ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- "Fashion in the 1920s." The A. & L. TIROCCHI DRESSMAKERS PROJECT. http://tirocchi.stg.brown.edu/514/story/fashion_twenties.html (accessed March 19, 2013).
- This provided information about the trends women wore in the 1920s.
- This helped me because it connected what they wore with how their clothing was important.
- Peterson, Amy T., and Ann T. Kellogg.The Greenwood encyclopedia of clothing through American history 1900 to the present. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2008.
- This provided information about how fashion has changed throughout the 1920s and the 1930s.
- It helped realizes the causes for many changes regarding culture and economy.
- Gordon, Lois G., and Alan Gordon.American chronicle: seven decades in American life, 1920-1989. Rev. ed. New York: Crown, 1990.
- This filled in some extra fashion facts from both the 1920s and the 1930s.
- It helped me fill in many gaps I had and tied many things together.
- Drowne, Kathleen Morgan, and Patrick Huber. "Fashion." In The 1920s. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2004. 95-118.
- This provided information about fashion in the 1920s as well as much information about consumerism.
- It helped me get information that connects fashion the rest of the world and how Americans would persuaded into buying the latest trends.
- Young, William H., and Nancy K. Young. "Fashion." In The 1930s. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2002. 81-93.
- This provided information on everything I needed to know on fashion in the 1930s as well as connecting to other things going on in America at the time, such as The Great Depression.
- It helped me connect fashion to the economy.
- Schrum, Kelly. ""Oh the Bliss": Fashion and Teenage Girls." In Some wore bobby sox: the emergence of teenage girls' culture, 1920-1945. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. 23-68.
- This provided information of how fashion impacted and was seen towards teenage girls.
- It helped me see different perspectives towards fashion.
- Flapper Magazine. The New Fashioned Girl (Flapper Magazine, 1922). N.d. Old Magazine Articles, June 1922. Fashion- Flapper Style. Web. 13 Mar. 2019.
- This provided information on flappers and gave me a good primary source.
- It helped to incorporate a younger more radical view on fashion.
- This provided information about specific fashion trends and how they varied between different class as well as providing me with many detailed pictures.
- This helped me understand how different the lower class was from the higher class because they could afford better materials and better quality clothing.
- This provided information on many types of womenswear ranging from daywear to nightwear.
- This helped to get a better understanding on what American women would wear in the 1920s.
- This provided information on the stock market in the 1920s.
- This helped me connect the booming stock market with the increasing economy of the 1920s and then the rash of the stock market with the decreasing economy in the 1930s.
- This provided information on immigrants and their relation to American fashion.
- This helped get a better understanding of perspective especially for people that came from outside of America.
- This provided perspective for the upper class and lower class.
- This helped me see the different materials Americans in the lower class would use to substitue for more expensive things.
- http://americainclass.org/sources/becomingmodern/prosperity/text3/cathedralsfifth.pdf
- This provided me with a good primary source on consumerism.
- This helped me learn more about how upper class Americans would spend their money.
- http://thefbm.com/2011/06/24/the-booming-20s-and-american-working-class-perception/
- This provided information on the differences between the upper class and the working class.
- This helped me find information about perceptions within America.