Roaring 20s GHS
Across
- 2. Most modernists tended to live in this type of environment
- 5. Traditionalists believed in this type of interpretation of the Bible, which they used to enforce local law.
- 6. This Delta Blues singer highlighted the hardships and reality of Black life in the region
- 10. These women challenged gender norms and upset their parents by listening to jazz (and smoking and drinking and dancing)
- 11. Jazz composers relied on this technique to keep their music fresh
- 12. This painter depicted the sadness and hopefulness of Black culture through his paintings
- 14. This Lost Generation writer wrote about the ambivalent morality of the wealthy in his book The Great Gatsby
- 15. This Lost Generation Writer relied on the simplicity of language to convey storyies, focusing mostly on subjects and verbs
- 19. This Delta genre of music was transported to the rest of America during the Great Mgiration
- 20. This Lost Generation Writer wrote about Mississippi citizens struggling to adjust to modern times
- 21. This Lost Generation writer relied on satire to encourage Americans to scrutinize our own norms and ideas
Down
- 1. This was the old way that people found husbands
- 3. Most traditionalists lived in this type of environment
- 4. Modernist Christians believe that the Bible should be understood this way
- 7. This Harlem Renaissance writer showed the world the stories that Black Southerners used to teach their children
- 8. After WWI, people started doing this to find a good time or wife
- 9. This New Orleans genre of music was brought to the rest of America through early recordings during the Harlem Renaissance
- 13. This Lost Generation Writer wrote about how Great Depression hardships forced normal Americans into desperate situations
- 16. This jazz performer later used his position as a cultural ambassador to fight for Black rights in Africa and America
- 17. Thanks to household innovations and shortened work schedules, Americans were able to experience this idea on a regular basis
- 18. This Harlem Renaissance writer celebrated the diversity of Black culture