La ley seca
External Rating42%
2011120 minFinalizada

Prohibition

La ley seca

Cadena:PBS

Episodio Anterior

S01E03 - "A Nation of Hypocrites"

Emitido el Oct 5, 2011, 2:00 AM

Próximo Episodio

Serie Finalizada

Descripción

Ken Burns aborda cómo el alcohol y sus efectos se conectan a muchas fuerzas culturales diferentes. En los años 20, la inmigración, el sufragio femenino, el impuesto sobre la renta, y el movimiento de la templanza condujeron a la promulgación de la Ley Seca (Volstead Act), la décimo octava enmienda a la Constitución de los EE.UU..

Detalles

Estado
Finalizada
Idioma
English
Duración
120 min
Estreno
October 2, 2011
Finalizado
October 4, 2011
Horario
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday a las 22:00

Enlaces Externos

Episodios (1 Temporada · 3 Episodios)

A Nation of Drunkards

Part 1 of Ken Burns' three-part history of the prohibition era (1920-33) opens with the start of the temperance movement in the 19th century under the stewardship of such leaders as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Frances Willard and Carry Nation; and the Anti-Saloon League, which pushed for a constitutional amendment that would ban the sale and manufacture of alcohol.

Oct 2, 2011

120 min

A Nation of Scofflaws

Part 2 of 3 examines the problems that the Volstead Act and prohibition caused, including a possible increase in alcoholism due to women frequenting the illicit speakeasies that replaced male-only saloons; adulterated liquor that poisons some drinkers; and civil-rights violations by overzealous federal agents anxious to make arrests. Despite the public's growing opposition to the ban, few politicians dare to speak against it due to the political might of the Anti-Saloon League.

Oct 3, 2011

120 min

A Nation of Hypocrites

Conclusion. The factors that led to the end of prohibition are detailed, as the criminalization of alcohol feeds large profits into the coffers of criminal organizations and turns such gangsters as Al Capone into celebrities. Wealthy Pauline Sabin encourages the repeal of the 18th Amendment and brings together women from all classes who support her position. The 21st Amendment, which repeals the 18th, is adopted after FDR's 1932 election, and by late 1933 people can again legally buy drinks.

Oct 4, 2011

120 min

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