Women also have the right to vote, but some women do not use this right as they think they are men. Although other women think that this is an opportunity to participate in politics. Women still do not have the same powers as men, but women have participated in committees across the country and are focusing on improving social problems. When girls go on to university after graduating from high school, they go on to private universities or all girls' universities. In North Carolina, UNC allowed female graduate students to acquire accommodation in 1921.
Jazz era is an explosion to music of African-American culture. At the end of the First World War, economic growth and social change. During that time, Americans began to relax and started hobbies. Prohibited order has just been approved, alcohol is not included, but obtaining is legally difficult. At that time, the alcohol club was called "speakeasies". "Speakeasies" exchanges Americans with other people, engages in drinking, and gives opportunities to oppose traditional culture. Some people call it a modernist.
During the Harlem Renaissance, music was also a prominent feature of African-American culture. Many of those who have seen African-American music use the word "jazz era", especially the words blues and jazz, as a feature of the Renaissance. However, both jazz and blues are imported from Harlem. They are derived from what African Americans experienced at the turn of the century in southern cities such as New Orleans, Memphis and St. Louis. Starting from these origins, these forms of music spread all over the country north to Chicago and then arrived in New York a few years before the First World War.
For me, if it is not my imagination, is this period called jazz era? Is not it the KKK era? In the 1920s, most Americans did not even listen to jazz. I did not even touch or touch them. By the end of the decade, 40% of Americans have not yet had a radio, and during this decade only a handful of radio stations (the main city stations) have done jazz. This is a special underground music mainly related to African Americans, and fashionable young people with disposable income. However, in the long run, jazz won and KKK lost. This is the point. This is a long game. My mother was listening to the radio from a young age, but for decades after jazz invented, he lived in swing and big bands, and then loved rock music. It is by no means a zero sum game. People invest as much as possible. This is an exchange. People trying to resist this process are always poor - obviously poor