What Nations did they reject
The League of Nations
popularization of new dances like the "what"
like the Charleston
what was the name of the Generation?
The "Lost Generation"
The period saw a shift toward specialization, such as "who"?
Henry Ford’s assembly line
actories operated more efficiently, allowing what?
Allowing lower prices and higher worker incomes during the 1920s.
What Treaty did the U.S. reject
The Treaty of Versailles
the Charleston, and the breaking of "what"
of racial boundaries through music.
what did the "Lost Generation" experience?
it experienced profound disillusionment.
However, this period also experienced the rise of "what"
The rise of protectionist policies and significant trade disruptions, leading to economic imbalances, though productivity grew in industrialized nations between the wars.
focusing on specific tasks rather than complete "what"
Production, and factories
what is U.S. involvement in post-world war 1
After World War I, the United States pivoted toward isolationism, rejecting the League of Nations and prioritizing domestic issues, despite emerging as a top global economic power.
what is the cultural developments and individual contributions in the 1920s of the jazz age
The Jazz Age of the 1920s was a transformative era of cultural rebellion, technological advancement, and artistic explosion, named by F. Scott Fitzgerald to describe the "roaring" spirit of liberation following World War I.
what is social change?
Social change means the way people live, work, and treat each other transforms over time
what is the basic economic of trade, cost, specialization, productivity, and price incentives?
The basic economics of trade, cost, specialization, productivity, and price incentives revolve around the fundamental principle that resources are scarce and that individuals, firms, and nations can maximize their well-being by producing what they are best at and trading for the rest.
what is the specialization can improve standard of living and productivity
The primary specialization that dramatically improved productivity and the standard of living in the post-World War I era (the 1920s) was the industrial application of mass production techniques and the division of labor, often exemplified by the assembly line and the use of interchangeable parts.
Why did the United States rejecting the League of Nations and the Treaty of Versailles
To focus on domestic affairs
Key contributions included "what"
Duke Ellington’s compositions, Louis Armstrong's scat singing, and the "classic blues" of singers like Bessie Smith.
In what place did the woman gained the right to vote?
Western countries.
marked by high "what"
Inflation, debt, and structural adjustments.
How the specialization can improve standard of living and productivity
widespread use of electricity, allowing machines to do more work and enabling faster, cheaper production methods.
How did the high-energy, improvised nature of jazz music influence the fashion and behavior of flappers, who challenged traditional gender roles?
The high-energy, improvised nature of 1920s jazz music directly inspired the flapper fashion of short, loose-fitting dresses and bobbed hair, designed for unrestricted movement while dancing the Charleston.
Jazz Age was a transformative era of cultural rebellion, fueled by "what" ?
by the Great Migration, Prohibition, and technological advances like radio and phonograph records.
what did many woman increased their "?what?" in the workforce.
increased their presence in the workforce.
Beyond reducing production costs, how did Henry Ford’s assembly line techniques affect worker wages, turnover, and the overall labor structure
To stabilize this, Ford doubled wages to $5-a-day, slashed work hours, and introduced a paternalistic "Sociological Department" to monitor worker lifestyles, ultimately reducing turnover and fostering a new, stable, middle-class workforce.
How did the War Industries Board and other WWI government agencies encourage the adoption of standardized production techniques that were later applied to consumer goods?
During World War I, the War Industries Board (WIB) encouraged standardized production by limiting product variety, setting manufacturing quotas, and allocating raw materials to maximize efficiency.