The Roaring 20s refers to the "golden" decade of growth between 1920 - 1930 in post-war America. ... Culturally, the 20s brought forth many changes- progression which contributed to the "golden age" of the 1920s... A booming market, expanding production, rising national income, and a higher standard of living brought forth a golden age of American culture. ...
The roaring twenties were a time for positive change. The Twenties were indeed a decade that roared for Canadians. It was a time of discoveries, new inventions, machines and improvements in technology. These new inventions and gadgets improved and dramatically changed how peoples lived there life'...
In this "golden age" of the family, happily married men and women lived in suburban homes raising families. ... People married at a younger age as prosperity and government aid allowed them to establish themselves more easily. ... The atomic age fostered in a real fear of the outside world. ... With the Cold War and atomic age in full force, the family provided stability in unstable world. ...
For the American people the 1920s was a time of unlimited opportunities and wealth. America was the richest nation at this time and the wages of many ordinary people rose while the prices of goods did not. At this time the president was Harding, a strong Republican. But in 1923, in the midst of ...
Leiss, Kline, Jhally and Botterill state that "this was advertising's golden age, not merely because advertisers had grasped its almost unlimited transformational capabilities, but because society as a whole almost completely agreed with its key premise, that the road to happiness was paved with more goods and services". ...
Being an American teenage driver myself, I clearly remember dreaming about that golden day I"d be allowed to get my driver's license. ... Making these items available for automobile installation is obviously aimed at teens; no other age group would jump at the chance to be the envy of their peers by putting these excessive distractions in their cars. ...