Temper Lynn Dumenil, Modem Temper: Essay

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Many Americans saw modernity, as they conceptualized it, as a curse, not a blessing. The causes of the "Modern Temper were thus a culture clash of old and new, of a reaction to Progressivism as well as a desire to kick up the nation's heels at the end of World War I and a delight at the ability of more individuals to enter the more leisured consumer class. The national focus shifted to private solutions for social problems, such as women's interest in work rather than winning the vote, the Harlem Renaissance's emphasis on literature and newspapers to give Blacks a voice, and the retreat of organized labor and government's public regulation of industry. The rise of consumerism in urban locations and a loosening of sexual mores threatened older centers of cultural and social power, but...

...

Dumenil's comprehensive survey of newspapers, literature, sociological data and the politics of the era makes a persuasive case that the modern shift to a pluralistic rather than an Anglo-Protestant culture came into full flower during this period. But the era also set the stage for future cultural wars rather than resolved the issues it raised.
Lynn Dumenil, Modem Temper: American Culture and Society in the 1920s, (New York: Hill and Wang. 1995), p.302.

Dumenil, p.121.

Dumenil, p.115.

Dumenil, p.160-1611.

Dumenil, p.117.

Dumenil, p.159.

Dumenil, p. 149.

Dumenil, p.94

Dumenil, p.239.

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