History 102 Biography Project: Upton Sinclair Sheila AdjeiMensah Mrs. KellyLuba March 25,2015 Period 6 Sheila AdjeiMensah Mrs.KellyLuba SUPA American History February 18th, 2015 Annotated Bibliography Websites *Denby, D. (2006, August 28). Uppie Redux? The New Yorker. Retrieved March 6, 2015, from http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2006/08/28/uppieredux This online magazine article discusses the triumphs and downfalls of Upton Sinclair. It g…
Words 2865 - Pages 12
look at The Jungle by Upton Sinclair and explain to you what we can learn from it upon careful examination. First, the book was published in 1906, during what is today known as the Gilded Age of America. The Gilded Age was a time where the prospect of becoming rich and prosperous was drawing in many immigrants, and sets the scene for Sinclair’s book. The main characters from The Jungle are immigrants who had come to America to prosper, but that is not to be their fate. In fact, the purpose of this writing…
Words 936 - Pages 4
These two forms of communication were radio and newspaper. Radio was used to destroy Upton Sinclair’s campaign by having scripts about Sinclarism and radio assaults on his program, EPIC. In the book review, The Campaign of the Century, the author said “His radical program for economic change, dubbed End Poverty in California (EPIC), called for…
Words 1645 - Pages 7
lack of realism when describing how socialism is the solution to the issues faced by his characters. The realism in Sinclair’s symbolism about hogs appealed to many readers’ emotions of pity and frustration; but his socialist propaganda causes the story to lose its emotional appeal. Sinclair hoped to change America into a socialist society by writing The Jungle. Every author has a purpose for writing, and there is equal responsibility between them and their readers in order for a message to be successfully…
Words 1724 - Pages 7
“The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair was written during the Progressive Era, 1890-1920, and declared Sinclair as a Progressive writer. Writers like himself sought to bring light to the United States’ economic problems through education, rather than excusing them with Social Darwinism. As the Industrial Revolution ended with a shift in the United States’ economy, workplace conditions adversely got worse while corporations and factory owners gradually became more wealthy. The wealthier the owners, the more…
Words 564 - Pages 3
According to the National Institutes of Health, obesity and overweight together are the second leading cause of preventable death in the United States, close behind tobacco use. Road Dahl’s novel, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964), Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle (1906), Eric Schlosser’s non-fiction, Fast Food Nation (2001), Morgan Spurlock’s documentary, Supersize Me (2004), Craig Lambert’s non-fiction article, “The Way We Eat Now,” (2004) and the wikipedia article, “Abattoir,” or “Slaughterhouse…
Words 2433 - Pages 10
The Jungle, a novel by Upton Sinclair, resulted in the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906. Sinclair made this change by writing about the disgusting environment inside the factories and the emotions the employees go through. The context in this novel caused an uproar that caused laws for regulations in factories in the United States. Sinclair described how the “skinned hams” were made out of the oldest hogs, which no one would buy. This deceived customers to think these were special, when in all actuality…
Words 359 - Pages 2
In Upton Sinclair depiction of the horrors of factories and struggles in his novel The Jungle, Jurgis and Ona will illustrate and seek past different aspects of diverse characterization in literature. Jurgis, blunt and human hearted in the very aspect of human ways. Jurgis appears a behemoth, weighing…
Words 1085 - Pages 5
migrate from the rural areas to urban areas? Mechanized farming machines created less need of people to work on the farms, so less pay and demand for workers. People then moved to the city in search of high wages and jobs. What was Upton Sinclair’s book, The Jungle, about? The book exposed unsanitary conditions of The Meat packing industry in Chicago. The novel depicted the poor quality of food preparation and the work ethics within the plant. What was the Progressive movement? Progressivism…
Words 760 - Pages 4
revolution had many Americans working seventy to eighty hours a week. Men women and children had jobs in steel mills, shipping docks, and meat plants. Work hours where excruciating and the conditions where unfathomable across the land. Upton Sinclair’s book “the Jungle” illustrated profound employment ethics with disturbing imagery. “due to rising heat or the exhaustion of their long workdays a child would slip and fall into the vats, and when and if it was realized that the child was missing, no…
Words 1200 - Pages 5