What is the significance of "Flappers" in American history?

Upvote:3

This question is quite old, but it's a subject dear to my heart, so I thought I'd provide my own take for you and anyone who happens to end up here.

The most important thing to remember is that there was no "flapper movement". The fashion of the 1920s grew organically out of the fashion of the 1910s, no emphatic rebellion against past dress necessary. The Gibson Girl was dated by 1920, more a part of the 1890s and 1900s. In the 1910s, the fashionable ideal was slim and delicate (rather than statuesque and haughty, like Gibson's drawings). Looking at fashion plates from, say, 1913 shows something that could easily become the stereotypical streamlined 1920s look (bearing in mind that full skirts were still fashionable well into the 1920s, so long as they were paired with a slender, waistless bodice). So understanding the era's dress as a jarring fad is a crucial roadblock to understanding it at all.

"Flapper" was used from about 1910 on as slang for a girl who was just a bit too young to be out (in terms of "coming out" as courtable). You have to read period references to flappers in the same way you would read about millennials today: the supposed bad behavior is common to a fraction of them and is stereotyped as being common to all of them. Much of what people generally believe to be true of flappers comes from later media depictions based on the broadest humorous or satirical depictions of the 1920s, and is not representative of an actual teenager's experience in the period.

Upvote:8

Every so often in American history, we have a "girl power" movement. One appears to be happening right now, as we speak. That is, today's girls are graduating from college in greater numbers than boys, and getting better entry-level jobs. This appears to have no precedent in American or world history.

This "girl power" movement is an offshoot of their MOTHERS of the Baby Boom generation, which fought for EQUAL rights for women; access to a good education and high level jobs, including, in the case of Hillary Clinton, the chance to run for President of the United States.

Likewise, the Flappers was a "girl power" movement FOR ITS TIME. That is, fighting for the right for girls to wear "less restrictive" clothing, and otherwise act more like men. This, in turn, had been fueled by THEIR mothers of FDR's "Rendezvous With Destiny" generation (born 1861-82), who fought for, and got the right of women to VOTE, under the 19th Amendment.

Edit: A commenter below reasonably wondered why the 1861-1882 "incubator" generation is associated with FDR (born 1882) and not TR (born 1858). (Like Obama with the Boomers, FDR was born at the end of "his" generation.) The reason is that it was FDR, and not TR, who said, "This generation has a rendezvous with destiny."

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