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Mass Media and the Jazz Age 4.8 Hollywood!! • Few people outside of Los Angeles had heard of the subdivision northwest of the city • Early 1900s filmmakers began moving there • Attracted by large work force in LA • Variety of landscapes • From deserts to snowy mountains • Hollywood soon became the center of the entertainment film industry Mass Media •What is it? •“The print and broadcast methods of communicating information to large numbers of people” •Leads to a national culture •Before this time the United States had been largely a collection of regional cultures • “The Jazz Singer” • 1927 First Sound Film • Huge success Movies • 125 million people in the US • Sold roughly 80 million tickets a week! • Moviemaking became a huge business! Greta Garbo • Born in Stockholm, Sweden • Glamorous star from the silent screen • Moved to speaking roles • Began her career modeling for department stores Charlie Chaplin • Delighted Americans since 1914 • Chaplin added music to his films and continued his soundless performances Newspapers and Magazines • Followed the off-screen lives of their favorite stars • Newsprint doubles from 1914-1927 • Started publishing tabloids – – – – compact newspaper large headlines few words lots of pictures • Huge rise in popularity in newspapers and magazines • Helped make a common popular culture – Share the same information – Read about the same events and ideas – See the same fashions Radio • Barely existed until the 1920s • Few Americans had radio sets – Homemade – Used to communicate with one another one-on-one • 1920 Frank Conrad-worked for Westinghouse Electric • Set up a radio transmitter in his garage – Began broadcasting programs regularly • First commercial radio station Pittsburgh’s KDKA • By 1922 more than 500 stations Jazz Sweeps the Nation… • • • • Comes from Blues in New Orleans African American music of the south Arrives with black musicians in Northern Cities Radio listeners began hearing the new sound in the 1920s • 2/3 of radio time is devoted to Jazz!! • The 1920s came to be called the Jazz age Duke Ellington • Played in clubs at night and painted signs during the day • Moved to New York with several other musicians • Jazz band leader and composer • Wrote at least 1,000 pieces in his long career • Music for concerts • Broadway shows • Films • Operas Louis Armstrong • Born and grew up in New Orleans • Jazz trumpet player • Performed improvised extended solos • Made solos become key elements of jazz ensemble performances “The Lost Generation” • Rejected the quest for material possessions that many Americans were captivated with • The Lost Generation-Intellectuals that felt disconnected from their country and its values • Many moved to Europe (Paris) Ernest Hemingway Gertrude Stein • Both part of the Lost Generation • Both moved to Paris • Hemingway introduced Stein’s term the lost Generation to the public in his 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises F. Scott Fitzgerald • Part of the lost generation and Jazz age • Some believed he helped create the flapper culture • 1920 novel This Side of Paradise • 1925 The Great Gatsby • Concentrated on the sophisticated/wealthy Americans of the Jazz Age • He found them to be selfcentered and shallow The Harlem Renaissance • New York City’s Harlem • Becomes the cultural center for African Americans • Number of African Americans living in Harlem • 1914- 50,000 • 1930- about 200,000 • Jazz, Poetry, Literature, and Activism • Harlem Renaissance-African American literary awakening of the 1920s, centered in Harlem James Weldon Johnson • Early leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) • Writer • Inspired younger members of the Harlem group • Most famous work • 1927 God’s Trombones • Collection of sermons modeled after the style of traditional black preaching Zora Neale Hurston • Anthropologist and author of: • “Of Mules and Men” • “Their Eyes Were Watching God” – Expressed the longing for independence felt by many women black and white Langston Hughes • Poet, short story writer, journalist and playwright • One of the most famous and influential members of the Harlem Renaissance • Wrote about the joys and difficulties of being human, being American, and being African American • I, Too by Langston Hughes - Poetry Archive • The Negro Speaks of Rivers by Langston Hughes - Poetry Archive