Do you ever find yourself wondering why the 1920s were called the Roaring Twenties? The Roaring Twenties was a celebration of youth and culture. During the 1920s, many different forms of art, music, and literature began. There were many changes that took place in the 1920s, and many people were influenced by these changes. The Roaring Twenties was a constant party because America was celebrating the victory of World War I. Many customs and values changed in the United States in the 1920s.
In the 19th century right before 1920, America was a country of small towns and farms that were held together by conservative moral values and close social relationships. The middle-class rural population believed in the values of thriftiness, moderation, and respectability. Before automobiles became of importance to Americans, the small towns were very independent places. Everyone knew each other in on the streets, and for entertainment they went to church socials and county fairs. Little did America know that soon their world would be changing more than they had ever seen.
In 1920 right after World War I, America changed dramatically, becoming an urban nation. An estimated 51.4 percent of Americans lived in communities with a population of 2,500 to more than one million. Between 1922 and 1929, nearly two million people left farms and towns each year. "Cities were the place to be, not to get away from," said one historian. Small-town spirits began to lose control on the American mind as the cities rose to fame.
The 1920's saw the first significant amount of publishing of works by.
black artists, to name some of them they are Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Rudolph Fisher since the turn of the century. Migration to the north seemed a.
necessity due to the more and more intolerable hiring conditions for blacks in.
the south. Industrial expansion and jobs left open by whites now serving in WWI.
saw many blacks moving into the seriously overbuilt Harlem which was originally.