One of the most significant dividing lines in United States history occurred in 1920, when for the first time the national census reported that more people lived in cities than lived rurally. This was the culmination of a myriad of trends – industrialization, immigration, interior race-based population movement, and more – that marked a radical transformation in the notion of cultural life: what it meant to work and to recreate, where people imagined themselves living, the things they wanted to own, their relationship with technology, the kinds of dreams they had (or didn't have) for themselves and their descendants, and a million other small and large changes from the way their ancestors had existed.
No One Beats the Game: "Double Indemnity"
No One Beats the Game: "Double Indemnity"
No One Beats the Game: "Double Indemnity"
One of the most significant dividing lines in United States history occurred in 1920, when for the first time the national census reported that more people lived in cities than lived rurally. This was the culmination of a myriad of trends – industrialization, immigration, interior race-based population movement, and more – that marked a radical transformation in the notion of cultural life: what it meant to work and to recreate, where people imagined themselves living, the things they wanted to own, their relationship with technology, the kinds of dreams they had (or didn't have) for themselves and their descendants, and a million other small and large changes from the way their ancestors had existed.