This Is Why The 1920s Were GREAT

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  • Опубликовано: 8 дек 2024

Комментарии • 170

  • @footballlvnlady
    @footballlvnlady 6 месяцев назад +76

    My grandparents got engaged in 1924 and married in 1925. I have a picture of their engagement. My grandfather is sitting on the running board of a Model T. My grandma is sitting on his lap. She has her arm around my grandpa’s neck. They are both laughing.

    • @shereesmazik5030
      @shereesmazik5030 3 месяца назад +1

      Wow , that really rugged on my heartstrings. What a gift for future family !

  • @susiefairfield7218
    @susiefairfield7218 6 месяцев назад +125

    Always liked the picture of my Grandmother from the 20s, she wasn't a flapper, but she did follow her heart and make her own decisions, for which, I am truly grateful

    • @bluebox2000
      @bluebox2000 6 месяцев назад +8

      And she may have been a Suffragist. Unfortunately the derogatory term "suffragette" is what is more commonly used today out of ignorance.

    • @GlennDuke-yc5ky
      @GlennDuke-yc5ky 5 месяцев назад +3

      Flappers fascinate me. Too bad about the vote!

    • @sevenandthelittlestmew
      @sevenandthelittlestmew 5 месяцев назад +4

      They called my grandmother Bobbie, because she burned her hair trying to curl it with an iron, and had to cut it in a bob. She kept it cut like that the rest of her life. 😊

  • @daguard411
    @daguard411 6 месяцев назад +37

    Thanks for noting the best blues singer ever, Bessie Smith. Thankfully I found so much of her music for free to download from the Library Of Congress.

  • @Dpb-236
    @Dpb-236 6 месяцев назад +37

    I am a Korean in the 1920s in America, where I always feel a faint longing. Ever since I was young, I really wanted to know and liked that time. Currently, I am very interested in the 1910s, from just before World War I to about 12-13 years in 1926.

  • @RevLeigh55
    @RevLeigh55 6 месяцев назад +31

    My grandmother was born in 1908. She was a flapper and I love how beautiful her clothing is in pictures. I recall her putting on 78 records and playing 20s music. She showed me the Charleston. Her dates in the 1920s usually involved bootleg hooch. She and my grandfather married in 1927.

  • @user-eh1gv5ld5o
    @user-eh1gv5ld5o 6 месяцев назад +19

    Your voice is literally dripping with your love and admiration for the 1920s! Great video, as always 🙂

  • @t-mar9275
    @t-mar9275 6 месяцев назад +27

    It was a great decade for diabetics after 1922, with the discovery of a practical method to produce insulin. Prior to that, diabetes was a death sentence. Insulin was arguably the greatest medical advance of the 1920s.'

    • @mackbolan5126
      @mackbolan5126 6 месяцев назад +6

      Don't forget penicillin.

    • @t-mar9275
      @t-mar9275 6 месяцев назад +14

      @@mackbolan5126 I didn't forget penicillin but made a conscientious decision not to include it, as it didn't have any impact on society until it was mass produced in the 1940s. Insulin, on the other hand, was being mass produced in late 1923 and had a huge effect on mid and late 1920's society.

  • @scottlarson1548
    @scottlarson1548 6 месяцев назад +21

    My father's grandparents grew up in late twenties. They told me they had good times but the Great Depression tainted any good memories they had of the decade and they never wanted to talk to me about it. They told me I would be better off learning about the 1930s because that's when they found out what was really happening in the U.S.

    • @PungiFungi
      @PungiFungi 5 месяцев назад +1

      The Great Depression indeed brought the 1920s to a crashing end and I am sure some people viewed it as a form of divine punishment for the "debauchery" that the country was indulging in.

    • @Voucher765
      @Voucher765 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​@PungiFungi And then World War II, The children of the 1920s were the soldiers of that conflict

  • @mickeyconnor830
    @mickeyconnor830 6 месяцев назад +13

    Thanks for the vid! Enjoying while sipping my morning coffee. 😊
    The 20s really do seem like they would've been some of the best years to be alive in America. I'm glad you create this kind of content so that we can all enjoy even a small view of the times. ❤

    • @alenahubbard1391
      @alenahubbard1391 6 месяцев назад +5

      If you were well off, and white, and straight, and male.

  • @hippiechick2112
    @hippiechick2112 5 месяцев назад +4

    You do wonderfully to educate us on the decade. My great-grandparents grew up during this time and it helps me to understand their world. Thank you.

  • @anthonythomas1504
    @anthonythomas1504 6 месяцев назад +18

    I was 14 in 1969. My great grandmother (b1904) was still alive. One Saturday morning she and I were watching Soul Train and she shouted: they're doing the Black Bottom! The BB is more a dance routine than eg, The Twist or Charleston. The BB is akin to a Cake Walk in that both derive from minstrels and both were considered politically incorrect by the 1950s and beyond.

    • @JJONNYREPP
      @JJONNYREPP 6 месяцев назад +2

      This Is Why The 1920s Was GREAT 0426am 7.6.24 RKO Pictures had an art deco logo....

  • @sirchadiusmaximusiii
    @sirchadiusmaximusiii 6 месяцев назад +15

    Great job man. Always impressed by your work.

  • @magdlynstrouble2036
    @magdlynstrouble2036 4 месяца назад +4

    The art/design style you described from 1925 on was called the Streamline Style or Art Moderne. Art Deco coexisted, but it was more feminine, with round roses, fountains, weeping willows, peacocks, fans, etc. It had a debt to Art Nouveau of the prior decades. Streamline/Moderne was based on speed, the zig zag, skyscrapers, machines. Both styles incorporated Egyptian motifs.

  • @ronaldalbertansley579
    @ronaldalbertansley579 4 месяца назад +5

    My grandmother was a teenager in the 1920s and she did some bad things like smoking and drinking as a teenager in the 1920s !

  • @nola281
    @nola281 5 месяцев назад +5

    My great grandmother was born in 1905 snd 17, 1922, she was a divorced single mother. Her first husband married another woman with her marriage license. She was a flapper then. I've seen pictures of her and I'm the copy of her. She passed nine months before i was born. I was given her name and from what I was told we're not that different.

  • @Zebred2001
    @Zebred2001 6 месяцев назад +28

    I'd really like to see you post a video explaining your personal interest in the 1920's. It always fascinates me how people came to develop their passions.

    • @binkydonna
      @binkydonna 12 дней назад +1

      I was born with minr. I always believed I lived in the 20's in my padt life.

  • @CrystalHogan-c7y
    @CrystalHogan-c7y 6 месяцев назад +6

    I love the fashion from that era especially the silk gowns wedding dresses every bride had a huge bouquet of flowers fabulous 😍😍😍😍

  • @Corgis175
    @Corgis175 6 месяцев назад +11

    My mother was born in 1923 and taught me the Charleston in the 1960's.

  • @marksadler4104
    @marksadler4104 5 месяцев назад +3

    My grandmother from the UK was in New York in the 1920s, have an amazing photograph of her from that time

  • @neil6958
    @neil6958 6 месяцев назад +8

    The 1920s, such a different different era.✈🛩

  • @janethammond5925
    @janethammond5925 5 месяцев назад +3

    There was so much about the 1920s that was iconic, which you covered here. I'm fascinated by that decade...love the swing music and atmosphere of the 40's too. But there's something about the joyous freedom of the 20's which is only comparable to the hippy/bohemian movement of the 1960's I think. Or maybe that's just me. 😊

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +2

    In Rockford Illinois we have a movie palace called The Coronado that is now a performing arts center since it was renovated and reopened in the early 2000s

  • @Gravitythief
    @Gravitythief 6 месяцев назад +5

    Excellent video! Your videos where you read a magazine or newspaper article are great, but I absolutely love your original videos - they are so well done! Thanks for all of the videos you make and post!

    • @JJONNYREPP
      @JJONNYREPP 6 месяцев назад

      This Is Why The 1920s Was GREAT 0417am 7.6.24 her taking masses of drugs, attending speakeasies... ahahaha..... nice. I'd have walked out with her.

  • @62Madison
    @62Madison 4 месяца назад +7

    I ❤ Felix the Cat, who became the world’s first TV star in 1926.

  • @ShinigamisBlade
    @ShinigamisBlade 6 месяцев назад +4

    Im excited to see the oppoaite video! But I do want to request you do a video exclusively on the types of dances and actually show them 😆 that would be really fun!

  • @CrystalHogan-c7y
    @CrystalHogan-c7y 6 месяцев назад +4

    I love the silent movies too😊

  • @charlestaylor3195
    @charlestaylor3195 6 месяцев назад +4

    I find it fascinating, it's the first time we've been able to easily compare and investigate what we did a century ago. It wasn't really that long ago.

  • @bucksdiaryfan
    @bucksdiaryfan 6 месяцев назад +6

    If you like the 20s, I recommend Scorcese's "Boardwalk Empire" -- pretty good drama that's very authentic to the time, they even have the huge dollar bills... when Buscemi's character peels a couple off for his wife I wondered how he could fit those bills in his pocket!

  • @IVWOR
    @IVWOR 6 месяцев назад +6

    Цікаве інформативне та пізнавальне відео. Дякую ❤️

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +2

    The Charleston Dance was a thing I associate with the movie It’s A Wonderful Life where Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed’s characters did that dance during the movie.

  • @aariley2
    @aariley2 5 месяцев назад +5

    The crazes were the way to drown out the horrors and tremendous loss in WWI. Same thing happened in the 1950's.

  • @curtismarean6963
    @curtismarean6963 2 месяца назад +1

    I think you made a great video about the '20s. There are quite a few folks who have no clue about the time period of the 20's or it's impact on our lives, even to this day! Thanks for a great vid! Best of luck to you!

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks for sharing about Felix the Cat. Felix was a major movie star long before Mickey Mouse came along. He was the first character to exhibit a human like personality so I understand.

  • @BrianRoberson-k7g
    @BrianRoberson-k7g 4 месяца назад +4

    the 1920's was when people discovered fun.

  • @edwardj64
    @edwardj64 5 месяцев назад +3

    One of the greatest things about the 1920s was America's manufacturing dominance during that time. The majority of radios, cars, appliances and gadgets were manufactured in factories throughout the country. A lot of urban centers and places no longer associated with manufactured products were the beating heart of modernity and the new technological age. The way the demand for iPhones, laptops, or OLED TVs (to say nothing of many cars) today are met by manufacturers in the far East, it must have been something when the latest and the greatest came from Detroit, Baltimore, Brooklyn, Trenton, and the like.

  • @PC-tz6kb
    @PC-tz6kb 6 месяцев назад +3

    You do a wonderful show & I love it! Thank you for educating, entertaining & making me laugh. I have been subbed for quite some time & I always enjoy your show.

  • @rebeccawhite7448
    @rebeccawhite7448 6 месяцев назад +2

    This was a great, fun and informative show💞Thank You 🙏🏻💐

  • @alandesouzacruz5124
    @alandesouzacruz5124 6 месяцев назад +5

    I really like the 1920s and the 1930s especially polish tango

  • @danhurst9048
    @danhurst9048 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is an excellent,informative video with great photos and clips...PLEASE keep them coming

  • @markbaston8147
    @markbaston8147 6 месяцев назад +2

    Most of the movies i own are silent. They were truly wonderful years for cinema.

  • @zero_bs_tolerance8646
    @zero_bs_tolerance8646 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you. Enjoyed, as always.

  • @lawriefoster5587
    @lawriefoster5587 5 месяцев назад +3

    As always, wonderful!! I wonder what your graduate studies will be on!!!

    • @The1920sChannel
      @The1920sChannel  5 месяцев назад +1

      I’ll continue in history, and probably also do some museum studies!

  • @brennocalderan2201
    @brennocalderan2201 6 месяцев назад +3

    I'd go back to the 1920s for a short vacation before coming back.
    Spending the days at a farm upstate New York or the Hollywood hills sounds amiable.

  • @J.M.Chadwick6
    @J.M.Chadwick6 5 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent presentation - as always!

  • @truecrimeboozer
    @truecrimeboozer 6 месяцев назад +2

    0:20 Absolutely!
    Unless you wanted a beer 😆

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +1

    A rock band called the Bangles had a song called Walk like An Egyptian in the 80s I believe.

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +1

    Have you ever heard of Max Raabe and the Palace Orchestra? They are a German orchestra that plays a lot of songs that were popular in the American 1920s and the Weimar period in Germany. Check them out on RUclips. They are in the style of the big bands of the era.

  • @BtA-k2h
    @BtA-k2h 6 месяцев назад +4

    This was great. I always love seeing your posts. Woulda been a great time to be alive!

  • @weylguy
    @weylguy 6 месяцев назад +3

    My father had lots of stuff he kept in the garage that was made in the 1920s. I never got over how well they were made, with brass and other metals, and even the then-new Bakelite plastic was neat. Now everything is cheap plastic and designed to wear out quickly, requiring you to buy another. On the other hand, the 1920s was an age of extreme decadence, Jim Crow and stupid behaviors like flagpole sitting.

  • @staleovenberg127
    @staleovenberg127 5 месяцев назад

    This was very well-produced, a good voice and good pace. I'll hereby subscribe.

  • @pisceanbeauty2503
    @pisceanbeauty2503 6 месяцев назад +2

    You have a great channel! Looking for the bad things about ‘20s companion piece.

  • @vilstef6988
    @vilstef6988 6 месяцев назад +4

    A really excellent overview of the decade! Thanks!
    A question. What is the music on the video opening? I rather like it.

    • @The1920sChannel
      @The1920sChannel  6 месяцев назад +2

      The song is “Sweet Mama” by Duke Ellington (1929 version) :)

  • @janerkenbrack3373
    @janerkenbrack3373 5 месяцев назад +1

    I'm going to defend Tunney in the supposed "long count" controversy.
    It wasn't actually a long count, but rather a regular count that started late. It started late because of the rules of the match.
    Dempsey was required to go to a neutral corner after he knocked down Tunney, as opposed to his traditional habit of standing over the downed fighter to hit him as he tried to stand, as he had famously done to Jess Willard. By the rules, the ref would not begin the count until the other fighter stepped to a neutral corner. The time it took for Dempsey to follow this rule accounts for all of the lost time in that incident.
    Tunney could have gotten up earlier.
    A close watching of the film shows clearly that Tunney had risen to a one leg crouch, with one knee still on the mat, and was watching the ref count and waiting until 9 to stand. This is still a practice in boxing, and many matches have a mandatory 8 count any time a fighter hits the mat.
    Two things to take away. First, that any delay in the time from knockdown to resumption of fighting was caused by Dempsey. And second, Tunney could have risen sooner, had that delay not happened.
    Gene Tunney was the better boxer.

  • @rhobot75
    @rhobot75 5 месяцев назад +1

    This one takes the cake!

  • @derekroberts6654
    @derekroberts6654 4 месяца назад +2

    I often wondered why a lot of bluesmen in those times were blind?? Blind Willie McTell, Blind Lemon, Blind Boy Fuller…

  • @james_baker
    @james_baker 5 месяцев назад +1

    great channel. 😻

  • @JJONNYREPP
    @JJONNYREPP 6 месяцев назад +3

    This Is Why The 1920s Was GREAT 0415am 7.6.24 charlie chaplin talkies..... amazed.

  • @pammienakh
    @pammienakh 5 месяцев назад

    Loved this video. Thank you!

  • @SagesseNoir
    @SagesseNoir 4 месяца назад +1

    Duke Ellington. I saw him in 1970s

  • @DocsChannel
    @DocsChannel 6 месяцев назад +4

    The Black Bottom (we don't say it anymore but...) was called the Negro Charleston in parts of the country... racism sucks but made it less talked about in the 30's and 40's and made it fade away. This of course is based on South Eastern ladies born in the 00's and 10's

    • @DocsChannel
      @DocsChannel 6 месяцев назад +1

      If anyone has differing knowledge I would love to hear it. Big fan of 20's dance and food.

    • @andrewom679
      @andrewom679 6 месяцев назад

      Racism is merely in group preference that was demonized by communists such as Leon Trotsky to set their opponents against one another.
      You are one of the useful idiots doing that for them.
      You could have a functional civilization, but you can't do that if someone who hates you might call you a racist.
      That would be a fate worse than death, wouldn't it?

  • @kidmohair8151
    @kidmohair8151 6 месяцев назад +5

    I shall await your "This is Why the 1920s Weren't Great" instalment.

    • @JJONNYREPP
      @JJONNYREPP 6 месяцев назад +1

      This Is Why The 1920s Was GREAT 0429am 7.6.24 they seem to have done away with prestige movies nowadays....

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 5 месяцев назад

      I just watched it on this channel. It was very interesting to see the good stuff and things that were not so good about the 20s.

  • @RemusKingOfRome
    @RemusKingOfRome 6 месяцев назад +2

    Great video. I bought a Art Deco TV stand, looks great. Modernism has no style, 20s was all style.

  • @alvincash3230
    @alvincash3230 3 месяца назад

    I'm in the midst of reading F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby." Which fits in so well with this channel.

  • @nallo69
    @nallo69 6 месяцев назад +1

    Good work! I really enjoyed it. Well....a little sugar coated I must admit. So I’ll wait for your post on the other side of the decade. Congrats

  • @cornsyruptrucker
    @cornsyruptrucker 3 месяца назад

    Flagpole sitting is amazing! It's like an ancient version of planking!

  • @sarahs5340
    @sarahs5340 5 месяцев назад +2

    🤍 Art Deco

  • @IanMichael-pj7fz
    @IanMichael-pj7fz 5 месяцев назад

    This was excellent!!

  • @meshgraphics
    @meshgraphics 5 месяцев назад

    Cool video. Very informative

  • @calvinguile1315
    @calvinguile1315 5 месяцев назад +1

    I would love to see an episode on animation and cartoons, and comic strip characters, I loved seeing Felix the cat in this episode ❤ when I think of the 20s, Felix is one of the first things I think of…

  • @MarcusZepeda
    @MarcusZepeda 6 месяцев назад +5

    1:26 umm the Victorian era ended in 1901. so the flappers weren't worry about Victorian gender roles, and by the way, there was still strict gender roles in the 1920s

  • @kerrygriffin578
    @kerrygriffin578 5 месяцев назад +1

    I read in a National Geographic that you could buy a Radio for like $500. that would be like 5 Grand today!

  • @GaleMeade
    @GaleMeade День назад

    This keeps going out

  • @davidmartin8211
    @davidmartin8211 6 месяцев назад +4

    It is to easy to cherry pick historical nuggets from any era.
    Don't forget:
    the financial exuberance led to the 1929 stock market crash.
    Prohibition led to an increase in crime and corruption.
    On the other hand, I remember seeing a picture of my great-grandmother, who lived in a rural area of the United States, with short hair and a typical late 1920s hat. Eg . The flapper style!!

    • @The1920sChannel
      @The1920sChannel  6 месяцев назад +3

      I’ll be covering the bad aspects of the 1920s in a video early next month as well ;)

    • @davidmartin8211
      @davidmartin8211 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@The1920sChannel I look forward to seeing a video about prohibition, bank robbers, and The moral decay brought up out by jazz!!

    • @jakevendrotti1496
      @jakevendrotti1496 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@davidmartin8211I'll be looking for Jim Crow. Politics. Economics.

  • @SamanthaN92
    @SamanthaN92 6 месяцев назад +5

    The 1920's is one of my favorite eras after the Edwardian era 💖

  • @1952jodianne
    @1952jodianne 5 месяцев назад +1

    The ideal, most beautiful flapper of the silver screen: obviously, Louise Brooks.

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +1

    Breakfast cereals started using sports celebrities to advertise their products.

  • @Sneakycat1971
    @Sneakycat1971 6 месяцев назад +2

    Hello good man, I like your channel and I have a request. Could you do your effective research and make a video about the stock market boom of the mid 1920s? I would like to know about how people got excited about the stock market and started participating in it. It was the biggest stock market participation by retail investors.

  • @Nunofurdambiznez
    @Nunofurdambiznez 6 месяцев назад

    I Don't WANT to know the "bad things"!! This video is perfect!

    • @jakevendrotti1496
      @jakevendrotti1496 6 месяцев назад +3

      How irresponsible. History includes the whole truth. I'll be goddamned if my great-grandchildren look at my life and think it was a peach. Let them know all of it. Not just movie clips from when I was alive, films I never even saw. Grow up.

  • @williamharvey8895
    @williamharvey8895 6 месяцев назад +5

    You forgot airships,

    • @wa1ufo
      @wa1ufo 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes! The Graf Zeppelin trip around the world! It was amazing! 🌝🌈😎🇺🇸

  • @Sokrabiades
    @Sokrabiades 6 месяцев назад +2

    No section on cars or suburbanization?

  • @Mr19thcenturyman
    @Mr19thcenturyman 6 месяцев назад +3

    Automobiles came of age. Closed cars became the norm.

  • @debbiem9218
    @debbiem9218 4 месяца назад +1

    People seemed to have so much more money back in the twenties but that was before the government imposed all these taxes on us. The twenties seemed to be such a "free" time in that everyone seemed so easy going, well to me anyway. I love watching your vides, thanks for making them!

    • @TerrellThomas1971
      @TerrellThomas1971 4 месяца назад +3

      People who had money had money but if you didn't have any....😢

  • @maxlinder5262
    @maxlinder5262 6 месяцев назад +2

    It was the end of a War & the beginning of freedom for the American woman ....then there was no stopping ....😊.. just my opinion... Thank you for extending the video .... That was a great asset.....

  • @chesthoIe
    @chesthoIe 6 месяцев назад +1

    1:56 "She could be labelled a flapper..." without even one single solitary flap.

  • @michaelmcgee8543
    @michaelmcgee8543 6 месяцев назад +1

    interesting!

  • @susanb2015
    @susanb2015 3 месяца назад

    Watch The Roaring Twenties 1939 starring James Cagney.

  • @johnspooner7020
    @johnspooner7020 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great for some not others

  • @MrEab2010
    @MrEab2010 5 месяцев назад +2

    if you were white, largely male and rich.

  • @John-wg6xw
    @John-wg6xw 5 месяцев назад

    Always great videos! FYI, When you sign off you should be saying "So long for now all you Sheiks and Sheba's!" and not "Sheiks and Gals" . 😊

  • @livrowland171
    @livrowland171 3 месяца назад

    The 20s appeal a lot to me, but I realise the fun aspects applied most if you were young and rich.. Plus those years didn't last very long (and there were bad aspects too, as you mention in another video). Maybe it's partly that they are long ago enough to have a charm of byegone times, but at the same time they are somehow the start of modernity and more relatable than earlier times. Is it that the era is still just in living memory? Or that we have films and recordings from it, not just sepia photos, or paintings and statues? Whatever the reason, it feels to me the 1st World War is a huge turning point and Edwardian times seem much more distant. There are the technological aspects, with telephone, radio, cinrma etc all playing a much bigger role and motor cars becoming much more common. Also, socially it is more relatable with greater freedom for women, especially, and the fashions seem fun, not restrictive as before.

  • @malconsak
    @malconsak 3 месяца назад +4

    We're now in 2024. Do you think 100 years from now people will make these videos about us? 😅

    • @vicsepi
      @vicsepi Месяц назад

      No because Jesus will come back and get his church. I’ll be in heaven so I won’t care. But when I’m in heaven I would love to ask GOD if I can relive through this decade. And see all of history. That would be awesome

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад

    Rock music of the 50s and 60s .

  • @daviddempsay4930
    @daviddempsay4930 3 месяца назад

    Was that a very young Joan Crawford at (1:52)?

  • @DescendantDroog
    @DescendantDroog 6 месяцев назад

    What is the source of the image of the group at 4:20? Its a striking one

  • @BubbeParker
    @BubbeParker 5 месяцев назад +2

    Weimar Republic: "What was so great about it?"

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +1

    Later people thought TV was magic.

  • @jahirareyes1102
    @jahirareyes1102 6 месяцев назад +1

    And of course this view of the 1920s is almost fully American-centric which is no problem really as it is understandable that the roaring 20s is understood more in American terms.The only other countries iam certain about something similar like this occurring is perhaps France and Germany ,other western countries are quite absent in all this and far less non western countries.Also,the 1920s in America women's movement i suppose it failed because the later decades didnt show any real progression so much,so yeah...

  • @survivingthetimes
    @survivingthetimes 3 месяца назад +1

    Women started voting, then look what happened.

  • @paulbobier7857
    @paulbobier7857 2 месяца назад

    What is the song you open each video with?

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 5 месяцев назад +1

    Would flappers be similar to the “flower children “ of the 1960s-70s? Also feminists?