2. What is the difference between a'smart' and a'smar What new opportunities did the 1920s provide for women and African Americans? What new limitations did this era impose? The 1920s were full of change for the women and African Americans. The 19th amendment which gave women the right to vote was passed. This amendment began the rebellion against the social norm that was created for women. The women challenged the roles that society created for them and began working and participating in the new culture referred to as the "Flapper Culture." "The public flaunting of social and sexual norms by flappers represented an attempt to match gains in political equality with gains in the social sphere. Women were increasingly leaving the Victorian era norms of the previous generation behind, as they broadened the concept of women’s liberation to include new forms of social expression such as …show more content…
The migration north allowed new job offers. ”The decade witnessed the continued Great Migration of African Americans to the North, with over half a million fleeing the strict Jim Crow laws of the South. Life in the northern states, as many African Americans discovered, was hardly free of discrimination and segregation." Corbett et al. pg. 710). The. African Americans also experienced the formation and blooming of the Harlem Renaissance. "In this rediscovery of black culture, African American artists and writers formulated an independent black culture and encouraged racial pride, rejecting any emulation of white American culture." Corbett et al. pg. 710). The. Although the 1920s offered many positive outcomes, there were also some negative outcomes. Women are still battling discrimination. They were still denied some job opportunities and equal pay. Their choices and freedom were still limited. African Americans still faced racial segregation and were denied equality within the workplace and