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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 12 page paper discussed the American economy in the 1920s and its slide into the Great Depression. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVPreDep.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
looks at the economic structures that were in place before the Depression. Timeframe The Great Depression is the name given to that period of time between the stock market crash
on October 24, 1929, and the outbreak of World War II. Although the Germans invaded Poland in 1939, the United States wasnt drawn into the conflict until the attack
on Pearl Harbor in 1941, so that is usually cited as the end of the Depression. The United States economy was the most powerful in the world, and when
it went down it took everybody else with it. Thus, the world depression which followed the stock market collapse is tied closely to the Depression in the U.S. Because the
Great Depression defined an entire era, as well as the people who lived through it, it looms large in any account of economic policies in that time. In fact,
its only by examining the changes brought by the Depression that we can discern what conditions were like before it. Before the Depression A discussion of economic structures before the
Depression will inevitably tie into the Depression itself, because of the changes the Depression caused. Well begin with the 1920s, a decade that in retrospect seems frenzied, even decadent.
The world had survived the First World War, and women had entered the workforce in large numbers for the first time. They reveled in the realization that they were
capable of earning their own living; they enjoyed freedom and the appearance, at least, of recklessness-and the "flapper" was born. This is not to suggest that women in the 1920s
were immoral, but they liked giving that impression. The music of the decade was jazz; in Harlem, that extraordinary period of artistic creativity known as the "Harlem Renaissance" was
...