
 +*[[Theatre of the Absurd]]
 +*[[European comics]]
 +*[[Sexual revolution]]
 +*[[Cut-up technique]]
 +*[[Silent film]]
 +*[[Musidora]]
 +*[[André Kertész]]
 +*[[Samuel Roth]]
 +*[[Lee Miller]]
 +*[[Roaring Twenties]]
 +*[[Flapper]]
 +*[[New Criticism]]
 +*[[Ero guro nansensu]]
 +*[[Djuna Barnes]]
 +*[[Swing music]]
 +*[[Cinema pur]]
 +*[[Storyville]]
 +*[[Kino-Pravda]]
 +*[[International style (architecture)]]
 +*[[Golden Twenties]]
 +*[[Avant-garde film in Europe]]
 +*[[Années Folles]]
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 18:30, 25 December 2021

The Bouba/kiki effect (1929)
Josephine Baker dancing the charleston at the Folies Bergère in Paris for La Revue nègre in 1926. Notice the art deco background. (Photo by Walery)
Enlarge
Josephine Baker dancing the charleston at the Folies Bergère in Paris for La Revue nègre in 1926. Notice the art deco background.
(Photo by Walery)
Inversions, the first French gay journal is published between 1924 and 1926, it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with "Outrage aux bonnes mœurs".  Its full title was Inversions ... in art, literature, philosophy and science. Sexual inversion was a term used by sexologists in the late 19th and early 20th century, to refer to homosexuality.
Enlarge
Inversions, the first French gay journal is published between 1924 and 1926, it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with "Outrage aux bonnes mœurs". Its full title was Inversions ... in art, literature, philosophy and science. Sexual inversion was a term used by sexologists in the late 19th and early 20th century, to refer to homosexuality.

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The 1920s is a decade that is sometimes referred to as the "Jazz Age" or the "Roaring Twenties," usually applied to America. In Europe the decade is referred to as the Golden Twenties in Anglophone countries, Les Années Folles in France, and Weimar Berlin in Germany.

Since the closing of the 20th Century, the 1920s has drawn close associations with the 1950s and 1990s, especially in the United States. The three decades are regarded as periods of economic prosperity, which lasted throughout almost the entire decade following a tremendous event that occurred in the previous decade (World War I and Spanish flu in the 1910s, World War II in the 1940s, and the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s).

Despite the comparisons, however, there were a number of differences. Firstly, Weimar Republic Germany, like many other European countries, had to face a severe economic downturn in the opening years of the decade, because of the enormous debt caused by the war as well as the one-sided Treaty of Versailles. Such a crisis would culminate with a devaluation of the Mark in 1923, eventually leading to severe economic problems and the rise of the Nazis.

Second, the decade was characterized by the rise of radical political movements, especially in regions that were once part of empires. Communism began attracting large numbers of followers following the success of the October Revolution and the Bolsheviks' determination to win the subsequent Russian Civil War. The Bolsheviks would eventually adopt semi-capitalist policies--New Economic Policy--from 1921 to 1928. The 1920s also experienced the rise of the far-right in Europe and elsewhere, starting with Fascism in the world as an antidote to Communism.

The Stock Market collapsed during October 1929 (see Black Tuesday) and drew a line under the prosperous 1920s.

Contents

Culture

Subcultures

In the 1920s, American Jazz music and motor cars were at the centre of a European subculture which began to break the rules of social etiquette and the class system (See also Swing Kids). In America, the same flaming youth subculture was "running wild" but with the added complication of alcohol prohibition. Canada had prohibition in some areas, but for the most part, thirsty Americans coming over the border found an oasis. As a result, smuggling escalated as crime gangs became organised. In the southern United States, Mexico and Cuba were popular with drinkers. Thus, a drinking subculture grew in size and a crime subculture grew along with it. Other drugs were used as alternatives to alcohol. When prohibition ended, the subculture of drink, drugs and jazz did not disappear, and neither did the gangsters.

Artworks

Literature

interwar literature, jazz age

The Jazz Age in literature

Perhaps one of the most representative literary works of the Jazz age is American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby (1925), which highlighted what some describe as the corruption of the post-WW1 age, as well as new attitudes, and the growth of individualism. Fitzgerald is largely credited with coining the term, which he used in such books as his short story collection Tales of the Jazz Age. His second novel, The Beautiful and Damned (1922), also deals with the era and its effect on a young married couple. Fitzgerald's last completed novel, Tender Is the Night (1934) takes place in the same decade but is set in France and Switzerland not New York, and consequently is not widely considered a Jazz Age novel per se.

Additional works on the Jazz Age might include Thomas Wolfe's and Catarina Botto's titanic 1936 book Of Time and the River which takes its protagonist from the depths of the Carolinas to Harvard and Antarctica, and finally to New York City in the 1920s. Wolfe's You Can't Go Home Again is recommended for its party scene on the night of the 1929 stock market crash. Edith Wharton's late novel Twilight Sleep, set in New York and written in 1927, is a great example of social critiques of Jazz Age values and lifestyles. Additionally, The Rosy Crucifixion trilogy of Henry Miller -- Sexus, Plexus, and Nexus -- is set in New York during this period.

Mentioned in




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