Asked by ,,,,,,,,

how does page connect world war 1 to broader cultural shifts of 1920s? 1 the war caused youth to abandon civic responsibility 2 the war infested youth dependence on peers rather than family 3 the war disrupted tranditnial values forcing youth to redefine identify 4 the war directly encouraged consumerism and leisure culture. which excerpt best supports this interpretation? 1 the times have made us older and more experienced than you were at our age 2 i powder my nose 3 youth does not understand 4 i don't smoke or drink.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Choose interpretation 3: the war disrupted traditional values, forcing youth to redefine identity.

Best supporting excerpt: 1 — "the times have made us older and more experienced than you were at our age."

Why: that line directly links the war/times to a changed generation—older, altered in outlook and experience—which supports the idea that WWI upended previous norms and forced young people to rethink identity. The other excerpts point to surface behaviors (powdering one's nose; not smoking/drinking) or complain about misunderstanding, but none so clearly ties wartime experience to a fundamental generational shift.