The Flapperâs of the 1920âs
Essay Preview: The Flapperâs of the 1920âs
Report this essay
Jenna ShumateMrs. ThompsonU.S. History16 May 2017The Flapperâs of the 1920âs In the 1920s, a new woman was born. Â She smoked, drank, danced, and voted. Â She cut her hair, wore make-up, and went to petting parties. Â She was giddy and took risks. Â She was a flapper. Â The most famous flapper was Clara Bow, she was the star of the movie âItâ and soon became known as the âIt Girlâ. Â Clara Bow once said âwe had individuality. Â We did as we pleased. Â We stayed up late. Â We dressed the way we wanted. Â I used to whiz down Sunset Boulevard in my open Kissel, with several red chow dogs to match my hair. Â Today, theyre sensible and end up with better health. Â But we had more funâ. Â This quote from Clara Bow describes the new age of women in America that came about. Â The image of a flapper was given through cartoon drawings created by John Held Jr in magazines published in the 1920s. Â The print media defined the Flapper for the rest of the world, who did not understand why these women would disdain their mother and grandmotherâs tradition. Â Many flappers were described as a âyoung woman who danced, drank, bobbed her hair, showed skin, and had casual sexâ (Sagert, p.11). Â These women were normally around the age of 19, come from middle class families, and had little to no political knowledge. Â The Flappers of the 1920âs had a large impact on the appearance and behavior of women in the United States due to their risky clothes, social freedom, and participation in casual sexual actions.Flappers ditched their tight clothes and layers of undergarments for loose, short, and provocative outfits. Â These women were seen to wear, âa bra, underpants, and silk stockingsâ (Lindop, 60), this was a major step down from the Victorian age clothing. Â âSilky dresses showed everything under her knee and low necklines were common, many dresses were sleeveless and backlessâ (Lindop, 60). Â As this new fashion took over ânew fashionable dancers took advantage of mobility and flexibility that the clothes gave womenâ (Infobase). Â âIt is said that girls âparkedâ their corsets when they were to go dancingâ (Hall, 773). Â The new, energetic dances of the Jazz Age, required women to be able to move freely. Â Replacing the pantaloons and corsets were underwear called âstep-ins.â Â Many women adopted âshort hemlines and bobber haircutsâ (American) to show off their figures. Â âTo look more like a boy, women tightly wound their chest with strips of cloth in order to flatten itâ (Hatton, 112). Â The waists of flapper clothes were dropped to the hipline. Â The hem of the skirts also started to rise in the 1920s. Â At first the hem only rose a few inches, but from 1925 to 1927 a flappers skirt fell just below the knee. Â These new fashions and less clothes being worn caused, âknees became a sexualized body partâ (Infobase) because they were never shown before. Â The skirt comes just an inch below her knees, overlapping by a faint fraction her rolled and twisted stockings. Â Flappers were also the first generation to wear makeup, lipstick, and eyeliner. Â âCosmetics industry grew as women start wearing makeup in large numbersâ (Flappers). Â Make-up was introduced for women to wear when they went out with men. Â Â Many Flappers would do their makeup to match the âracyâ outfits they were wearing out dancing.
Women started exercising their social freedom, they wanted to have as much freedom as men of the time.  Flappers were known for having the âexpectation that women could engage in the same social freedom as menâ (Hanson, 50).  The flapper attitude was characterized by stark truthfulness, fast living, and sexual behavior.  Flappers seemed to cling to youth as if it were to leave them at any moment.  They took risks and were reckless.  The flapper of the 1920s âsmoked cigarettesâ (Wells), which was previously only associated with men.  Smoking wasnt the most outrageous of the flappers rebellious actions.  Flappers drank alcohol.  At a time when the United States had outlawed alcohol (Prohibition), young women were starting the habit early.  Some even carried hip-flasks full so as to have it on hand.  Many adults didnt like to see tipsy young women.  Flappers had a scandalous image as the âgiddy flapper, rouged and clipped, careening in a drunken stupor to the lewd strains of a jazz quartetâ (Hatton, 112).  Besides the probation, the 1920s was also the Jazz Age and one of the most popular pastimes for flappers was dancing.  As described in the May 1920 edition of the Atlantic Monthly, flappers “trot like foxes, limp like lame ducks, one-step like cripples, and all to the barbaric yawp of strange instruments which transform the whole scene into a moving-picture of a fancy ball in bedlamâ (Baughman, 269).  For the Flapper generation, the dances fit their fast-paced life-style.  These social freedoms helped to create the new women, flappers tended to âtake a manâs point of viewâ (Hooper).  Flappers wanted to break free of the social normality of the Victorian age, and create new women.Flappers also had changed the view on sexual activities and how they viewed marriage.  Many Flappers âbelieved in a greater degree of sex freedomâ (Allen, 234). These changes in the sexual and social climate suited flappers, who tended to avoid long-term commitments such as marriage and enjoyed flirting with multiple male partners. Flappers âdeclared that dating had an object other than marriageâ (Infobase).  Most flappers claimed that there was nothing particularly outrageous about their behavior, since sexual aggressiveness in young men had been widely tolerated for some time.  In their view, they were simply working to eliminate the social âdouble standardâ (Danzer, 441) that had previously enabled men, but not women, to engage in premarital flirtations and sexual activity.  Double standard was changed with the âpolitical field leveled by the nineteenth amendment, women sought to eliminate social and sexual double standardâ (Flappers); the women of the 1920s succeeded in eliminating the double standard. As more women are having relationships for the fun of it the âdivorce rates increased, legal access to birth control, and smaller family sizeâ (Lindop, 102). Women also started to use birth control for the first time in the 1920s, because people started to have sex for pleasure instead of having sex to have children.  Many believed that the âdiscussion of sex should be free and continuedâ (Allen, 234).  Flappers often âread, talked, and thought about sex, and defied anyone who said noâ (Allen, 234).  Although all these things changed the âviews on courtship rituals, marriages, and childbearing still on women but changed someâ (Hanson, 49), most of the responsibilities stayed within the womenâs realm.  With this Flappers had always done sexual relations to please the man in their life, whether father or husband, but with the new women they âchose activities to please themselves not father or husbandâ (Flappers).  Since the women know chose to please themselves and not their husbands or fathers, âseveral newlyweds cheated on husbandsâ (Flappers). Flappers redefined the way a marriage and dating should be to make it about pleasure and not about having children.  Women looked at sex as a reproduction system instead of a pleasure as well, the Flappers changed that view.  Flapper âflouted traditional sex rolesâ (Wells) and changed views on sexual activities.