Women's Roles In The 1920s

1246 Words3 Pages

Women’s Changing Roles in the 1920s In 1931 Frederick Lewis Allen, who worked as writer and editor for popular American magazines, published a sweeping, lively history of the 1920s. Allen also devoted one chapter of his book to what he called “The revolution in Manners and Morals”. Before the 1920s Allen explained to his readers, Americans middle and upper class white families lived according to a very precise code of manners and morals. First and foremost, “Women were the guardians of morality”. In addition, girls grew up looking forward to a romantic love match which would lead them to alter and living happily ever after, and until the “right man” came along and they even went to the extent of not allowing any man to kiss …show more content…

Some women concluded that the struggle for women rights was completed by the passage of this amendment. For many leaders in the NAWSA, the recognition of women’s voting rights seemed like a dream come true. Its goal met, the NAWSA changed its name to the league of women voters (LWV) and began pursuing a new mission, to encourage informed and active participation in government and increased understanding of public policy issues. Women turned out to be as diverse in their political agendas and as reality factionalized as men. Women's right to vote is eerily similar to african americans being allowed to vote because it all stems from white men not wanting to share the right to vote with the rest of the country and both these groups have made tremendous success as both groups have fully earned their right to …show more content…

The proposed amendment declared that “men and women shall have equal right throughout the united states and every place subject to its jurisdiction”. In the 1920s, one in four American women worked outside the home. Magazines and movies now glamorized working women as sophisticated and alluring. And women took on new jobs, as secretaries, lawyer, professors and writers. There was no doubt in the minds of contemporary observers that new ideas about women’s nature were emerging and women’s experiences were changing as result. A Great deals of public debate swirled around these

More about Women's Roles In The 1920s

Open Document