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Argumentative Essay: The Jazz Age

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The Jazz Age
The Jazz Age was the period of time between the end of World War I and the Great Depression. A controversial issue arose over whether or not the Jazz Age was an impact on African Americans socially, politically, and economically. Socially, Jazz music became a positive spirit for African Americans and it kept them away from anger. Politically, African Americans developed new attitudes and many men became optimistic leaders after World War I. Economically, African Americans successfully published poems and were recruited as singers for money. Therefore, The Jazz Age was beneficial to African Americans.
Socially, Jazz music became a positive spirit for African Americans and it kept them away from anger. Faced with racism, discrimination, …show more content…

My first argument is Mackey (1992) believes that there was a containment of black mobility on the political level and that the social and economic progress African Americans might have accumulated because of their artistic innovation was blocked by whites. My second argument is the racial pride that sparked the artistic achievements of the Harlem Renaissance also fueled the political and economic aspirations of many African Americans. The postwar years saw the development of new attitudes among African Americans, who forged new roles in life and in politics. For many, the sight of the 1,300 African American men of the Fifteenth Regiment of New York’s National Guard, returning from the war and marching through Manhattan and home to Harlem, symbolized these aspirations. My last argument is Marcus Garvey was a political leader during the Jazz Age who found the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA). His idea of Pan-American inspired a global movement called Garveyism which also led to movements such as the Rastafari movement. Some argue that African American jazz musicians were less credited for their inventions and innovations. Jazz music created a sense of identity, originality, and social cohesion among African American musicians, but they were seldom credited with inventing it but I refute this argument because most African Americans got recognition for

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