Monday, February 8, 2016

Agenda for 2/9

Complete the following assignment during class:

1. Read through the Key Concept 7.1 and 7.2 to preview the essential content from this chapter.


Key Concept 7.1
Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform U.S. society and its economic system.

I.               The United States continued its transition from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban, industrial economy led by large companies.
  
A.         New technologies and manufacturing techniques helped focus the U.S. economy on the production of consumer goods, contributing to improved standards of living, greater personal mobility, and better communications systems.

Examples:  US Steel Company (1901), Henry Ford’s Model T car (1908), General Motors (1908), Frederick Taylor’s Principles of Scientific Management (1911), “Taylorism” (scientific management), Henry Ford’s “moving” assembly line (1914), consumer goods industry (electric washing machines, vacuums, refrigerators, etc.)
B.         By 1920, a majority of the U.S. population lived in urban centers, which offered new economic opportunities for women, international migrants, and internal migrants.
                  
Examples:  1920 Census results of urban vs. rural living, second waves of new immigration, Puerto Ricans granted US citizenship (1917), Great Migration, Triangle Shirtwaist Company
            
        C.         Episodes of credit and market instability in the early 20th century, in particular the Great Depression, led to calls for a stronger financial regulatory  
                        system.



Examples:  Federal Reserve Act (1913), stock market crash (1929), bank “holiday” (1933), FDIC (1933), Securities Exchange Commission (1934)


Key Concept 7.2: 
Innovations in communications and technology contributed to the growth of mass culture, while significant changes occurred in internal and international migration patterns.

I.                   Popular culture grew in influence in U.S. society, even as debates increased over the effects of culture on public values, morals, and American national identity.  

        A.         New forms of mass media, such as radio and cinema, contributed to the spread of national culture as well   as greater awareness of regional cultures.

Examples:  Radio, KDKA (1920), War of the Worlds (1938), FDR’s fireside chats, motion pictures, nickelodeons, movie palaces, Jazz Singer (1927), Steamboat Willie (1928)

B.         Migration gave rise to new forms of art and literature that expressed ethnic and regional identities, such the Harlem Renaissance movement.

Examples:  Jazz Age, Edward Hopper, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Yiddish theater, Harlem Renaissance, Gertrude Stein’s “lost generation”,  Sinclair Lewis’s Babbitt (1922), F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (1925)

C.         Official restrictions on freedom of speech grew during World War I, as increased anxiety about radicalism led to a Red Scare and attacks on labor activism and immigrant culture.

Examples:  Red Scare, Immigration Act of 1917, Espionage and Sedition Acts (1917-1918), Schenck v. US (1919), Palmer Raids (1920), execution of Sacco and Vanzetti (1927)

D.         In the 1920s, cultural and political controversies emerged as Americans debated gender roles, modernism, science, religion, and issues related to race and immigration.

Examples:  Flappers, fundamentalism vs. modernism, Scopes “Monkey” Trial (1925) 

II.         Economic pressures, global events, and political developments caused sharp variations in the numbers, sources, and experiences of both international and internal migrants. 
          
A.              Immigration from Europe reached its peak in the years before World War I. During and after World War I, nativist campaigns against some ethnic groups led to the passage of quotas that restricted immigration, particularly from southern and eastern Europe, and increased barriers to Asian immigration.

Examples: Immigration Act of 1917, Emergency Quota Act of 1921, National Origins Immigration Act of 1924

B.         The increased demand for war production and labor during World War I and World War II and the economic difficulties of the 1930s led many Americans to migrate to urban centers in search of economic opportunities.

Examples:  War Industries Board (1917), National War Labor Board (1918), dust bowl (1930-1936), John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath (1939), Office of War Mobilization (1943)

C.             In a Great Migration during and after World War I, African Americans escaping segregation, racial violence, and limited economic opportunity in the South moved to the North and West, where they found new opportunities but still encountered discrimination.

Examples:  Great Migration, Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association (1914), revival of the KKK (1915), D. W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation (1915), Red Summer (1919), race riots in Detroit, Tulsa, and Chicago (1919), 

D.             Migration to the United States from Mexico and elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere increased, in spite of contradictory government policies toward Mexican immigration.

Examples:  Great Depression-era deportations, WWII braceros program

2. Read the following article about racial unrest at the start of the 1920s - Red Summer of 1919

  • Why was the year 1919 a "notable one for racial violence?"
  • What does the author offer as a cause of racial violence in America in 1919?
  • Why does the author believe that the history of armed defense and resistance by black Americans has been ignored?

3. Read through the "Roaring Twenties" APUSH Explained Slide Show

A. Categorize each issue/event as either: 

  • Political, Economic, Religious, and/or social
AND as either 
  • Roaring - new, modern, changing, growing, progressive
  • Reactionary - traditional, restrictive, fundamentalist, violent, exclusionary

4. Watch independently: The Century - America's Time - "From Boom to Bust" - parts 1-3

HW:
  • Finish "From Boom to Bust" video
  • Ch. 23 Reading Assignment

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