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The Roaring Twenties, also known as the Jazz Age, was one of the most dynamic and transformative decades in American history. Spanning from 1920 to 1929, it was a period marked by booming prosperity, social upheaval, and cultural revolution-but also deep contradictions that would ultimately lead to its downfall with the Great Depression. At the heart of the decade was Prohibition, established by the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act in 1920, which outlawed the manufacture, sale, and transport of alcohol. Instead of promoting morality and discipline as intended, Prohibition fueled a vast underground economy. Speakeasies-secret bars hidden in basements, back rooms, and even behind false walls-multiplied across cities. The ban on alcohol gave rise to bootlegging and organized crime syndicates, as gangsters like Al Capone in Chicago built empires smuggling liquor and battling rival mobs in bloody gang wars. The illegal alcohol trade made millionaires out of criminals and corrupted police, judges, and politicians alike, eroding public faith in law enforcement and traditional moral values. Meanwhile, the U.S. economy seemed unstoppable. The stock market soared as ordinary Americans, swept up in the thrill of easy money, poured savings into shares on margin-buying stocks with borrowed funds. Culturally, the 1920s embodied a spirit of rebellion and liberation. Traditional values crumbled in the face of jazz music, flapper fashion, and new attitudes toward sexuality and independence. The decade saw low morality in the eyes of older generations-symbolized by wild parties, short skirts, and open defiance of convention. Writers like F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway captured the glittering excess and moral emptiness of the age, while jazz musicians like Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington gave it its rhythm and soul. When the stock market crashed in October 1929, the party abruptly ended, and the nation plunged into the Great Depression. The Roaring Twenties remain a paradoxical decade-an age of both extraordinary innovation and reckless abandon. Yet beneath the glamour and prosperity, instability brewed. The illusion of endless growth and easy wealth was built on fragile credit, speculation, and social inequality. When the pursuit of pleasure and profit overshadowed prudence, it left a legacy as dazzling as it was destructive.
Joe Reina | 9798900134055 | FIC014000 | book-has-featured-image