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May 4th, 2016
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  1. The literature, art, and music of the 1920's reflected the nation's changing values. In his novel Main Street (1920), Sinclair Lewis attacked what he considered the dull lives and narrow-minded attitudes of people in a small town. Many American authors, including F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, lived in Paris during the period. Some of their finest works present the attitudes and experiences of the era's so-called Lost Generation. H. L. Mencken, in his witty magazine The American Mercury, ridiculed the antics of dimwitted politicians, prohibitionists, and others.
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