The 1920s Terms

The 1920s Terms

Americanization

The process by which immigrants assimilate to the social and cultural customs of the United States.

Financial Bubble, Stock Market Bubble, Bubble

A market phenomenon in which overly optimistic traders bid up prices for assets to a level far beyond their intrinsic value. Bubbles lead to spectacular short-term profits but eventually burst, causing a rapid decline in asset values. 

The trouble is that it's difficult or impossible to distinguish a bubble from a normal bull market until after the bubble has burst. In retrospect, it seems clear that the booming stock market of the 1920s was a classic bubble, which burst with devastating effect in the Great Crash of 1929.

Financier, Financiers

A large-scale investor or major player in the stock market.

Fundamentalist Christianity, Fundamentalists

A branch of American Protestantism that arose in the early-20th century in opposition to modernist cultural changes. Fundamentalists emphasize rigid adherence to traditional biblical teachings and conservative social mores, and insist upon a literalist rather than metaphorical reading of the Bible.

Laissez-Faire

From a French term meaning "let the people do as they please," laissez-faire is the philosophy that government shouldn't intervene to regulate the affairs of the free market economy. Laissez-faire ideology was powerful in late-19th-century America, then after a period of stronger government regulation, experienced a resurgence in the 1920s.

Political Economy

The aspect of social science or philosophy that deals with the optimal interaction between the capitalist marketplace and the democratic political system.

Regulators

Public officials charged with enforcing laws designed to regulate the conduct of private businesses. During the Progressive Era, Congress passed a wide variety of new regulations on economic activity; during the 1920s, many of the officials appointed to enforce those regulations were philosophically opposed to government regulation of business and therefore chose to enforce the laws quite loosely.

Reparations, Reparation

Reparations are payments made by a defeated nation in war to compensate its conqueror for costs incurred in the conflict. When Germany surrendered to end World War I, the Allies demanded that Germany pay them heavy reparations as a condition of peace. The high cost of reparations ruined Germany's economy, leading to economic collapse and the rise of Adolf Hitler.

Repatriation, Repatriated, Repatriate

The return of an immigrant to his country of origin. Many of the so-called New Immigrants of the late-19th and early-20th centuries didn't settle permanently in the United States, but rather stayed long enough to earn a significant quantity of money, then repatriated to their homelands.

Retrenchment, Retrenchments

Cutting back on expenses during times of economic difficulty. A business pursuing retrenchment would cut production and lay off employees; an individual pursuing retrenchment would cut back on consumer spending.

Speakeasies, Speakeasy

Illegal, underground saloons that operated during the Prohibition era when sale and consumption of alcohol was illegal in the United States.

Traditionalist, Traditionalists

A person who holds traditional, conservative views and opposes radical social and cultural changes.