preview

The Flappers In The 1920's

Better Essays

First came the war, and then the flappers.
Flappers were a new revolutionary type of woman that came about in the early 1920s. Daughters of women that fought for suffrage and equal rights, they had no interest in politics, and even less in the issue of ´social norms´. Girls from well of families drank alcohol, smoked cigarettes, and took part in ´petting parties´. They cut their hair in bobs and wore short skirts that went up above the knee, Which at the time was socially unacceptable. Many people were appalled by the ways of the flapper, some even taking the case of immodesty to court. But the flapper movement would not be stopped, and would pave the way for the modern woman.
Before the first World War, the Gibson Girl was all the rage. She …show more content…

Kallen). Similar legislation were enacted in New Jersey, South Carolina, Kansas, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and many other states across the U.S.. Police officers roamed the streets handing out tickets to young women who didn't abide by the laws, but the flappers did not yield, and while the laws were still in effect they were less inforce.
Breaking cloths laws were not the only morally black thing that flappers dealt in. flappers were young and reckless taking every chance to diverge from social norms. Flappers burbank alcohol and smoked cigarettes as casually and a man would, shown here in the excerpt from ´Me and My Flapper Daughter´, I was sure my girls had never experimented with a hip-pocket flask, flirted with other women's husbands, or smoked cigarettes. My wife entertained the same smug delusion, and was saying something like that out loud at the dinner table one day. And then she began to talk about other girls.
"They tell me that that Purvis girl has cigarette parties at her home," remarked my …show more content…

The young flappers could no longer afford their swing lifestyles and expensive makeup. So it was that the Roaring Twenties came to an end taking the lavish lifestyle with it.

Works Cited
Gourley, Catherine. “Chapter 1.” Flappers and the New American Woman: Perceptions of Women from 1918 through the 1920s, Twenty-First Century Books, Minneapolis, 2008.
Kallen, Stuart A., and Ben Hecht. “A Chance Encounter with a Flapper .” The Roaring Twenties, Greenhaven Press, San Diego, CA, 2002, pp. 141–145.
Kallen, Stuart A., and Frederick lewis Allen. “Flappers, Fashion, and a New Morality.”The Roaring Twenties, Greenhaven Press, San Diego, CA, 2002, pp. 128–141.
Rosenberg, Jennifer. “The New, Modern Woman: The Flapper.” ThoughtCo, ThoughtCo., 14 Feb. 2017, www.thoughtco.com/flappers-in-the-roaring-twenties-1779240. Accessed 11 Apr. 2017.
Rosenberg, Jennifer. “The New, Modern Woman: The Flapper.” ThoughtCo, ThoughtCo., 14 Feb. 2017, W. O. Saunders, "Me and My Flapper Daughters," The American Magazine 104 (Aug. 1927): 27., www.thoughtco.com/flappers-in-the-roaring-twenties-1779240. Accessed 11 Apr.

Get Access