Changing Role Of Women In The 1920s Essay

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The roaring twenties were a time where many things changed. In the twenties women became more provocative, congress passed new laws, the average american family was able to afford new luxuries, and people migrated to bigger cities. In the twenties the average income rose from $6,460 to $8,016 per person. People in the 1920s bought everything much like people today do.
Some women in the 1920s became more provocative these women were called flappers. Flappers were women that wore short skirts, drank, smoked, and cursed. These women usually have their hair in a bob. Most young women however, worked in “pink” collar jobs such as sales clerks, office secretaries, telephone operators or they were nurses. The changing role of women was a result of the work they did during the war. Women also got the right to vote in 1920. …show more content…

On January 16, 1920 the federal Volstead Act closed all bars and saloons in the united states. Congress also had very strict immigration laws passed because of the “red scare.” People in Eastern Europe and Asia were not allowed to travel to the United States. While people in Great Britain and Northern Europe could.
While people weren't allowed to migrate from Europe many African Americans came from the south. Many African Americans came north in search of better jobs and a less judgmental environment but instead they were met with the same treatment they got in the south. “Black culture such as jazz and blues music and the literary movement known as the harlem renaissance discomforted some white americans.” Millions of people in Indiana and Illinois didn’t like the change and began joining the KKK. This did not stop blacks from having an impact on American

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