Flappers In The 1920s

926 Words4 Pages

Flappers are clever, strong minded women who earned the right to live a tremendous lifestyle. Flappers were the new kind of feminists; they wanted independence and respect from men. They flaunted themselves which was shamed at the time, dresses and skirts were shorter, makeup was worn, and hair was cut into bobs. Flappers influenced other women to become independent and to be respected. Two of the most famous flappers in the 1920s were Clara Bow and Zelda Fitzgerald. Flappers changed the life´s of women forever through their influence, style, and role models. Many people defined the term flappers as various ideals. Most people define flappers as “young women with bobbed hair and short skirts who drank, smoked and said what might be termed “unladylike” things” ( Even though “in reality, most young women in the 1920s did none of these things”, however, many did wear fashionable flapper wardrobe. The term “first appeared in …show more content…

Clara was “born on July 29, 1905, her father was sexually abusive and left the home for long periods of time”. “Her mother suffered from severe mental disorders, bow took to watching movies as an escape from the horrors of home”. She “dropped out of school at the age of 16, overtime she struggled deeply with her emotional and mental health, attempting suicide in the mid-1940s and undergoing a score of examinations”. Clara bow’s “imagery and electric, sexy perormances spoke to the the flapper persona of the times”. Bow was “a major box-office draw during the silent-film era, having starred in dozens of projects”. Bow “was the greatest female sex symbol of the decade that broke into the film industry, she played a series of flappers in movies”. She became “widely popular after the 1927s “It” film. Became a “widower after her husband’s death in 1962”. She passed away “at the age of 60 on September 27,1965 in Los Angeles from a heart