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| 1900 | 1910 | 1920 | 1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970 | 1980 | 1990 |
| FACTS
about this decade.
|
Early modernism in art, design, and architecture, which began at the turn of the century, continued through to 1940 and the war. In cities, Skyscrapers (first in 1870s) were erected and hundreds of architects competed for the work. The first successful design was the Woolworth Building in New York. In Chicago, the Wrigley building was designed by Graham, Anderson, Probst, and White while the Chicago Tribune Tower was designed by Howells and Hood. The Art Deco design was exemplified by the Chrysler and Empire State Buildings (depression projects - the Empire State Building completed early 1931.) Frank Lloyd Wright was prolific during this period, designing homes in California and in Japan. The term Art Deco (1925-1950) is derived from the International Art Exposition in Paris in 1925. In the 20s and 30s art of that style was referred to as modern. Designers included Karl (Kem) Weber and Eliel Saarinen.
Art movements included the modernist
movement [George
Luks, Charles
W. Hawthorne], abstract
expressionism [Willem
de Kooning],
surrealism,
and
dadaism [Georgia
O'Keeffe, Morgan
Russell, Man Ray],
realism [
Thomas
Hart Benton, Edward
Hopper, Grant
Wood, Leon
Kroll] and landscape [Aldro
Thompson Hibbard, N.C. Wyeth].
Horace Pippin is
considered one of America's foremost primitive or naive painters. The
best museums featured shows by these important artists.
Web sites
| N65122.5.A7D86 1986 | American Art Deco | Includes art deco of the 20s and 30s - exhibitions, furniture, silver, ceramics, textiles, architecture, jewelry, painting and much more. Very complete - with col and b&w illus. |
| N6494.D3I5 1985 | In the Mind's Eye: Dada and Surrealism | Excellent resource for these movements - includes American art and artisits. |
| NA680.F723 1983 | Modern Architecture 1920-1945 | Photographs, floorplans and review of architecture during this time. |
| N6505.C7 1994 | American Art: History and Culture | Overview by era. By Wayne Craven. |
| ND205.Z4 1987 | 300 Years of American Art | I consider this the best source. Very good explanation of movements, then 1 page entry on important artists, a color photo of one of their works, 10 year average of value of their art, and public collections list. 2 volumes. |
Following
WWI (the war to end all wars), talented young authors, some expatriates in France,
wrote about their feelings of disillusionment and alienation. A sense of rebellion
developed and the victorian idea of decency was considered hypocritical. Writers began to write frankly about sexuality. Three important groups during
this period were:
The Algonquin Round Table, also called THE ROUND TABLE, informal group of American literary men and women who met daily for lunch on weekdays at a large round table in the Algonquin Hotel in New York City during the 1920s and '30s. Many of the best-known writers, journalists, and artists in New York City were in this group. Among them were Dorothy Parker, Alexander Woollcott (author of the quote "All the things I really like are immoral, illegal, or fattening", Heywood Broun, Robert Benchley,Robert Sherwood, George S. Kaufman, Franklin P. Adams, Marc Connelly, Harold Ross, Harpo Marx, and Russell Crouse.
| Acids stain you; And drugs cause cramp. Guns aren't lawful; Nooses give; Gas smells awful; You might as well live.
RESUME by Dorothy Parker |
| Southern
gentle lady, Do not swoon. They've just hung a black man In the dark of the moon. |
They've
hung a black man To the roadside tree In the dark of the moon For the world to see How Dixie protects Its white womanhood |
Southern gentle lady, Be good! Be good! Silhouette by Langston Hughes |
| Quote
by Gertrude Stein, who coined the phrase, Lost Generation |
i carry your heart with me(i carry it in my heart)i am never without it(anywhere i go you go,my dear; and whatever is done by only me is your doing,my darling) i fear no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true) and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant and whatever a sun will always sing is you here is the deepest secret nobody knows (here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide) and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)
e.e. cummings
|
Library of Congress browsing areas for books by authors if this period include: Literary History and collections(6000 Plays, 6160 Humor) PS American Literature 130-153 Women and Other Minorities, 260 Southern Lit, 350 Drama, 400-600 Special Topics 634 Plays, 648 Short Stories, 3500 begin to look for the authors of this time by name)
| Books That Define
the Time
|
| Books About Writers of the Twenties | ||
|---|---|---|
| REF PN771.G27 | Twentieth Century Literary Criticism | Vol 26, p. 45-126. This TOPICS volume of TCLC is an excellent source for excerpts from critical essays on the Harlem Renaissance. |
| E173.A793 | Annals of America | Vol 11-12 contain essays by the important writers of the time, including excerpts from books listed above. |
| PS153.N5H26 1984 | The Harlem Renaissance Remembered | Essays about the people of the Harlem Renaissance. |
| PS159.F5P59 1996 | American Expatriate Writing and the Paris Moment | Pizer focuses on 7 major writers self-exiled to Paris following WWI. |
| REF 1003.2.C66 1993 | American Literacy | 4-6 page essays on 50 books that define the American culture. |
| PS129.C27 1988 | Geniuses Together: American Writers in Paris in the 1920s | Includes photographs in Paris - includes the dark side of life there. |
| REF Z1219.C96 1905 (annual) | Book Review Digest | Indexes and abstracts book reviews. Use it to find books written during the period and their reviews |
Children's
Newbery Book Award winners of the twenties: In
1921 Frederic G.Melcher had the Newbery Medal designed by René Paul Chambellan.
The bronze medal has the winner's name and the date engraved on the back. The
American Library Association Executive Board in 1922 delegated to the Children's
Librarians' Section the responsibility for selecting the book to receive the
Newbery Medal.
|
1922: The
Story of Mankind by Hendrik Willem van Loon 1923: The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting 1924: The Dark Frigate by Charles Hawes 1925: Tales from Silver Lands by Charles Finger 1926: Shen of the Sea by Arthur Bowie Chrisman 1927: Smoky, the Cowhorse by Will James 1928: Gay Neck, the Story of a Pigeon by Dhan Gopal Mukerji 1929: The Trumpeter of Krakow by Eric P. Kelly |
| REF E169.1.P19 1991 | Panati's Parade of Fads, Follies and Manias | Arranged by decade, includes fads, dance crazes, radio, tv, popular books and songs. |
| E 169.1.R7755 1964 | Mass Culture: The Popular Arts in America | Important essays analysing mass culture in American history. |
| E169.1.S9733 1984 | Culture as History : The Transformation of American Society in the Twentieth Century | Excellent source for this topic. Events which transformed the social, political and cultural face of America in this century. |
Costumes / Fashion
Men: Clothing for men became a bit more conservative
in the 1920s. Trousers widened to as wide as 24 inches at the bottomes. Knickers grew in width and length and were called 'plus fours'. White
linen was popular during the summer. And during the winter, an outstanding
American coat was popular - the racoon coat. These were very popular with
the college men. The slouch hat was made of felt and could be rolled up and
packed into a suitcase. A wool suit was only $15.85. Garters were 40 cents.
All this and a 12" long cigarette holder. Cigarettes were 10 cents a pack.
Women: By 1921 the longer skirt was back - some long and uneven at the bottom. The short skirt was popular by 1925. This period was called the Flapper Age. No bosom, no waistline, and hair nearly hidden under a cloche hat. This decade began the present hey-dey for the manufacturing of cosmetics. Powder, lipstick, rouge, eyebrow pencil, eye shadow, colored nails. They had it all! AND pearls.
This period marked the spread of ready-to-wear fashion. More women were wage earners and did not want to spent time on fittings. The status symbol aspect of fashion was losing its importants as class distinctions were becoming blurred. Inexpensive fashion became available. America moved ahead of other countries mass production of contemporary style clothing for women. America even produced several designers of this fashion including Jane Derby.
BOOKS ON FASHION AND DESIGN
| GT596.E9 1986 | History of 20th Century Fashion | Very good chapter on Developments in fashion manufacture from 1918-1939 and one on New fashion makers 1920-1930. . |
| GT738.B97 1987 | A Visual History of Costume: The Twentieth Century | Photographs or illustrations. Presented by year, each includes a note, information about the head and the body and a description of accessories. |
| GT605.H35 1992 | Common Threads: A Parade of American Clothing | Includes an overview of the 20th century, then chapters on contributors to changes in fashion. If you only see one book, this is the one. It has photographs of people during the 20s including the dandy outfits of the Ku Klux Klan to Eleanor Roosevelt's enticing wardrobe. |
containing
as much as one half-ounce of alcohol unlawful. This one unsuccessful act brought
about much of the flavor of the Jazz Age or Roaring Twenties as we know them.
This was a period of prohibition
and intolerance, speakeasies, flappers, gangsters,
and crime. Hootch was supplied by Dutch
Schultz and Al
Capone. The Nineteenth
Amendment had passed the previous year allowing women the right to vote in
national elections. At the beginning of the decade the US was paralyzed
by the grip of the red
scare . Racial tensions were high and quotas were set for immigrants
coming into America. The
Klan was very active during this period. The decade was a wonderful one for
all of the arts and literature in America. Technology
grew - the country shrunk - as popularity of automobiles, radios, and movies
exploded. Buying on credit or installments
was an outcome of the industrial age. In the fall of 1929, the New
York Stock Exchange was more active than it had ever been. Economists predicted
a permanent high plateau. By October 24, 1929, Black
Thursday, the stock
market crashed and panic broke out. Banks closed. The nation stayed in this
depression through the end of the twenties and most of the thirties. Check out the Regulatory environment
of the 1920s
Library of Congress browsing
areas :
E -F - U.S. History [ Remember, history covers
all areas of the library.]
Important
Historic and Cultural Events
|
| REF E169.1G664 1995 | The Columbia Chronicles of American Life: 1910-1992 | Covers topics in the news, entertainment and more - by year. |
| REF E178.5.A48 1981 | Album of American History | This is a great book to give the reader the real flavor of the decade because it is made up of photographs, captions, and brief entries. |
| REF E169.1 G665 1987 | American Chronicle: 6 Decades in American Life 1920-1980 | Overview, economic, social, consumer, entertainment, and vital information by year |
| REF E174.D52 | Dictionary of American History | From very brief to multi-page signed entries on topics in American History. |
| REF HA202.B87 1975 | Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1970 | 2 volume set. Statistical tables and explanations from the Bureau of the Census. Covers all aspects of American life. |
| REF E169.1A471872 1995 | America in the 20th Century | 1920-1929 is covered in volume 3. Typical of Marshall Cavendish, this encyclopedic set is accessible and gives easy to use background information for this decade. Covers from art to transportation. |
| REF E173.A793 | The Annals of America | Use volumes 14 and 15. Set contains essays and excepts from important writers and on important topics of the time. Most valuable for this research. |
| REF E169.M45 1995 | The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life from Prohibition through World War II | Neat book for writers. Includes slang, crime, transportation, clothing, entertainment, and great events. Mostly lists - arranged dictionary-style. |
"There's nothing surer; the rich
get rich and the poor get poorer." was considered the credo of the roaring 20s. Chicago
was hot! Harlem was hot with Jazz and the so-called "devil's music'! (The
Cotton Club was open to both whites and blacks and packed nightly.) Jazz was hot! Bessie
Smith sang the Blues. But most of the best-selling pop hits were sentimental
ballads (I'll Be
With You in Apple Blossom Time and I'm
Just Wild About Harry), old-fashioned walzes (Three
O'Clock in the Morning and Deep
in My Heart) , and nonsense songs (Yes,
We Have No Bananas and I
Wish That I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate). Fanny
Brice sang Rose
of Washington Square and Second
Hand Rose in the Ziegfeld Follies
and
Vaudeville. The Grand
Ole Opry was transmitted on the radio from Nashville in 1925.
Al
Jolson sang his wonderful songs.
People were going places and singing about them; Chicago; That Toddling Town, Carolina in the Morning, Way Down Yonder in New Orleans, California Here I Come (love YouTube), Alabamy Bound, and Puttin' on the Ritz. Try the other versions, I just love Young Frankenstein. :-) Irving Berlin wrote it.
LINKS
BOOKS
Library of Congress browse areas: ML, look
by musical era
| REF ML200.H15 1996 | A Chronicle of American Music 1700-1995 | Arranged by year, historical highlights, world cultural highlights, American art and literature, music - commercial and cultural. |
| REF ML197.S634 1994 | Music Since 1900 | Arranged by day, includes important premiers and musical events. |
| REF ML128.S37L4 1984 | The Great American Song Thesaurus | Arranged by year, summary of world and musical events, list of important songs. |
| REF ML390.S983 1986 | Show Tunes 1905-1985 | Features important composers. Lists their shows and the published music for each show. |
Broadway reached an all time peak. Gershwin was hot with An American in Paris, Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein created Show Boat starring Helen Morgan. Fred and Adele Astaire opened in Funny Face. There were 268 plays offered in New York City in the year 1927. This compaired with 50-60 in the 1970s.
Radio networks began during this decade: David Sarnoff's NBC and William Paley's CBS both went on the air. Billboard Magazine published its first charts in 1928. Bing Crosby and other crooner singing stars aided their sales with their live and recorded radio performances.
BOOKS
| REF PN2189.L85 1983 | Twentieth Century Theatre | A theater buff's bible. This book lists and describes by year premiers, productions, revivals, events, births/death/debuts in both America and Great Britain. |
| REF PN1993.5.U6H55 | The Transformation of Cinema | Volumes 1 and 2 are needed to cover this decade. A great source for information about early cinema. Photographs. |
| REF ML390.S983 1986 | Show Tunes: 1905-1985 | Limited because it only covers only Jerome Kerns and Irving Berlin [try this letter to Irving Berlin] from this era. Worth a look for these two - because it lists plays, performances, theater information, and published songs. |
This page designed,
written, and maintained by Peggy
Whitley, 1999.
Revised Nov 2008 pwhitley
Subject
Guides |
Kingwood College Library
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Twentieth
Century Decades |
19th
Century Decades