![chamillelynn](/avatars/19144.jpg)
chamillelynn
26.03.2020 •
History
Explain three reasons why there was a mass consumer culture during the 1920’s.
Solved
Show answers
More tips
- L Leisure and Entertainment How Many Seasons are There in the TV Show Interns?...
- S Sport When will the Biathlon World Championships 2011 take place in Khanty-Mansiysk? Answers to frequently asked questions...
- H Health and Medicine Trading Semen for Money: Where Can You Sell and Why Would You Want to?...
- F Food and Cooking Homemade French Fries: The Ultimate Guide...
- H Health and Medicine How to Increase Blood Pressure without Medication?...
- S Style and Beauty Choosing a Hair Straightener: Specific Criteria to Consider...
- F Food and Cooking How to Make Polendwitsa at Home?...
- S Science and Technology When do we change our clocks?...
- L Leisure and Entertainment What to Give a Girl on March 8?...
- F Family and Home Is it Worth Knowing the Gender of Your Child Before Birth?...
Answers on questions: History
- H History Why did Churchill need the United States on the side of the British?...
- H History The Great Depression and Rise of Totalitarianism Test PLEASE HELP! Hitler appealed to German racial pride by referring to Germans as the ....
- H History The Great Depression and Rise of Totalitarianism Test PLEASE HELP! Kafka and Dali presented the world as a clash of the conscience and unconscious, a style known as ....
- H History Find x to the nearest tenth....
- H History The Great Depression and Rise of Totalitarianism Test PLEASE HELP! The was intended to provide for unemployment and old age benefits....
- H History Disadvantage of the Big stick...
- H History The locust infestation in East Africa is of no concern to Canada. Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Give reasons to support your response....
- H History Why did governor parker want to create a new constitution...
- H History Is this true or false when supply is up and demand is down employment will rise...
- H History Who were the coureurs de bois ?...
Ответ:
Explanation:
By the early twentieth century, hundreds of car manufacturers existed. But they all made products that were too expensive for most Americans. Ford’s innovation lay in his use of mass production to manufacture automobiles. He revolutionized industrial work by perfecting the assembly line, which enabled him to lower the Model T’s price from $850 in 1908 to $300 in 1924, making car ownership a real possibility for a large share of the population. Soon, people could buy used Model Ts for as little as five dollars, allowing students and others with low incomes to enjoy the freedom and mobility of car ownership. By 1929, there were over 23 million automobiles on American roads.
An advertisement entitled “Watch the Fords Go By” features drawings of two Ford automobiles. The prices are listed at $780 and $725, along with details about each model. In the center of the advertisement, an illustration shows a couple driving along an idyllic country road. At the bottom is the text.
In the center of the advertisement, an illustration shows a couple driving along an idyllic country road. At the bottom is the text “Ford Cars Sold by Russell Motor Car Co. 2120-2130 Canal Street, New Orleans, LA. See Our Exhibit Booth at Show”.
This advertisement for Ford’s Model T ran in the New Orleans Times Picayune in 1911. Note that the prices had not yet dropped far from their initial high of $850. Image credit: OpenStax College.
The assembly line helped Ford reduce labor costs within the production process by moving the product from one team of workers to the next, each of them completing a step so simple that workers had to be—in Ford’s words—“no smarter than an ox.” Ford’s reliance on the assembly line placed emphasis on efficiency over craftsmanship.
Ford’s focus on cheap mass production brought both benefits and disadvantages to his workers. Ford would not allow his workers to unionize, and the boring, repetitive nature of the assembly line work generated a high turnover rate.
A photograph shows assembly line workers producing Ford automobiles.
A photograph shows assembly line workers producing Ford automobiles.
In this image from a 1928 Literary Digest interview with Henry Ford, workers on an assembly line produce new models of Ford automobiles. Image credit: OpenStax College
On the other hand, Ford doubled workers’ pay to five dollars a day and standardized the workday to eight hours—a reduction from the norm of the time. Ford’s assembly line also offered greater racial equality than most employment of the time; he paid white and black workers equally. Seeking these wages, many African Americans from the South moved to Detroit and other large northern cities to work in factories. Ford shaped the nation’s mode of industrialism to rely on paying decent wages so that workers could afford to be the consumers of their own products.
The automobile changed the face of America, both economically and socially. Industries like glass, steel, and rubber processing expanded to keep up with auto production. The oil industry in California, Oklahoma, and Texas expanded as Americans’ reliance on oil increased and the nation transitioned from a coal-based economy to one driven by petroleum.
The need for public roadways required local and state governments to fund a dramatic expansion of infrastructure, which permitted motels and restaurants to spring up and offer new services to millions of newly mobile Americans with cash to spend. With this new infrastructure, new shopping and living patterns emerged, and streetcar suburbs gave way to automobile suburbs as private automobile traffic on public roads began to replace mass transit on trains and trolleys.
Airplanes
The 1920s not only witnessed a transformation in ground transportation but also major changes in air travel. By the mid-1920s, men—as well as some pioneering women like the African American stunt pilot Bessie Coleman—had been flying for two decades. But there remained doubts about the suitability of airplanes for long-distance travel. Orville Wright, one of the pioneers of airplane technology in the United States, once famously declared, “No flying machine will ever fly from New York to Paris [because] no known motor can run at the requisite speed for four days without stopping.”
Despite the fact that the promise of more leisure time went largely unfulfilled, the lure of technology as the gateway to a more relaxed lifestyle endured. This enduring dream was a testament to the influence of another growing industry: advertising. The mass consumption of cars, household appliances, ready-to-wear clothing, and processed foods depended heavily on the work of advertisers. Magazines like Ladies’ Home Journal and The Saturday Evening Post became vehicles to connect advertisers with middle-class consumers. Colorful and occasionally provocative print advertisements decorated the pages of these publications and became a staple in American popular culture.
Ответ:
France and Britain
Explanation:
The Seven Years War is called the series of international conflicts that occurred between the beginning of 1756 and the end of 1763 to establish control over Silesia and the colonial supremacy in North America and India. They took part, on the one hand, the Kingdom of Prussia, the Kingdom of Hanover and the Kingdom of Great Britain together with their American colonies and, some time later, their ally the Kingdom of Portugal; and on the other hand the Kingdom of Saxony, the Austrian Empire, the Kingdom of France, the Russian Empire, Sweden and the Kingdom of Spain, the latter from 1761. There was a change of coalitions with respect to the War of Succession Austrian, although the Silesian conflict and the Franco-British struggle remained the keys.