Deck 23: A Clash of Cultures, 1920-1929

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Question
Charlie Chaplin is best associated with:

A) politics
B) muckraking journalism
C) alternative comedy
D) stand-up comedy
E) slapstick comedy
Use Space or
up arrow
down arrow
to flip the card.
Question
The Roaring Twenties pitted a cosmopolitan urban America against the values of an insular rural America.
Question
Flappers was the slang word for illegal drinking establishments in the 1920s.
Question
Conservative moralists saw the flappers as a positive influence on society.
Question
The Harlem Renaissance grew out of the fast-growing African American community in Atlanta.
Question
When Hemingway published his first novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926), he used the phrase "lost generation" as the book's epigraph.
Question
The consumer culture generated bewildering changes in everyday life.
Question
Cultural conflicts resulted largely from explosive tensions between rural and urban ways of life.
Question
The success of mass production made mass consumption less important than ever.
Question
During the 1920s, scientists' ideas about the nature of the universe inspired modernist artists to try new techniques.
Question
In the political arena, reactionaries and rebels battled for control of:

A) people who had been lied to about the war
B) a postwar society driven by conflict
C) the southern vote
D) the northern cities
E) President Woodrow Wilson's legacy
Question
In 1920, what percentage of homes in America had electricity?

A) 60
B) 35
C) 50
D) 25
E) 75
Question
The nation's total wealth almost tripled between 1920 and 1930, while wage workers enjoyed record-breaking increases in average income.
Question
The NAACP favored militant protests over legal challenges as a way to end racial discrimination.
Question
Paul Gauguin acknowledged that the upheavals of cultural modernism and the aftermath of the war produced "an epoch of progress."
Question
Albert Einstein was a member of Al Capone's gang in Chicago.
Question
Jazz music inspired rural youth to remember their culture's musical roots.
Question
What event pushed the development of the airplane?

A) the development of the car
B) advertising on the radio
C) political pressure
D) the defense industry
E) World War I
Question
The major American prophets of modernist literature lived in Europe.
Question
The first radio station to begin broadcasting regularly scheduled programs was located in:

A) Detroit, Michigan
B) New York, New York
C) Cleveland, Ohio
D) Pittsburg, Pennsylvania
E) Boston, Massachusetts
Question
Harold Edward "Red" Grange is best associated with:

A) being a great leader
B) football
C) boxing
D) baseball
E) being a Communist
Question
Petting parties were:

A) opportunities for young men and women to experiment sexually with each other
B) opportunities for young men and women to learn about proper treatment of dogs and cats
C) opportunities to raise money for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
D) visits to the zoo so young people could get away from their parents
E) parents' chance to teach their children proper morals
Question
After encountering strong resistance, Mabel Puffer and Arthur Hazzard:

A) were married in New Hampshire
B) were married in New York
C) were married in Canada
D) were never allowed to marry
E) were really not engaged to be married
Question
In 1920, how many cars were registered in the United States?

A) 4 million
B) 6 million
C) 8 million
D) 10 million
E) 11 million
Question
All of the following could be associated with flappers EXCEPT:

A) bobbed hair
B) Victorian values
C) smoking and drinking
D) swearing
E) petting
Question
Which amendment to the Constitution is known as the Prohibition amendment?

A) Seventeenth
B) Eighteenth
C) Nineteenth
D) Twentieth
E) Twenty-first
Question
James Weldon Johnson coined the term:

A) bootlegger
B) progressivism
C) flapper
D) Negro
E) Aframerican
Question
The Roaring Twenties was dubbed the "Jazz Age" by:

A) Upton Sinclair
B) Ernest Hemingway
C) Langston Hughes
D) Louis Armstrong
E) F. Scott Fitzgerald
Question
The desire to restore traditional values and social stability in 1920 led voters to elect as president:

A) Woodrow Wilson
B) Calvin Coolidge
C) Theodore Roosevelt
D) Warren G. Harding
E) William Jennings Bryan
Question
Who was once known as the "Lone Eagle"?

A) W. E. B. Du Bois
B) Henry Ford
C) Charles Lindbergh
D) Woodrow Wilson
E) Marcus Garvey
Question
William Harrison "Jack" Dempsey is best associated with:

A) football
B) baseball
C) horse racing
D) boxing
E) radio
Question
Who celebrated the jazz era's spontaneity and sensual vitality?

A) Sherwood Anderson
B) Countee Cullen
C) James Weldon Johnson
D) Upton Sinclair
E) F. Scott Fitzgerald
Question
Conservative moralists saw the flappers as just another sign of:

A) progress
B) equality
C) women's rights
D) a degenerating society
E) the work of the devil
Question
What were the professional baseball leagues for African Americans called?

A) Negro Leagues
B) Black Leagues
C) African American Leagues
D) Minor Leagues
E) Inner City Leagues
Question
The "House That Ruth Built" is known as:

A) Wrigley Field
B) Yankee Stadium
C) Red Sox Field
D) Tiger Stadium
E) Ebbets Field
Question
The movement of southern blacks to the North:

A) was called the Great Migration
B) created the rise of the KKK
C) saw many African Americans return to Africa
D) was so large that southern agriculture was interrupted
E) meant industry could no longer hire whites
Question
Amelia Earhart:

A) was the first aviator to fly around the world
B) was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic
C) was the first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic
D) was the first woman elected to Congress
E) was an advocate of Prohibition
Question
The novel This Side of Paradise concerned:

A) immigrant life in New York City
B) the lax enforcement of Prohibition
C) modernist student life at Princeton
D) fundamentalist attacks on modernism
E) the beginnings of Miami's tourist industry
Question
Which one of the following is associated with Detroit, Michigan?

A) airplane industry
B) socialism
C) farming
D) entertainment industry
E) automobile industry
Question
The amendment to the Constitution that barred the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors went into effect in:

A) 1911
B) 1920
C) 1922
D) 1928
E) 1932
Question
Baseball, like football, tended to attract:

A) large crowds of spectators
B) women spectators
C) black spectators
D) lower-class spectators
E) immigrant spectators
Question
Which of the following did W.E.B. Du Bois say in his opposition to Marcus Garvey?

A) "We have to rid ourselves of this viper."
B) "He will help only his friends and not the great mass of black people."
C) "He thinks that black people are only good enough to be plumbers."
D) "He believes himself to be the very second coming of Christ."
E) He is "the most dangerous enemy of the Negro race. . . . He is either a lunatic or a traitor."
Question
Gertrude Stein was a(n):

A) disc jockey
B) Dada artist
C) experimentalist poet
D) freedom fighter in World War I
E) member of Congress
Question
The NAACP emphasized:

A) legal action against discrimination
B) the formation of a black political party
C) vocational and technical education
D) Garvey's concept of social and political separation of blacks
E) strictly black membership
Question
Marcus Garvey:

A) sought reconciliation with southern whites
B) said blacks should return to Africa
C) was a revered jazz saxophonist
D) helped lead the suffragist movement
E) was allied with W. E. B. Du Bois
Question
Jazz:

A) was a European innovation emerging from modern classical music
B) blended several musical traditions
C) was invented by Benny Goodman
D) helped calm the fears of rural fundamentalists
E) inspired rebellious youth to violence
Question
In physics, the theory that the fundamental concepts of space, time, matter, and energy are not distinct, independent things with stable dimensions was developed by:

A) Albert Einstein
B) Isaac Newton
C) Werner Heisenberg
D) Max Planck
E) Sir Francis Bacon
Question
Ernest Hemingway wrote of:

A) rational people dedicated to traditional values
B) "real" life punctuated by the doomed, war-tainted love affairs of young Americans
C) patriotic fervor among the American expatriate writers in Paris
D) masculinity and a desperate search for life
E) hope and happiness in America's heartland
Question
The horrors of World War I accelerated:

A) the need to rearm
B) the formation of the United Nations
C) the birth of computers
D) rebellion in the United States
E) the rise of modernism in the arts
Question
The novels of Ernest Hemingway:

A) portrayed utopian communities in a socialist society
B) attacked the corruption of machine politics in the large cities
C) traced the philosophical connections between twentieth-century America and eighteenth-century Britain
D) described the frenetic, hard-drinking lifestyle and the cult of robust masculinity that Hemingway himself epitomized
E) documented "the greatest, gaudiest spree in history"
Question
Who developed the theoretical basis for quantum physics?

A) Albert Einstein
B) Isaac Newton
C) Max Planck
D) Werner Heisenberg
E) Sir Francis Bacon
Question
The Armory Show in 1913:

A) was a controversial exhibition of modern art
B) introduced many women to new clothing fashions
C) featured poetry readings by Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot
D) showed the continuing appeal of traditional values
E) led directly to woman suffrage
Question
All of the following were prophets of modern art and literature EXCEPT:

A) Ezra Pound
B) Edward Bellamy
C) Gertrude Stein
D) T. S. Eliot
E) Ernest Hemingway
Question
The Universal Negro Improvement Association:

A) sponsored black artists and writers
B) was led by Marcus Garvey
C) promoted Booker T. Washington's idea of racial peace through accommodation
D) was the forerunner of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
E) was conceived by W. E. B. Du Bois
Question
The Waste Land, a poem that became the favorite of many modernist readers because of its sense of disillusionment and its suggestion of a burned-out civilization, was written by:

A) Franz Boas
B) T. S. Eliot
C) Ezra Pound
D) Gertrude Stein
E) E. E. Cummings
Question
Who wrote "fed up With Jim Crow laws, / People who are cruel And afraid, / Who lynch and run, / Who are scared of me And me of them"?

A) Claude McKay
B) Jean Toomer
C) DuBose Heyward
D) Langston Hughes
E) W. E. B. Du Bois
Question
Modernists in art and literature came to believe that:

A) nature's reality can be captured in art
B) human reason ruled all of nature
C) science and art had no connection
D) art, in the end, had rules that should be obeyed
E) the subconscious fascinated some people and scared others
Question
Charles A. Lindbergh Jr., a St. Louis-based mail pilot, made the first solo transatlantic flight, traveling from New York to Paris in:

A) 1927
B) 1928
C) 1926
D) 1920
E) 1929
Question
The 1920s "New Era" was created by advances in all of the following EXCEPT:

A) communications
B) transportation
C) government-funded programs
D) business organization
E) the spread of mass consumerism
Question
In physics, the theory of relativity was developed and explained by:

A) Albert Einstein
B) Isaac Newton
C) Max Planck
D) Werner Heisenberg
E) Sir Francis Bacon
Question
What were the political and cultural manifestations of a new sense of identity among blacks in the 1920s?
Question
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
James Weldon Johnson

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
Question
Which court case or legal action brought the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments back to life?

A) Abrams v. United States (1918)
B) Schenck v. United States (1917)
C) Buchanan v. Worley (1917)
D) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
E) Guinn v. United States (1915)
Question
Who was the New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan who observed many young mothers struggling to provide for their growing families?

A) Gertrude Stein
B) T. S. Eliot
C) Margaret Sanger
D) Amelia Earhart
E) Ernest Hemingway
Question
How did the scientific work of Albert Einstein, Max Planck, and Werner Heisenberg influence American thought?
Question
Discuss the meaning and significance of the Harlem Renaissance.
Question
Who, in 1921, told Hemingway that he and his friends who had served in the war "are a lost generation?"

A) Gertrude Stein
B) Ezra Pound
C) T. S. Eliot
D) Franz Boas
E) Ernest Hemingway
Question
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
Charlie Chaplin

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
Question
Describe the influence of modernism in literature.
Question
Fitzgerald's stories during the 1920s were:

A) written for Hollywood
B) painfully autobiographical
C) not discovered until the 1960s
D) nonfiction
E) about science
Question
Trace the career of Marcus Garvey and show how his philosophy divided the African American community in the 1920s.
Question
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
T. S. Eliot

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
Question
Examine and evaluate the characteristics of the African American life in the 1920s.
Question
"The major theme in American society in the 1920s was the theme of cultural alienation." Defend this statement.
Question
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
F. Scott Fitzgerald

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
Question
Describe the defensive temper of the 1920s. What factors contributed to it?
Question
Define what the phrase "The Modernist Revolt" means.
Question
Discuss the emerging mass culture from the crucible of the Great War to the Great Depression.
Question
Hemingway used the phrase "lost generation" as the epigraph in:

A) A Farewell to Arms (1929)
B) This Side of Paradise (1920)
C) The Waste Land (1922)
D) Three Lives (1909)
E) his first novel
Question
Describe the variety of spectator sports common in the 1920s. How successful were they in capturing the imagination of Americans?
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Deck 23: A Clash of Cultures, 1920-1929
1
Charlie Chaplin is best associated with:

A) politics
B) muckraking journalism
C) alternative comedy
D) stand-up comedy
E) slapstick comedy
slapstick comedy
2
The Roaring Twenties pitted a cosmopolitan urban America against the values of an insular rural America.
True
3
Flappers was the slang word for illegal drinking establishments in the 1920s.
False
4
Conservative moralists saw the flappers as a positive influence on society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The Harlem Renaissance grew out of the fast-growing African American community in Atlanta.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
When Hemingway published his first novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926), he used the phrase "lost generation" as the book's epigraph.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The consumer culture generated bewildering changes in everyday life.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Cultural conflicts resulted largely from explosive tensions between rural and urban ways of life.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The success of mass production made mass consumption less important than ever.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
During the 1920s, scientists' ideas about the nature of the universe inspired modernist artists to try new techniques.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
In the political arena, reactionaries and rebels battled for control of:

A) people who had been lied to about the war
B) a postwar society driven by conflict
C) the southern vote
D) the northern cities
E) President Woodrow Wilson's legacy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
In 1920, what percentage of homes in America had electricity?

A) 60
B) 35
C) 50
D) 25
E) 75
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The nation's total wealth almost tripled between 1920 and 1930, while wage workers enjoyed record-breaking increases in average income.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The NAACP favored militant protests over legal challenges as a way to end racial discrimination.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Paul Gauguin acknowledged that the upheavals of cultural modernism and the aftermath of the war produced "an epoch of progress."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Albert Einstein was a member of Al Capone's gang in Chicago.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Jazz music inspired rural youth to remember their culture's musical roots.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What event pushed the development of the airplane?

A) the development of the car
B) advertising on the radio
C) political pressure
D) the defense industry
E) World War I
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The major American prophets of modernist literature lived in Europe.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The first radio station to begin broadcasting regularly scheduled programs was located in:

A) Detroit, Michigan
B) New York, New York
C) Cleveland, Ohio
D) Pittsburg, Pennsylvania
E) Boston, Massachusetts
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Harold Edward "Red" Grange is best associated with:

A) being a great leader
B) football
C) boxing
D) baseball
E) being a Communist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Petting parties were:

A) opportunities for young men and women to experiment sexually with each other
B) opportunities for young men and women to learn about proper treatment of dogs and cats
C) opportunities to raise money for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
D) visits to the zoo so young people could get away from their parents
E) parents' chance to teach their children proper morals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
After encountering strong resistance, Mabel Puffer and Arthur Hazzard:

A) were married in New Hampshire
B) were married in New York
C) were married in Canada
D) were never allowed to marry
E) were really not engaged to be married
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In 1920, how many cars were registered in the United States?

A) 4 million
B) 6 million
C) 8 million
D) 10 million
E) 11 million
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
All of the following could be associated with flappers EXCEPT:

A) bobbed hair
B) Victorian values
C) smoking and drinking
D) swearing
E) petting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which amendment to the Constitution is known as the Prohibition amendment?

A) Seventeenth
B) Eighteenth
C) Nineteenth
D) Twentieth
E) Twenty-first
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
James Weldon Johnson coined the term:

A) bootlegger
B) progressivism
C) flapper
D) Negro
E) Aframerican
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The Roaring Twenties was dubbed the "Jazz Age" by:

A) Upton Sinclair
B) Ernest Hemingway
C) Langston Hughes
D) Louis Armstrong
E) F. Scott Fitzgerald
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The desire to restore traditional values and social stability in 1920 led voters to elect as president:

A) Woodrow Wilson
B) Calvin Coolidge
C) Theodore Roosevelt
D) Warren G. Harding
E) William Jennings Bryan
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Who was once known as the "Lone Eagle"?

A) W. E. B. Du Bois
B) Henry Ford
C) Charles Lindbergh
D) Woodrow Wilson
E) Marcus Garvey
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
William Harrison "Jack" Dempsey is best associated with:

A) football
B) baseball
C) horse racing
D) boxing
E) radio
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Who celebrated the jazz era's spontaneity and sensual vitality?

A) Sherwood Anderson
B) Countee Cullen
C) James Weldon Johnson
D) Upton Sinclair
E) F. Scott Fitzgerald
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Conservative moralists saw the flappers as just another sign of:

A) progress
B) equality
C) women's rights
D) a degenerating society
E) the work of the devil
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
What were the professional baseball leagues for African Americans called?

A) Negro Leagues
B) Black Leagues
C) African American Leagues
D) Minor Leagues
E) Inner City Leagues
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The "House That Ruth Built" is known as:

A) Wrigley Field
B) Yankee Stadium
C) Red Sox Field
D) Tiger Stadium
E) Ebbets Field
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The movement of southern blacks to the North:

A) was called the Great Migration
B) created the rise of the KKK
C) saw many African Americans return to Africa
D) was so large that southern agriculture was interrupted
E) meant industry could no longer hire whites
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Amelia Earhart:

A) was the first aviator to fly around the world
B) was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic
C) was the first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic
D) was the first woman elected to Congress
E) was an advocate of Prohibition
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
The novel This Side of Paradise concerned:

A) immigrant life in New York City
B) the lax enforcement of Prohibition
C) modernist student life at Princeton
D) fundamentalist attacks on modernism
E) the beginnings of Miami's tourist industry
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which one of the following is associated with Detroit, Michigan?

A) airplane industry
B) socialism
C) farming
D) entertainment industry
E) automobile industry
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The amendment to the Constitution that barred the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors went into effect in:

A) 1911
B) 1920
C) 1922
D) 1928
E) 1932
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Baseball, like football, tended to attract:

A) large crowds of spectators
B) women spectators
C) black spectators
D) lower-class spectators
E) immigrant spectators
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Which of the following did W.E.B. Du Bois say in his opposition to Marcus Garvey?

A) "We have to rid ourselves of this viper."
B) "He will help only his friends and not the great mass of black people."
C) "He thinks that black people are only good enough to be plumbers."
D) "He believes himself to be the very second coming of Christ."
E) He is "the most dangerous enemy of the Negro race. . . . He is either a lunatic or a traitor."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Gertrude Stein was a(n):

A) disc jockey
B) Dada artist
C) experimentalist poet
D) freedom fighter in World War I
E) member of Congress
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
The NAACP emphasized:

A) legal action against discrimination
B) the formation of a black political party
C) vocational and technical education
D) Garvey's concept of social and political separation of blacks
E) strictly black membership
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Marcus Garvey:

A) sought reconciliation with southern whites
B) said blacks should return to Africa
C) was a revered jazz saxophonist
D) helped lead the suffragist movement
E) was allied with W. E. B. Du Bois
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Jazz:

A) was a European innovation emerging from modern classical music
B) blended several musical traditions
C) was invented by Benny Goodman
D) helped calm the fears of rural fundamentalists
E) inspired rebellious youth to violence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
In physics, the theory that the fundamental concepts of space, time, matter, and energy are not distinct, independent things with stable dimensions was developed by:

A) Albert Einstein
B) Isaac Newton
C) Werner Heisenberg
D) Max Planck
E) Sir Francis Bacon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Ernest Hemingway wrote of:

A) rational people dedicated to traditional values
B) "real" life punctuated by the doomed, war-tainted love affairs of young Americans
C) patriotic fervor among the American expatriate writers in Paris
D) masculinity and a desperate search for life
E) hope and happiness in America's heartland
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The horrors of World War I accelerated:

A) the need to rearm
B) the formation of the United Nations
C) the birth of computers
D) rebellion in the United States
E) the rise of modernism in the arts
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50
The novels of Ernest Hemingway:

A) portrayed utopian communities in a socialist society
B) attacked the corruption of machine politics in the large cities
C) traced the philosophical connections between twentieth-century America and eighteenth-century Britain
D) described the frenetic, hard-drinking lifestyle and the cult of robust masculinity that Hemingway himself epitomized
E) documented "the greatest, gaudiest spree in history"
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51
Who developed the theoretical basis for quantum physics?

A) Albert Einstein
B) Isaac Newton
C) Max Planck
D) Werner Heisenberg
E) Sir Francis Bacon
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52
The Armory Show in 1913:

A) was a controversial exhibition of modern art
B) introduced many women to new clothing fashions
C) featured poetry readings by Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot
D) showed the continuing appeal of traditional values
E) led directly to woman suffrage
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53
All of the following were prophets of modern art and literature EXCEPT:

A) Ezra Pound
B) Edward Bellamy
C) Gertrude Stein
D) T. S. Eliot
E) Ernest Hemingway
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54
The Universal Negro Improvement Association:

A) sponsored black artists and writers
B) was led by Marcus Garvey
C) promoted Booker T. Washington's idea of racial peace through accommodation
D) was the forerunner of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
E) was conceived by W. E. B. Du Bois
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55
The Waste Land, a poem that became the favorite of many modernist readers because of its sense of disillusionment and its suggestion of a burned-out civilization, was written by:

A) Franz Boas
B) T. S. Eliot
C) Ezra Pound
D) Gertrude Stein
E) E. E. Cummings
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56
Who wrote "fed up With Jim Crow laws, / People who are cruel And afraid, / Who lynch and run, / Who are scared of me And me of them"?

A) Claude McKay
B) Jean Toomer
C) DuBose Heyward
D) Langston Hughes
E) W. E. B. Du Bois
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57
Modernists in art and literature came to believe that:

A) nature's reality can be captured in art
B) human reason ruled all of nature
C) science and art had no connection
D) art, in the end, had rules that should be obeyed
E) the subconscious fascinated some people and scared others
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58
Charles A. Lindbergh Jr., a St. Louis-based mail pilot, made the first solo transatlantic flight, traveling from New York to Paris in:

A) 1927
B) 1928
C) 1926
D) 1920
E) 1929
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59
The 1920s "New Era" was created by advances in all of the following EXCEPT:

A) communications
B) transportation
C) government-funded programs
D) business organization
E) the spread of mass consumerism
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60
In physics, the theory of relativity was developed and explained by:

A) Albert Einstein
B) Isaac Newton
C) Max Planck
D) Werner Heisenberg
E) Sir Francis Bacon
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61
What were the political and cultural manifestations of a new sense of identity among blacks in the 1920s?
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62
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
James Weldon Johnson

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
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63
Which court case or legal action brought the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments back to life?

A) Abrams v. United States (1918)
B) Schenck v. United States (1917)
C) Buchanan v. Worley (1917)
D) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
E) Guinn v. United States (1915)
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64
Who was the New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan who observed many young mothers struggling to provide for their growing families?

A) Gertrude Stein
B) T. S. Eliot
C) Margaret Sanger
D) Amelia Earhart
E) Ernest Hemingway
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65
How did the scientific work of Albert Einstein, Max Planck, and Werner Heisenberg influence American thought?
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66
Discuss the meaning and significance of the Harlem Renaissance.
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67
Who, in 1921, told Hemingway that he and his friends who had served in the war "are a lost generation?"

A) Gertrude Stein
B) Ezra Pound
C) T. S. Eliot
D) Franz Boas
E) Ernest Hemingway
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k this deck
68
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
Charlie Chaplin

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
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Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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69
Describe the influence of modernism in literature.
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70
Fitzgerald's stories during the 1920s were:

A) written for Hollywood
B) painfully autobiographical
C) not discovered until the 1960s
D) nonfiction
E) about science
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71
Trace the career of Marcus Garvey and show how his philosophy divided the African American community in the 1920s.
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72
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
T. S. Eliot

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
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Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Examine and evaluate the characteristics of the African American life in the 1920s.
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74
"The major theme in American society in the 1920s was the theme of cultural alienation." Defend this statement.
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75
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
F. Scott Fitzgerald

A)wrote This Side of Paradise
B)New York nurse and midwife in the working-class tenements of Manhattan
C)wrote Three Lives
D)wrote The Waste Land
E)was the NAACP field secretary
F)was a silent film star
G)denounced "indecent dance" as "an offense against womanly purity"
H)was nicknamed the "Galloping Ghost"
I)was the leader of Negro nationalism
J)made the first solo transatlantic flight
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Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Describe the defensive temper of the 1920s. What factors contributed to it?
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77
Define what the phrase "The Modernist Revolt" means.
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78
Discuss the emerging mass culture from the crucible of the Great War to the Great Depression.
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79
Hemingway used the phrase "lost generation" as the epigraph in:

A) A Farewell to Arms (1929)
B) This Side of Paradise (1920)
C) The Waste Land (1922)
D) Three Lives (1909)
E) his first novel
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80
Describe the variety of spectator sports common in the 1920s. How successful were they in capturing the imagination of Americans?
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