oardwalk Empire, the show that demonstrates the real-life events that occurred during the early 1920s in Atlantic City, New Jersey, represents several intercultural communication concepts. This historically-based drama series provided through HBO was chosen because of its wide variety of themes, conflicts, and plots driven through certain means of communication and interactions among the characters. For instance, the communication and intercultural models observed while watching the television show only enhance the audience’s entertainment and interest. Atlantic City was thrown back to the days of a lawless country, which was due to prohibition and the consumption of alcohol that was not going to be stopped by anyone. In fact, most political servants were involved in the daily activities and were either profiting from bootlegging alcohol or helping those who did. They profited monetarily and were in power and control because they could hide in the shadows and still appear to be the pillars of society. It could be said that the very definition of prohibition in the early 1920s where a patron could have any alcohol he desired as long as he was willing to pay for it. The illegality of selling and drinking spirits affected the citizens’ lives, some positively and others negatively, and many were part of the extracurricular activities except those who obeyed the laws of the time. The three main concepts that will be discussed in much further detail include high power distance, a
The article focuses on the rise and fall of one of the most ruthless mobs during the Prohibition: The Purple Gang. It explores the world of where the leaders of the gang came from and how they were raised. The article focuses on how the Purple Gang came into power during Prohibition and how their business started booming. The Purple Gang controlled the liquor coming from Canada and most of the illegal bars in Detroit.
The 1920s was an age of drastic social and political changes. For the first time in history, more Americans started living in cities rather than on farms. Americans were wealthier than ever before. People from coast to coast bought similar goods, listened to the same music, did the same dances, and even used related slang. Numerous Americans were uncomfortable with this unfamiliar, urban, and occasionally racy “mass culture”. In fact, for a large number of people in the United States, the 1920s brought more conflict than celebration. However, for a minuscule handful of youth in the nation’s larger cities, the 1920s were roaring. Prohibition gave criminals a way to illegally make money; gangsters, young men who worked in criminal gangs, began selling on the black-market alcohol. Young woman emerged during the 1920s with different appearance, attitude, and behavior; with a bobbed haircut and short skirts.
The 1920s was an age of drastic social and political changes. For the first time in history, more Americans started living in cities rather than on farms. Americans were wealthier than ever before. People from coast to coast bought similar goods, listened to the same music, did the same dances, and even used related slang. Numerous Americans were uncomfortable with this unfamiliar, urban, and occasionally racy “mass culture”. In fact, for a large number of people in the United States, the 1920s brought more conflict than celebration. However, for a minuscule handful of youth in the nation’s larger cities, the 1920s were roaring. Prohibition gave criminals a way to illegally make money; gangsters, young men who worked in criminal gangs, began selling on the black-market alcohol. Young woman emerged during the 1920s with different appearance, attitude, and behavior; with a bobbed haircut and short skirts.
In Marni Davis’s book Jews and Booze, she offers readers a well-researched study addressing Jewish immigrant acculturation. Data on Jews, booze, and prohibition is familiar to scholars who study the histories of New York City, Chicago, and New Jersey. Much to her credit, Davis also gathers information from southern locales such as Atlanta and California. In Robert Rockaway’s book But He Was Good to His Mother, he examined Jewish gangsters in the early twentieth century and came to the conclusion that the reason a large number of them worked in the illegal alcohol business was because of the profit caused by prohibition and the intense thirst society developed for alcohol that came with it. When he studied further he realized that these “gangsters” running illegal operations often were more caring and human than people believed. Incorporated into this review are studies of the real life activity of these gangsters through information that Rockaway was able to recover.
The 1920s was a time of economic growth, inventions, and spending money. During the 1920s, America was renamed as “new society” and “new standard of living” (Foner, 773). Little did society know was that the 1920s was the reason for the Great Depression in the 1929. This time era had a rough start because there was a prohibition on manufacturing and selling alcohol (Foner, 742). There also an awakening of what America was really like for the immigrants, for example, the convictions of two Italians, Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco. Vanzetti and Sacco were accused of partaking in an armed robbery and murder of a security guard (Foner, 768). This raises about the corruption of the government, and how it destabilized basic American freedom because these men were seen as threats to the American Life (Foner, 769). There were no evidence against Sacco and Vanzetti, yet they still got the death penalty (Foner, 769). The 1920s were also famous for the Jazz Age and Roaring Twenties (Foner, 769, 770). The flappers were women who were young and sexually liberated (Foner, 770). The speakeasies were nightclubs
The era of the 1920s has been depicted as the Roaring Twenties, a time of glamour and glitter with the rise of parties, the dance of the “flappers,” the culture of the Jazz Age, and the consumption of pleasures and indulgence in leisure. But the 1920s were more than just the trend of looking good or listening to the blues, it was also a time of conflict, the fight and struggles of women and race, amongst others. By reading two distinct focuses of the after war era, the period could be thoroughly discussed and presented for what it really was, what events really followed, from the excitement of the envisioned grand parties to the underlying issues that lay beneath the “roar” of the twenties.
While reading and at some points reviewing the documents A through I , I have learned a lot about what was happening during these time periods. In document A it mainly focuses on the back bone of this country's industries, And on two specific by the names of Sacco and Vanzetti that preformed in helping making this country's economy in the way that we see it today, this document also had stated that even at some points men were forced into dramatic situations. In document B which was a picture that was taken of a brewery during the prohibition era. Some of the main points that I was able to pull from this picture was that they essentially had taken the picture as like a “ha ha” we found yah and that they had found a still that was as you could say practically unfindable because the fact that it was built underground but
Following the passage of the 18th Amendment, crime began to sprung about in large scale.4 Illegal sale and production of alcohol began to occur all across the United States. This action was called bootlegging.4 As the manufacturing and sale of the illegal alcohol went further into the underground, shady area, it began to be managed by gangs and the Mafia.4 They became skilled at bribing politicians and the police force to turn their face away from their illegal activities, and they renamed and transformed themselves into cultivated criminal businesses that obtained immense profits from their bootleg alcohol trade.4 In addition to bootlegging, prostitution and gambling also arrived at new heights.
The 1920s was a rebellious, expressionate time in the United States history. During this period, the northern cities, especially Chicago, were flourishing with the evolution of music, poetry and other liberal arts. However, once one looks beyond the intense spirit portrayed by the arts, the existence of many darks is evident. Due to the distinct defiant traits of the people, Prohibition was destined to be a failure. Accordingly, Prohibition left Chicagoans searching for unlawful ways to receive alcohol. This created a remarkable opportunity for gangs, as they were about to discover an invaluable gem: bootlegging . Once gangs in Chicago uncovered the immense amounts of profit they could generate by participating in bootlegging, they raced into competition for business. At the end of this race, two gangs were left with the most power and a tense rivalry: The North Side and the South Side (the
Organized Crime The 1920’s in America was a change from the past; soldiers were coming home, innovation was everywhere, and life was changing. Due to all these positive changes, this time in America’s history is known as the Roaring Twenties. Unfortunately, the Roaring Twenties had an ugly side. With the Eighteenth Amendment ratified, a ban on the production and distribution of liquor, it left a hole in a popular and booming industry.
The 1920’s brought change for Americans. New ways of communicating, telegraph and radio, allowed fellow Americans to come closer together despite proximity to one another. Celebrities began to emerge external to the political forums. Athletes and Socialites made an impact on knowledge, fashion, and ideas that were refined on perspective. American Citizens were given a choice and therefore the consumer market expounded causing the fashion industry to become fluidic. Stronger lines of communication also allowed more organized crime functions. Particular links in such crimes would envision for further distribution in the black market with more accessible routes. Communities took hold on public interest rather than government sanctions. Demand
Why, and to what extent did the thirteen years of prohibition lead to the rise of organized crime in America? From the year 1920 to the year 1933, the United States of America implemented a nationwide constitutional ban. Under this ban, the 'manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States' [source 2] was illegal. Prohibition was brought into effect due to a movement from 'dry' crusaders.
When the 1920’s are brought up, something that almost always follows it is gangster related. Those two are intertwined together because during that time period, gangsters controlled just about everything. They affected every part of people's lives. The government was even affected by gangsters in this time period. And the main cause of all this was because of the Prohibition era.
The swindlers, also known as bootleggers set up 100,000’s of illegal ‘speakeasies’ in Chicago alone and worked along the lines of “intimidation, blackmail”, bribery and homicide. These businesses, often hidden in basements, office buildings, and anywhere that could be found became straightforward for customers to lay hands on hard liquor. On the other hand, the Bootleggers smuggled liquor from oversees and Canada, stole it from government warehouses, and produced their own. The bootlegging business had become so extensive that the laws were flagrantly violated by gangsters, commoners and even sly government officials who had formed “corrupt alliances” with the mobsters, hence making it impossible to prevent immense quantities of liquor from entering the country.
As the Mafia grew in America, they prospered off illegal gambling and prostitution. It wasn't until 1919 with the ratification of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution that the Mafia really gained power. The 18th amendment banned the distribution and manufacturing of alcoholic beverages in America (Prohibition 2). Although this amendment meant nothing but good, it did the exact opposite to America. While politicians saw an improved nation with this amendment, criminals saw green. Americans now thought drinking as a thrill, it was something illegal that they can do but get away with. It was the rush of getting away with it that made speakeasies so popular. Speakeasies were Mafia-run entertainment clubs, consisting of an open bar of the finest bootlegged liquor along with dining and entertainment (Prohibition 5).