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- Flapper - Wikipedia
Flappers were a subculture of young Western women prominent after the First World War and through the 1920s who wore short skirts (knee length was considered short during that period), bobbed their hair, listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for prevailing codes of decent behavior
- Flapper | Girl, Fashion, Style, Dress, Era, 1920s | Britannica
flapper, young woman known for wearing short dresses and bobbed hair and for embracing freedom from traditional societal constraints Flappers are predominantly associated with the late 1910s and the ’20s in the United States
- Flappers - 1920s, Definition Dress - HISTORY
Flappers of the 1920s were young women known for their energetic freedom, embracing a lifestyle viewed by many at the time as outrageous, immoral or downright dangerous
- The History of the Flapper, Part 1: A Call for Freedom
The embodiment of that 1920s free spirit was the flapper, who was viewed disdainfully by an older generation as wild, boisterous and disgraceful While this older generation was clucking its
- 1920s Flappers: An Overview of the Ladies of the Jazz Age
Flappers were the images of the free spirit of the Jazz Age Women like Zelda Fitzgerald, Clara Bow, Louise Brooks, and Colleen Moore helped establish their sex as equals Flapper aesthetics started as taboo
- What Is a Flapper? The Glamorous History of Women in the 1920s
"Flapper" was a term given to young, progressive Western women in the 1920s (or the Roaring Twenties) who were primarily known for their modern sense of style and new attitudes toward womanhood, gender roles, and sexuality
- Flappers - Encyclopedia. com
Flappers wore simple, straight dresses with knee-length skirts, and they used brightly colored lipstick (see entry under 1920s—Fashion in volume 2) Unlike the generation before, flappers rejected the stable, careful life of a wife and mother
- Introduction - Flappers: Topics in Chronicling America - Research . . .
In the 1920s, the flapper craze swept America— women bobbed their hair and danced to the Charleston in short dresses This guide provides access to materials related to the “Flappers” in the Chronicling America digital collection of historic newspapers
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