Section 3
A Culture of Change
By Boundless
Jazz music exploded as popular entertainment in the 1920s and brought African-American culture to the white middle class.
Art Deco was a dominant design style of the 1920s artistic era that also was influenced by the Dada, Expressionist and Surrealist movements.
The 1920s are often referred to as the Golden Age of Hollywood, with "Talkies" and the first all-color features replacing silent films.
Flappers were the personification of a new spirit in fashion, dance and music in the 1920s.
Eugenics was a prejudicial pseudoscience with roots in the late 19th and early 20th century that gained popularity and impacted American state and federal laws in the 1920s.
The Southern Renaissance literary movement of the 1920s and 1930s broke from the romantic view of the Confederacy.
The Harlem Renaissance was an arts and literary movement in the 1920s that brought African-American culture to mainstream America.