1916  Immediate Antecedents: 1901-1919   1916

   For the most part, the new ideas and inventions of the end of the nineteenth century didn't make it into the daily lives of the urban middle class until the opening decades of the twentieth. For rural folk and the poor, the process took even longer, with some innovations (e.g. motion pictures) reaching the urban poor before the rural middle class and others (e.g. the automobile) vice versa.
   In the 1910s, modernization was in full swing. Victorian fussiness was clearly on the way out. New houses were built with open living spaces and without gingerbread trim. Mission style furniture, sleek and unornamented, filled the rooms of these houses. Cleaner lines were introduced into women's clothing, too, and somewhat shorter hemlines, which suited the "New Woman," who hoped to have the right to vote soon, just fine.
   New technology was growing in leaps and bounds and swiftly entering people's everyday lives. Machines seemed to be leading mankind on an ever-upward path to paradise. Then came the reality check. The science of hygiene couldn't save young adults from dying by the millions of influenza as the decade drew to a close. In the Great War which was going on at the same time, new technology applied to the battlefield -- machine guns, chemical gases, torpedoes, airplanes -- killed millions of others in especially grisly ways. This led to a disillusionment -- "disenchantment" was the word they used -- across the board, although more with systems of politics, aesthetics, religion, and ethics than with science and technology. Life is uncertain, so bring on the movies, jazz records, and bathtub gin!


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