![]() ![]() Many Americans were looking boldly ahead, but just as many were gazing backward, to cherished memories of a fabled national innocence. America stood at a crossroads between innovation and tradition. The same decade that bore witness to urbanism and modernism also introduced the Ku Klux Klan, Prohibition, nativism, and religious fundamentalism. The unmatched prosperity and cultural advancement was accompanied by intense social unrest and reaction. But the 1920s were an age of extreme contradiction. Scientists shattered the boundaries of space and time, aviators made men fly, and women went to work. The most vivid impressions of that era are flappers and dance halls, movie palaces and radio empires, and Prohibition and speakeasies. Before World War I the country remained culturally and psychologically rooted in the nineteenth century, but in the 1920s America seemed to break its wistful attachments to the recent past and usher in a more modern era. ![]() The 1920s heralded a dramatic break between America’s past and future.
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