The twenties in America

Bibliographic Information

The twenties in America

Paul A. Carter

(The American history series)

Harlan Davidson, c1975

2nd ed

  • : pbk

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Note

Reprint. Originally published: 2nd ed. New York : Crowell, c1975. (Crowell American history series)

"Suggestions for further study": p. 106-116

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A principal theme of the 1920s was "paradox," and Professor Carter explains the tensions that existed between city and country, progress and nostalgia for the past, progressive attitudes and the persistence of bigotry. Carter also provides incisive reevaluations of some archetypal figures of the era, such as Coolidge, Lindbergh, and Hemingway, and suggests new ways of considering events and developments such as jazz, popular sports, the Scopes trial, and isolationism.

Table of Contents

One: Of Bohemians and Consumers 1 Lost Generation, or Joyful Pioneers? 3 Radicalism Rampant, or Conservatism Triumphant? 11 Sports, Jazz, and Other Vocations 21 Two: Of Coolidge and Hemingway 35 The Talkative President-and the Critics 39 Big Society and Belittled Religion 50 The Hero in an Unheroic Age 59 Three: Of Town and Country 71 The Peerless Leader and the Gotham Cockney 76 The Ape in the Tree of Knowledge 83 Megalopolis versus Gopher Prairie 92 Suggestions for Further Study 106 Index 117

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