Changing Society: Organized Crime
Women of the 20s
Education and Popular Culture
Harlem Renaissance
100

An underground saloon where illegal liquor was sold.

Speakeasy

100

This is a description of a flapper.

A modern young woman of the 1920 who cut their hair short, smoked, and were independent.

100
This is what really helped the emergence of pop culture in the United States

The radio

100

This is the most famous poet during the Harlem Renaissance

Langston Hughes

200

Who was a bootlegger?

A person who would run or provide illegal alcohol.

200

This was the first woman to fly across the Atlantic.

Amelia Earhart

200

This is the term coined by F. Scott Fitzgerald that defined the 1920s

The Jazz Age

200

This is what the term Harlem Renaissance means

This is the rebirth of African American culture

300
This is the definition of Prohibition.

The banning of the manufacture, distribution, and sale of alcohol.

300

This is the amendment that granted women's suffrage

19th

300

This is who John Scopes was and what his trial was about

He was a teacher in Tennessee who was prosecuted for teaching evolution in high school.

300

This is what the the Harlem Renaissance was

A celebration of African American culture through literature and art

400

These are two reasons why Prohibition was difficult to enforce.

Alcohol was imported from other countries, there was not enough money budgeted to enforce the law, law officials took bribes, organized crime, and people did not support the law and did not obey it.

400

This is the definition of the "double-standard" for women in the 1920s

These are stricter social and moral standards for women than men.

400

This is what fundamentalists believed about religion and alcohol

That the Bible should be taken literally and that alcohol is the root of domestic abuse, crime, poverty...

400

This is what the Great Migration was and how it contributed to the Harlem Renaissance

A mass movement of African Americans from the South to Northern cities and it expanded black culture.

500
This is a description of who Al Capone was, how he got caught, and what happened to him.

He was the most infamous mobster, he was charged with tax evasion, and he went to Alcatraz prison.

500

This describes how traditional roles changed for women in the 1920s

Women had more freedom from the home environment, more educational and work opportunities, flappers image increased acceptability

500

These are four celerities from the 1920s and what they were known for....

Babe Ruth (baseball), Charles Lindbergh (pilot), Amelia Earhart (pilot), Louis Armstrong and Bessie Smith (singers), F. Scott Fitzgerald (writer), Duke Ellington (composer)

500

This was the goal of the writers, poets, musicians, and everyone who contributed to the Harlem Renaissance

To combat racism and racial stereotypes by educating people about black culture

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