19 pages 38 minutes read

Jazz Fantasia

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1922

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Background

Historical Context: The Roaring ‘20s

Prohibition defined much of the 1920s in America. Prohibition banned alcohol sales in the United States, and many issues evolved because of that ban. Bootlegging—the illegal manufacturing and distribution of alcohol—became a common way around the ban and helped fuel the sport of racing in America. Prohibition also helped the rise of organized mafia, as mobsters took to bootlegging to make money. Additionally, underground clubs, speakeasies, and honky-tonks became popular for young people looking to drink, dance, and have a good time.

There were other factors that led to the concept of the “Roaring ‘20s,” including the end of World War I, rapid industrialization, the move to cities that had been increasing for decades, and a booming economy. Culturally, the influence of African American art, literature, and music also began taking hold and jazz was a major part of this.

Finally, progressive political and social values began to spread and stick across America and Europe. The women’s suffrage movement led to the passage of the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote in 1920, and a new culture of progressive young women called “flappers” led to changes in the way women dressed and expressed themselves.

The massive change of the late teens and the first half of the 1920s represented a crucial time in the history of the United States, though it was to be short-lived as the party ended when the stock market crashed in 1929, leading to the Great Depression and the rise of fascism in the 30s.

Socio-historical Context: Early 20th Century Social Movements

The first half of the 20th century was an extraordinary time in many respects. One major aspect of the time, though, was the rise of racial, sexual, and class consciousness. Spurred by many factors—including the end of slavery and Jim Crow, industrialization, the rise of public education, philosophy, science, war, and an artistic renaissance—many groups of traditionally oppressed people created social movements that changed society. Having personally experienced poverty and knowing about the lives of the working class and African Americans, Sandburg knew the struggles of marginalized people. He lived as a hobo and worked with poor Black workers during his teens and early twenties, and he represents the experiences of the people he knew in his poetry. An interesting aspect of Sandburg’s presentation of lower-class workers and life is the beauty he portrays it with. For example, while many writers were drafting poems about the blight of urbanization, Sandburg’s work beautifies stereotypically bleak images like smokestacks and factories. Such was his work about the city of Chicago, which contemporary critics consider to be his legacy.

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