1920s France
- Social change-
The typified woman of the 1920s, the flapper, was, as Ginsburg describes, the “young, more aggressive and less conventional woman The flappers wore shocking knee-length dresses and were known for their bobbed hair and scandalous dances. Zelda Fitzgerald, a flapper herself, described the flapper as a woman who thought “it was fun to flirt, …bobbed her hair, …put on her choicest pair of earrings, and a great deal of audacity and rouge and went into battle” Flappers did epitomize the Lost Generation and the excess associated with Paris in the 1920s. Flappers in Paris also set a trend that would be followed in other countries, such as the United States.
- Spatial environments
- Propaganda-In the opening of the year 1920, France was in a stronger position than she had been in for several generations. The Allied victory over Germany and the restoration.
- Residential life
- Health
- Technology
- Transportation
- Markets
- Fashion
- War
11. Film