Originally posted in 2009. Re-posted in honor of Women’s History Month; cross-posted at Mental Floss.
Several factors were in play in the 1920s for the emergence of what came to be known as flappers, teenagers and young women who flaunted convention and spent their time pursuing fun instead of settling down to raise children in the prime of their lives. Many entered college or the workforce and felt entitled to make their own decisions about how to live their lives.
A lot of young men did not return home from World War I, which left an entire cohort of women without enough husbands to go around. The horror of the war (and the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918) also impressed young people with the knowledge that life is short and could end at any moment. Instead of staying home preparing to marry a man who might never come, young women wanted to spend what time they had enjoying all that life had to offer.
Movies popularized the image of the fun-loving and free-thinking woman throughout the US and Europe. The 1920 movie The Flapper introduced the term in the United States. The title character, Ginger, was a wayward girl who flouted the rules of society. Played by Olive Thomas, a former Ziegfeld Girl (left), Ginger had so much fun that a generation of lonely young women wanted to be like her. Another role model was stage and screen actress Louise Brooks (right), who also modeled for artists and fashion designers. She was the inspiration for the flapper comic strip Dixie Dugan.
Clara Bow wasn’t the first flapper on screen, but she was certainly a role model for young women of the era. She didn’t play by the rules, and was tabloid fodder for years for her sexual escapades with the biggest movie stars of the time. Bow’s first film was in 1922 and her career peaked in 1927 with the film It. “It” was defined as the sexual allure some girls have and others don’t. Bow’s fans wanted “it”, so they copied her look and behavior.
The rise of the automobile was another factor in the rise of flapper culture. Cars meant a woman could come and go as she pleased, travel to speakeasys and other entertainment venues, and use the large vehicles of the day for heavy petting or even sex.
These young women had plenty of opportunities for fun. Although Prohibition drove alcohol underground, that only added to its allure. Postwar prosperity allowed for leisure time and the means to spend that time drinking, dancing, and hanging out with free thinkers.
Being a flapper wasn’t all about fashion. It was about rebellion. In this article from 1922, a would-be flapper (but still a “nice girl”) explains her lifestyle choices to her parents. Flappers did what society did not expect from young women. They danced to Jazz Age music, they smoked, they wore makeup, they spoke their own language, and they lived for the moment. Flapper fashion followed the lifestyle. Skirts became shorter to make dancing easier. Corsets were discarded in favor of brassieres that bound their breasts, again to make dancing easier. The straight shapeless dresses were easy to make and blurred the line between the rich and everyone else. The look became fashionable because of the lifestyle. The short hair? That was pure rebellion against the older generation’s veneration of long feminine locks.
The party stopped when the economy crashed and the Great Depression curtailed the night life. Although the flapper lifestyle died along with the Roaring Twenties, the freedoms women tasted in that era weren’t easily given up. They may have gone back to marriage and long hours of toil for little pay, but hemlines stayed above the ankle, and the corset never went back to everyday status. And we’ve been driving cars ever since.
Miss Cellania is a newlywed mother of four, full-time blogger, former radio announcer, and worst of all, a Baby Boomer. In addition to mental_floss, she posts at Neatorama, YesButNoButYes, Geeks Are Sexy, and Miss Cellania. Miss C considers herself an expert on no particular subject at all.
Comments 22
Deaf Indian Muslim Anarchist — September 16, 2009
this is a great post. the 1920s is one of my favourite time periods. Just out of curiousity, did the media look back in horror? did they revile flappers and label them as "whores" and "sluts"? Did they try to discourage young women from cutting their hair, smoking, driving, and dancing to jazz music? I've always wondered that.
Shelby — September 16, 2009
I find it so interesting that the flapper lifestyle went out of style and it took another 40-50 years for women to regain that sense of freedom. In some ways, we're still fighting for it.
Christina M. — September 16, 2009
I think the end of WWII and the push to get women out of the factories and back in the home created possibly the biggest backlash to the flapper era, or at least to the idea of the free woman coming and going as she pleased, behaving and dressing as she liked. Women needed to be in the home so men could have their jobs back, and the media played a big role in reinforcing the concept of the woman's "place."
The 20s era is so interesting. I have photos of my grandmother with the short hair and flapper dresses!
thewhatifgirl — September 19, 2009
This is so wonderful! Its so easy for us all to forget that the gender roles of the '50s and '60s were not necessarily the same as previous gender roles.
I don't think I have any flappers in my family tree since both sides of my family were much too poor and too rural to do that, but I do have an aunt who ran her own restaurant back in the '20s or '30s. She was so "spunky", I always imagined she was a flapper...
puddmom — November 5, 2009
You're all talking about women's "freedom" in the 1920s, but how about what it was like for women of colour in the 1920s and in the lands colonized by Europe? In the 1920s it was still considered acceptable for whites to treat people of colour as sub-human. Think about it, "Deaf Muslim Indian Anarchist" (above).
Your Mileage May Vary: Women, Cars, Wellington | Ever So Scrumptious — February 2, 2013
[...] The Rise of the Flapper – “The rise of the automobile was another factor in the rise of flapper culture. Cars meant a woman could come and go as she pleased, travel to speakeasys and other entertainment venues, and use the large vehicles of the day for heavy petting or even sex.” [...]
Flappers & Pin-Up Girls — December 5, 2014
[…] you want to brush up on your knowledge of the Flapper era, you can check out an article here. You can make the comparison to the Pin-up girl by taking a look at wikipedia. There is quite a […]
John — February 8, 2018
Strange.. I found this exact same article on Mental Floss.......
Flappers: 1920-1935 | The History Blog — June 8, 2018
[…] https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/03/25/guest-post-the-rise-of-the-flapper/ […]
Anonymous — January 22, 2019
it was the end of ww2 and i know that and im a sixth grader like come on
Berry — March 3, 2019
Grandmagetting sum at the cook out
Locomotive — April 25, 2019
WW2 ended in 1945, not the 1920s. Don't talk about things you don't know, like come on random 6th grader
yeetus on that feetus — May 5, 2019
lel is it just me or is this a load of bs?
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Women's norm-breaking | famous women of the 1920s - Crystal Thinker — March 13, 2022
[…] Cellania, M. (2013, March 25). The Rise of the Flapper – Sociological Images. Retrieved April 26, 2016, from https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/03/25/guest-post-the-rise-of-the-flapper/ […]
social norms for women | 4 Gender roles and inspire significant changes - Crystal Thinker — April 12, 2022
[…] Cellania, M. (2013, March 25). The Rise of the Flapper – Sociological Images. Retrieved April 26, 2016, from https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/03/25/guest-post-the-rise-of-the-flapper/ […]
gender norms example | Social norms in 3 critical periods of life - Crystal Thinker — April 17, 2022
[…] Cellania, M. (2013, March 25). The Rise of the Flapper – Sociological Images. Retrieved April 26, 2016, from https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2013/03/25/guest-post-the-rise-of-the-flapper/ […]
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