Jazz Age Culture
Part I

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Nichols Home Page // Jazz Age Part II // Jazz Age Writers The Flapper Era![]() "Mode Ball" (1928) by Julius Engelhard "Hip flasks of hooch, jazz, speakeasies, bobbed hair, 'the lost generation.' The Twenties are endlessly fascinating. It was the first truly modern decade and, for better or worse, it created the model for society that all the world follows today." (from Kevin Rayburn, "Two Views of the 1920s.") "[The flapper] symbolized an age anxious to enjoy itself, anxious to forget the past, anxious to ignore the future." (from Jacques Chastenet, "Europe in the Twenties" in Purnell's History of the Twentieth Century) "It was during what we might call the Flapper period . . . that American popular culture began to capture the imagination of the world. . . . [America] was inventing its own modernity. . . . " (from Laura Mulvey, "The Flapper Phenomenon")
The Harlem Renaissance![]() Featured U.S. Postal Stamp "Jazz Flourishes" "Harlem was not so much a place as a state of mind, the cultural metaphor for black America itself." (from Henry Louis Gates Jr., Rhapsodies in Black, 1997) "The true spirit of jazz is a joyous revolt from convention, custom, authority, boredom, even sorrow--from everything that would confine the soul of man and hinder its riding free on the air." (from J.A. Rogers, "Jazz at Home," The Survey Graphic, 1925) "It was the period when the Negro was in vogue. I was there. I had a swell time while it lasted. But I thought it wouldn't last long." (from The Big Sea by Langston Hughes, 1940)
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